Greater Roadrunner - Belle Campground, Joshua Tree National Park, CA
Greater Roadrunner - Belle Campground, Joshua Tree National Park, CA
Greater Roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus)
As I was cooking dinner in my campsite I saw this Roadrunner hop down from a cactus, where I couldn’t see it until it moved, and grab this centipede. It took me a second to get to my camera, but I was lucky enough to still get a photo before it ran away. I thought this photo was going to turn out when I took it and it held up when I got back home and could really check it out. This photo was taken 4/8/23 at 8:47 pm.
WeForest Donation: $390 (What is this?)
Print Number: 1/3
Print Size: 20 x 30
Total Dimensions: 43.5 x 51.5
Hanging equipment and certificate of authenticity included.
Photograph
Greater Roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus)
Although most common in the Southwestern United States The Greater Roadrunner can be found as far East as Arkansas and at far north as Northern California. The Greater Roadrunner is well suited for the desert landscape in which it thrives best. It is very fast, able to reach speeds of 20 miles per hour, a lethal hunter, commonly killing and eating rattlesnakes, horned lizards, and scorpions, and apparently fantastic at camouflaging itself against Yucca, as I have witnessed myself multiple times in Joshua Tree National Park. Fanning its feathers out to look similar to the leaves of the Yucca, I have sat right next to them multiple times for long periods of time before even realizing they were there. The Greater Roadrunner is a tough and smart bird but not quite as quick as the cartoon may have you believe. Coyotes are indeed one of the main predators of Greater Roadrunners and are much faster than their feathered prey.
Location
Joshua Tree National Park, CA
One of the more recently designated national parks, Joshua Tree National Park, established in 1994, is basically as old as I am. Up there with Sanibel, FL, and Yellowstone National Park, it is also one of my absolute favorite places to take photographs. It is an immense park, located in southeastern California, east of Los Angeles, Joshua Tree includes parts of two deserts, The Mojave and The Colorado. This unique and harsh environment is home to a surprising amount of life, if you are patient and willing to look. Named for the “trees” that dot much of the landscape, the Joshua Tree is actually not a tree at all, but is the worlds largest succulent, which makes sense as they thrive in such arid places. Black-tailed Jackrabbits, and Kit Foxes hide under the branches of these plants, getting shade wherever they can, and Red-tailed Hawks and Crows nest in the branches, some of the few branches that exist across this vast area. This park also contains two oasis where huge fifty foot tall palms grow and yield a very different, although small by comparison, ecosystem. Song birds fly through the rustling palms and temperatures are noticeably cooler. Evidence that coyotes and foxes and bighorn sheep visit these areas are always plentiful but witnessing these excursions to water is not as abundant. I have loved spending time in the park over the past few years and have never been bored by what some might think is a dull/vacant landscape on first glance, it’s not.
Belle Campground
Belle Campground is one of the three campgrounds in the park where you do not need a reservation and are first come first serve. It is where my buddy and I have camped each time we have visited the park although I must say that you do need to get there early to ensure that you get a spot, even then you might still get shut out. It is centrally located within the park which makes for an ideal location to getting to some of the spots that he like to paint and that I like to photograph. It in its own right is a lovely location for both painting and photography as well!
FRAME
Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum)
Bald Cypress, the giant of the swamp, is a stately, slow growing native of the southeastern United States. Very tough it can adapt to thrive in a wide range of soils, including very briny, salty, and water soaked areas. Able to grow very tall, it has great stability at its base thanks to its “knees.” The tallest known Cypress was about 145 feet tall. All of the Bald Cypress I have used in my frames has come from different parts of Louisiana.
THE ELEMENTS
Fire, Water, Earth, and Air
In the display case in the bottom of the frame, four items are preserved glass vials. The items represent the elements: fire (wood charcoal), water (mineral oil), earth (soil), and air (a milkweed seed). I include these items in my work as a symbol of the interconnectedness of all life on earth, and as a reminder that humans must do better.
The Plaque
I engrave a wooden information plaque for each work. The plaque includes what the photograph is of, the location of the photograph, what type of wood the frame is made of and where I got the wood from. The plaques also explain what the vials are in each display case, and even state the meaning of my logo. The plaques are attached magnetically and can be removed to read or to store on the back of each frame if you prefer not to have it displayed on the front.