Winter in Big Bend National Park can be a desolate affair. Photographer Rebecca Latson's latest article shows, though, that desolate does not mean devoid of photo ops in this national park.
Take one national park (Big Bend, in this case), add clear and dark night skies, introduce a telescope, and sit back and enjoy the star show, as Contributing Photographer Rebecca Latson did during a recent visit to Big Bend National Park in Texas.
While a wildfire in Big Bend National Park has blackened an estimated 2,000 acres, the threat to facilities at Panther Junction has diminished and all roads in the park are open to the public.
During a mid-January visit to Big Bend National Park in Texas, photographer Rebecca Latson tried out the photo app Instagram in addition to her usual arsenal of SLRs and lenses. Here's a quick rundown of her thoughts.
The vast, clear sky at Big Bend National Park is the perfect setting for stargazing, star photography, and the Dark Sky Dinner hosted by the Big Bend Conservancy. Contributing photographer Rebecca Latson was lucky enough to have a seat at the dinner table, returning with a report of the dinner as well as some tips for your own national park dark sky photography.
I’ve talked at length about the best parks for birds and the parks where all the birders go. Everglades National Park usually tops that list. Big Bend and Acadia are also extremely popular birding parks. But which of the 59 national parks gets the least birding attention? That’s tough to quantify, but I’ve made an educated guess from perusing eBird data.
The national parks of the United States are often compared to, and indeed inspire, works of art. In fact, the USGS has been regularly contributing new and updated works of art for the national parks—maps.
A man in Raleigh, North Carolina “re-discovered” a cache of 34 letters in January 2014 while cleaning his garage after a water pipe began leaking. After nearly 30 years, the correspondences remained tucked inside manila archival folders labeled “miscellaneous stationary, 1934-41” and stored flat in a cardboard box with other paper collectibles, including a World War One naval aviator certificate. Now he claims the letters provide connections between known but seemingly unrelated events in Texas history and ultimately reveal the largest unknown political conspiracy of the Great Depression.
Following the heels of Part 1, photographer Rebecca Latson completes her Big Bend National Park armchair guide with Park 2, covering points east, west and south within the park.