"Faith is the bird that feels the light when the dawn is still dark."
Rabindranath Tagore
Indian Poet
The best time to take photos outdoors is the hour around sunrise or sunset. If you want to avoid other people in your photo, dawn is the perfect time. Few people will be up and about at sunrise. It's my favorite time to make photos.
The problem with taking photos at dawn is I have to head for my destination long before I know what the conditions will be like. Will the sun paint the clouds with brilliant reds, oranges, and yellows or will the sky be overcast and gray? I have found that weather forecasts will give a general idea what to expect, but often the moment the sun breaks the horizon will be very different from the forecast. I have to get up when it's still dark and see what is in store when I get there.
Blue Heron in Morning Light |
On a recent trip to visit my family in South Florida June and I got up early and left the house while everyone was still comfortably asleep. Our destination was Wakodahatchee Wetlands. This is a favorite place to photograph birds in a natural setting. Boardwalks snake throughout the wetlands, making it easy to get close to birds, gators and other wildlife. On this morning, there were fewer birds than what we had seen in the wetlands before. Mid-December is a few weeks early for nesting activities and brilliant mating colors that present many photographic opportunities. However, there were still enough birds to fill all our available time and the rising sun bathed the scenes in a warm soft light, like the photo above.
We don't always have the gift of sunrise colors on every outing but if we didn't get up while it is still dark we would never get to experience the beauty of a sunrise and the beautiful colors of dawn.
“Never be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God.”
Corrie ten Boom
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