I used this image for a challenge of my own last year, but it works great for this theme.
For more from this challenge, visit Weekly Photo Challenge: Transition.
I used this image for a challenge of my own last year, but it works great for this theme.
For more from this challenge, visit Weekly Photo Challenge: Transition.
We are lacking snow so far this year, so this is from a few years ago.
For more from this challenge, visit Sunday Stills: Walking in a Winter Wonderland.
I have always been fascinated by twins. As a child, I wished I was a twin. (I also wished I had blonde hair, dark brown eyes, and a metabolism that let me eat whatever I wanted — like my sisters — but that’s how life goes.) I love it when I come across twins in nature, like these leaves.
IN A NEW POST CREATED FOR THIS CHALLENGE, SHARE A PHOTO OR TWO OF TWINS.
Everyone is welcome to participate, even if your blog isn’t about photography.
Here’s how it works:
In Utah, the weather can change very quickly. During the fall and winter, you hear people saying “If you don’t like the weather, wait five minutes.” I’ve always found it interesting that if the forecast calls for rain, the chance has to be higher than 75% for it actually happen. With snow, it only has to be 15% for it to happen. I’ve watched a weather forecast where they were predicting a 20% chance of snow while it was actually snowing at same the time. On a beautiful fall Sunday afternoon, we took a drive up in the Uintas. As we were heading back down the mountainside, a storm started moving in, and this was our view.
IN A NEW POST CREATED FOR THIS CHALLENGE, SHARE A PHOTO OR TWO OF SIGNS THAT THE WEATHER IS CHANGING OR AN INCOMING OR PASSING STORM.
Everyone is welcome to participate, even if your blog isn’t about photography.
Here’s how it works:

For more entries, visit Weekly Photo Challenge: Dialogue.
In the summer, we love to visit the High Uinta Mountains in Utah and fish at this lake.
For more, see Weekly Photo Challenge: Summer Lovin’.
For more remote images, click here.
We spent some time this weekend up in the Uinta Mountains in Northern Utah. We’ve had some early snow above 7000 feet, and most of the Quakies had dropped their leaves, but it made the ground glow golden.
http://sundaystills.wordpress.com/2013/10/20/sunday-stills-the-next-challenge-trees-fall-colours/