Over the course of visiting Michigan’s wonderful Upper Peninsula during a span of twenty years to lead workshops and to do my own work, I do not recall a single year that we did not take a group to Bond Falls, a state-owned property just on the edge of Ottawa Nationl Forest on the Middle Branch of the Ontonagon River.

While the main falls is the spectacular draw, the upper cataract has always more strongly attracted me for its amazing reflections that one must learn when and how to approach for the best results.

Two dear friends and fellow photographers, Bob and Gloria Epperson, both long-passed, shared the upper cataract with me many years ago, and I have always been grateful for their gift.

A focal length of 200mm, solid medium telephoto-land, gave me the angle-of-view I wanted along with some compression and magnification. An aperture of f/14 provided depth-of-field and the illusion of sharpness in the moving water; and with a shutter speed of 1/20 second at ISO 800 gave me an overall somewhat lighter-than-medium exposure.

Notice that the chosen aperture (14) is 1 1/3 stops wider than f/22 and the ISO (800) is 3 stops lighter than my preferred, less noisy, 100. This meant that I was able to slow the speed of the flow by nearly 5 stops in order to reduce the surface tension on the stiller/quieter, upper water in order to make the reflection that much sharper to the eye.

I offer this Image in celebration of National Forest Week. Our national forests are national treasures. They are public lands without peer and they remain for us to enjoy only as long as we are willing to preserve them from wanton cutting and destruction. May we have them always.