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The morning light in Joshua Tree doesn’t ask for permission or announce its coming with long, anticipatory rays gently brushing the hills.
It simply arrives, unapologetic, sculpting the desert in long, crisp shadows and turning the air electric with contrast.
I have come to this spot, camera in hand, not searching for anything specific but open to whatever the desert is willing to reveal.
I spent decades forcing the image from my camera in service to others who wanted to sell their trinkets or get more clicks. I do less of that these days and devote much of my time to making art and teaching others to do so.
These days I search for reasons to make images that will satisfy my own curiosity and hopefully answer a few questions I have’nt even thought of yet.
It’s a quiet life. Well, until I fire up the Cruiser with those awesome Cobra pipes.
The Joshua Trees stand like sentinels—twisted, spiky, and defiant against the blue sky shyly veiled by the thin, white clouds.
I love cloudy skies. From stormy gray to wispy smears against a blue canvas, anything to break up that pure blue sky.
I live in Phoenix. We have an abundance of clear, blue skies. Too many.
Give me a little texture in that deep blue abyss, please.
There is no wind; the trees seem almost fragile, their limbs stretching in odd directions as though they had lost their footing and were flailing their limbs around hoping not to fall.
But occasionally they do.
Fall, that is.
There is very little water in this desolate part of the California desert, yet there they stand, thriving in a landscape that should have crushed them long ago.
Around them, massive rock formations loomed, unmoved by time. Strength and delicacy, side by side. I cannot help but make a connection in my mind, and that connection - personal - is what inspires me to compose and expose.
I framed an image of a single tree against an impossibly large stack of boulders, the morning sun catching its spines just enough to make them glow. It was more than an image of a succulent growing in the sand—it was a conversation among friends. And allies.
The tree, resilient, yet vulnerable to the ravages of time and the inevitability of death.
The rocks, stoic, eternal, unchanged over millennia, yet offering companionship for the infinitely changing life cycles around them.
Two dramatically different elements exist in the same space, speaking completely different languages, with a totally different relationship to their surroundings.
And yet, somehow, they understand each other.
As I walk deeper into the park, I begin to notice the smaller details: the way light slipped between the cracks in the stone, the unexpected softness in the shadows, the quiet hum of the wind curling around the formations, and rustling the brush almost imperceptibly.
It is a reminder that nothing is as simple as it may seem.
A Joshua Tree appears fragile, but it will survive decades of brutal sun and wind.
A rock may look indestructible, but given enough time, even it will surrender to the elements. It’s hard to imagine, but there may be a day when it all turns to sand.
Photography, for me, has always been more than just capturing a pretty scene.
It’s a way of understanding—of making sense of the contrasts and contradictions that define the world.
At that moment, standing in the middle of Joshua Tree, I wasn’t just taking pictures of cacti.
I was absorbing the quiet lesson the landscape was offering: fragility and strength aren’t opposites.
They’re partners.
I made a series of images this beautifully cool Saturday morning, each one a reflection of that balance.
Some with tight framing on the intricate details of the trees, others wide and sweeping, hoping to show the scale of massive stone against the sky.
None of them were for a client, none of them designed to impress anyone.
They are just for me—a way of seeing, of feeling, of translating what the desert had whispered to me in that exquisite morning light.
The sun rose higher, and the shadows softened.
I packed up my camera and started the long walk back.
The trees remained, unmoved by my presence, standing guard as they had for centuries.
The rocks, as always, said nothing. But I had heard enough.
Or had I?
Perhaps another sojourn to this mystical desert is in order.
We’ll see.
Time grows shorter.
Although the rocks do not care.
The best time to visit Joshua Tree National Park is the winter. Summers can be hot and brutal, and the light flat and washed out. Stay in Joshua Tree or Twenty Nine Palms for easy access to the park - and the Mexican food is pretty good in both places.
PRODUCT PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP 2025
Well. it’s time for our next 8-Week Workshop. This one is on product photography, and by “product” I mean hard products: power tools, kitchen aids, cosmetics… The stuff you have to shoot for day-to-day customers for everything from e-commerce to advertising.
You can find out more about this workshop, starting dates, fee and such here:
Product Photography Workshop Overview
When you are ready, here is how I can help you succeed.
Group Mentorship: a small group of photographers who meet to show images, work on their portfolio, and build their businesses with help from a wonderful group. Lifetime membership for one fee.
One-on-one Mentorship: You and me - working together in an intense 6-month push to get you on the way to over $30K in additional revenue. The work we lay down will help you increase and scale your business for years ahead.
Coming in 2025, a One-on-One, 6-week plan to get your marketing system in place. You will see results immediately, and by results, I mean assigned work that pays you. More coming.
Beautiful photos and post about Joshua Tree. It's a magical place. I visited with my daughter many years ago when we were living in L.A.
Beautiful work! I was just there last week. Working through my images and printing my favs. 👍