A quiet shift from night sky photography to morning light in the Jemez Mountains
Some plans you push through. Others you know when to let go.
After turning back from the Valley of Dreams and Alien Throne area in Bisti, we pointed ourselves toward Albuquerque and made one last detour into the Jemez Mountains.
A different landscape. A different pace.
A Detour Worth Taking
Bisti had been vast, quiet and disorienting in the best way. The kind of place that stretches your sense of scale and time.
The Jemez Mountains felt immediately different.
This is the same region that holds places like Valles Caldera and Bandelier, landscapes I’ve explored before, but this time it felt quieter. More intimate. Less about scale and more about light.
Closer. Warmer. More grounded.
Even the name feels like a shift. Around New Mexico, you’ll hear it pronounced more like “Hay-mess.” It still sounds slightly unexpected every time.
Camping in the Jemez Mountains
We landed at Vista Linda Campground. An easy, straightforward stop tucked into the mountains.
Nothing complicated. Just a solid place to reset.
Surrounded by red rock canyon walls, the whole area felt more contained compared to Bisti. Less about wandering. More about observing.
Photographing Morning Light in Red Rock Canyons
The next morning wasn’t about chasing a grand scene.
It was about watching light arrive.
As the sun crested the canyon walls, it moved slowly, revealing shape, texture and color in layers. What stood out wasn’t the scale of the landscape, but how the light interacted with it.
Edges lit up. Shadows pulled back. Small compositions started to form.
Instead of wide vistas, the scene leaned toward something more abstract. More selective.
Light against shadow. Warm tones against cooler rock. Lines, patterns and transitions.
It felt less like documenting a place and more like interpreting it.
Field Notes for Jemez Mountains Photography
Watch for sun stars
As the sun crests the canyon walls, stop down your aperture to create defined sun stars.
Bracket your exposures
Dynamic range can be strong here. Shooting HDR helps retain both highlight and shadow detail.
Think smaller
This isn’t always a big vista location. Look for tighter compositions, textures and light patterns.
Let the light do the work
Don’t rush the scene. Some of the best moments happen a few minutes after first light hits.
A Different Kind of Landscape
Bisti asks you to navigate, plan and commit.
The Jemez asks you to slow down.
To watch. To wait. To notice smaller shifts.
It wasn’t the plan.
But it was the right ending.
If you’re exploring this region, I’ve also shared field notes from photographing Valles Caldera and Bandelier. Two very different but equally compelling landscapes within the Jemez.
Until next time,
Alan Stenback
