
We've been to Death Valley numerous times, but it wasn't until this year that we took a hike at Mesquite Flat Dunes. The problem with sand dune photography is excluding from the frame the footprints from the hundreds of people who traipse all over the landscape. Either you have to be the first to show up right after a windy day has erased the marks, or you have to forge deep into the dunes, far beyond where others bother to go. A third option is the tight crop, as in this image. We had just climbed to the top of the big dune, and as the sun was setting I saw this glint of light hitting the curve of a neighboring dune. Because the back side of the dune had a wind-rippled texture, the low angled sun generated tiny beads of light along the edge of the rim. I had just a moment or two before the sun dropped and the scene disappeared. How lucky was that?