Coldwell Banker Real Estate Incline Village header

Alvin Steinberg, Real Estate Broker
(775) 832-1888

931 Tahoe Blvd, Incline Village, NV  89541 (Google Map)

CA DRE #00428896
NRED #0022754

Coldwell Banker Real Estate Incline Village header

Alvin Steinberg, Real Estate Broker
(775) 832-1888

CA DRE #00428896 • NRED #0022754

Massive Snow Pack Means Fast Moving Water This Spring

Massive Snow Pack Means Fast Moving Water This Spring

Rafting Truckee RiverRecord snowfall around Lake Tahoe this winter brings obvious dangers including avalanches, roof failures, icy road conditions, etc.

But as we approach the summer season, it’s equally important to remember that all the snow will eventually melt and create very dangerous conditions in our waterways.

Agencies are encouraging all Californians to wait until summer to recreate in the water, when conditions are safer.

“After successive low-water drought years, it is imperative that Californians understand water safety in and around rivers, streams, lakes and Sierra reservoirs,” said State Parks Director Armando Quintero. “As the temperature rises, snowmelt-fed waterways can quickly induce incapacitating cold-water shock to even the strongest swimmers. We encourage everyone to follow the advice of public safety officials and avoid entering waterways if asked to do so.”

“California has one of the largest snowpacks on record,” said DWR Director Karla Nemeth. “As this snowpack melts in the coming months, the waterways will be especially cold, fast and running higher than normal. Be aware of fluctuating water levels. We want everyone to always make safety a top priority when recreating.”

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Ansel Adams Lookout

Ansel Adams Lookout

Photo of Lake Tahoe

ANSEL ADAMS – THUNDERCLOUD, LAKE TAHOE, CA, c 1936

In the year 1938, Lake Tahoe was a very different place than what we see today. The forests were recovering from being clear-cut in the late 1800s; the highway was a narrow, winding road; and few people lived year-round in Incline Village.

The first tunnel had been blasted through Cave Rock, improving access, but still, a trip around Lake Tahoe was not a trivial excursion. This didn’t stop a young photographer named Ansel Adams from making the trip. His friend and mentor, Cedric Wright, had been spending time there, though it is unclear whether they traveled together. Adams described Wright as his best friend. They had much in common, including photography and classical music; right was a violinist, and Adams was a pianist.

Adams made a trip to Lake Tahoe in the spring 1938, making a dramatic image of a thunderhead over the Sierra Crest from the Nevada side. It’s possible to assume that it was made sometime in the spring from the amount of snow on the mountains.

 

I became aware of this image when someone pointed out that one of my photos looked like the Ansel Adams image. I looked up the image for comparison, and it was obvious that they were taken at the same place. Stateline Point lined up with Granite Chief at what is now the Squaw Valley Ski Resort. But there was a problem. I did not remember exactly where I had taken my image!

Thus I began a bit of sleuthing and exploration. Lining up the point with the mountain was only part of the job. Then I had to identify the elevation; was it taken along what is now the highway, or down by the lake, or up on Tunnel Creek road, or farther up the mountain? I looked at the spacing of the Stateline Point on the lake and identified that the great photographer had done what millions of others have done since he just pulled off the side of the road at a pullout that is still along State Route 28 at the south end of Incline Village.

I then tried to frame the image to match his composition. This was easy with a telephoto lens, and it provided a bit more information about the image. The Adams shot was vertical and stretched from just past Mt. Watson in the north to a short distance past Twin Peaks in the south. Matching this as well as possible, I found that my zoom was about 45 mm. This is what photographers call a ‘normal’ lens, in that it yields a normal perspective, neither telephoto nor wide angle. Adams was not shooting with a 35mm camera, but a large-format view camera. If he was using a 4×5 camera, he was probably using a 150mm lens or a 6-inch lens as it would have been measured in 1938. If he was using an 8×10 camera, he would have been using a 300mm/12-inch lens.

I now refer to this pullout as the ‘Ansel Adams Lookout,’ and I took this image in honor of Ansel Adams, born on this day, February 20, 1902.