Glenn Randall Photography

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Mt. Wuh Sunrise

Mt. Wuh Sunrise, Mt. Wuh, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, winter
                Mt. Wuh is an insignificant, 10,000-foot bump of a mountain in Rocky Mountain National Park.  It's well off any trail.  I was intrigued with it, however, because I thought it might allow me to put Longs Peak and the rising sun into the same photograph.  As I envisioned it, I would shoot just as the sun burst over the horizon and threw a golden glow on backlit, snow-laden trees on the left side of the frame.  Longs Peak would rise on the right side of the frame.  After careful study of the map and measuring the angle of view of various lenses, I figured that Mt. Wuh had to be the right spot.  So I waited for an upslope snowstorm, with wind from the northeast, which often produces heavy snows in Rocky Mountain National Park that are not accompanied by strong winds.  Typical snowstorms blow in from the west with high winds, so trees in exposed locations don't get loaded with snow.  In November, 1999, we got just such an upslope storm.  I got up just after midnight, started hiking at 2:30 a.m. and hiked for about four hours in the dark to the summit of Mt. Wuh, navigating by map, compass and altimeter through the woods.  When I got there, I found that my idea wouldn't work - Longs Peak was completely obscured by cloud.  So I wandered along the summit ridge, looking for a consolation prize.  At the last minute, I set up on a little knoll looking east, thinking I had probably just lost a night's sleep for nothing.  Then, by a stroke of pure luck, a snow squall passed between me and the sun at the moment of sunrise.  The sky was otherwise clear between me and the horizon, so all of the golden light of the rising sun backlit this cloud of falling snowflakes.  For two minutes, the cloud exploded into gold.  The resulting photograph is a spectacular display of pure natural light.  It has not been enhanced by colored filters, digital manipulation or darkroom trickery.  If the cloud had been much thicker, it would simply have been another gray, boring sunrise.  I feel that shots like this are simply a gift.  I'm certain I could go back to Mt. Wuh a thousand times and never see the same thing again.

To order an 11x14 loose, matted-only or framed print of Mt. Wuh Sunrise, please visit my product catalog by clicking the link beneath the appropriate thumbnail.

Mt. Wuh Sunrise, Mt. Wuh, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, winter

Mt. Wuh Sunrise, Mt. Wuh, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, winter

Mt. Wuh Sunrise, Mt. Wuh, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, winter

Glenn Randall Photography
At home on the web at GlennRandall.com and AGPix.com
Specializing in Colorado landscape photography since 1993
Now offering a select group of Utah landscape photographs from Arches National Park and Canyonlands National Park
All images are offered both as prints for the general public and as stock images for professional photo buyers.