Yukon 

169 creative works found

  • Cold fall morning in the Yukon. As much as the sun looks warm, as cold as this morning was. Nature is so beautiful…

  • Fall time on the Yukon and British-Columbia border (Canada). It is so peaceful to be there… Alone with the magestic mountains…

  • One of my piece of art. This is a snow carving that I made myself in February 2006. It was at the Yukon Sourdough Rendez-vous. She was about 7 feet high to give you an idea. / / It took me 26 hours of consecutive work (no sleep) with a few breaks along the way to warm my toes up… (it was pretty near -40 degrees Celscius below that night. But I was dressed pretty well.) I called her Into The Light because I finished sculpting her when the sun came and shined on her from above the building that was standing in front of her. It was 12(noon) at the time.. I had started to carve her the day before at 10 am. She has her hands open to the sky, for she is as ready to give herself, as ready to receive from the creator.

  • This is one of many faces Yukon Skies take. The whole sky was as red as red can be. It was beautiful… There are the original colors… no modifications made here.

  • Dawson City, Yukon, Canada. / Taken at midnight on June 21-22 (solstice day-night)

  • ISO 200, F10, Shutter Speed 1/200 Sec, Focal Length 55.0 mm.

  • This is in very northern British-Columbia… it is just before entering the Yukon Territory. / ISO 400, Shutter Speed 1/500 Sec, F9.0, Focal Length 300.0 mm / Enjoy… :)

  • Photograph taken on top of the Dome, Dawson City, Yukon Territory, Canada. / Summer solstice 2006, MIDNIGHT (June 22nd). / The sun that goes through the Inukshuk adds to the F-stop effect. Photography is a great way to capture what we want to remember. / Great souvenir for those of you who have traveled north to the Yukon and that have witnessed Solstice there as well. / A picture is worth a thousand words. / This one a thousand beautiful souvenirs.

  • A long exposure shot of a few guys camping along side the Yukon River just outside of Whitehorse in the Yukon Territory of Canada. Back lit from the full moon hiding just behind a tree, mid-lighting by the campfire and the tent is lit with a small LED camping headlamp. This actually on a self-timer and that is myself on the far right. 20 sec. exposure at f11 Whitehorse, YT, Canada October 2007

  • An old wooden fishing boat sits on the shore of Burwash lake in western Yukon Territory in complete dereliction. Years of use and the brutal weather has began to chip away at the many layers of paint. Burwash, YT, Canada October 2007

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia

  • This photo was taken through an open doorway on the White Pass and Yukon Route scenic railway between Bennett and Fraser in Yukon, Canada. The fisherman was a bonus. Best viewed large 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia

  • Shot at The Dome, above Dawson City in the Yukon, Canada. I spent half an hour shooting some amazing gold clouds. Then, long after the dramatic colours had faded, the soft pastels emerged over Tombstone Territorial Park as the historic Gold Rish river suddenly took on a silver sheen. A single evening, but it showed me two separate aspects of the Yukon. Shot in late August 2008. I do not crop, enhance or post-edit my images in any way. Featured in MORNINGS & EVENINGS, May 2009.

  • At the historic Diamond Tooth Gertie’s in Dawson City in the gold rush Klondike region of the Yukon, I found myself at the back of the hall during the floor show on 29 August 2008. It was the only time in my whole week in the Yukon that I left my second camera in my hotel room, with my 70-300mm lens. Because I’d never been to Gertie’s before, I just assumed that one camera, with my favourite 18-125mm lens, would be sufficient. I was wrong. I was SO wrong. But when this segment of the floor show began, with each dancer using long, broad ribbons, I had to pick up my camera and do my best. (By the way, I have never used a tripod in my life!) I do not crop or post-edit my work in any way. Shot with a Pentax K100D, with a Sigma 18-125mm lens. F4.5, 1/20 sec, ISO 800, focal length 58mm. Featured in MOVEMENT: MOTION BLUR, May 2009. Featured in BLACK WITH A HINT OF COLOR, August 2009. Featured in SPEAKING PHOTOS, August 2009. Featured in ANYTHING THEATRICAL, September 2009. Canada08-Gerties-9387

  • “Listen up, buddy, how long do I have to wait here for you to fill up this jalopy and clean the windscreen? I really don’t care if you’re operating on a skeleton staff …..” I shot this on the outskirts of Whitehorse, in the Yukon, in September 2008. (The rusty vehicle is real. The skeleton is a fake – or so I’m told – but I’m “haunted” by the possibilities!) The Yukon, of course, is one of the world’s quintessential gold rush zones. There were probably some ghosts watching over me when I took this shot – but they knew I had entered into the “spirit’’ of the task!! Featured in RUSTIC, May 2009. Featured in YER PULLIN’ MY LEG, August 2009. Featured in STATUES AND SUCH, September 2009.

  • Location: Yukon Territory, Canada This lake (pronounced Klu-on-ee), is one of the most scenic areas…a favorite of mine. © Dyle Warren 2009

  • Featured in Canadiana – September 20, 2009 This is a scene from atop “The Dome” which is a site at the top of a mountain road that winds up to the Dome overlooking Dawson City, Yukon, Canada. Dawson City had to be my very favorite place in the Yukon. This was my first chance to not see the sun set. It was daylight all night long for 23.5 hours at the time we were in Dawson. I wanted to see the “sunset” at 12 midnight, which didn’t happen. We were out till 1:30 that morning enjoying the photography. The longest day (June 21) was just about there since we were in Dawson on June 16, 2009. In the valley you can see the Yukon River which winds it’s way through Dawson City. / / / Canon EOS Rebel XTi / F/9 / 80mm / 1/250 / ISO 400 / 181 views as of November 15, 2009

  • Male Lion The lion (Panthera leo) is a member of the family Felidae and one of four big cats in the genus Panthera. With some males exceeding 250 kg (550 lb) in weight, it is the second-largest living cat after the tiger. Wild lions currently exist in Sub-Saharan Africa and in Asia with a critically endangered remnant population in northwest India, having disappeared from North Africa, the Middle East, and Western Asia in historic times. Until the late Pleistocene (about 10,000 years ago), the lion was the most widespread large land mammal beside humans. They were found in most of Africa, much of Eurasia from western Europe to India and, in the Americas, from the Yukon to Peru. Should they survive the rigors of cubhood, lionesses in secure habitat, such as national parks, frequently reach an age of 12–14 years whereas male lions seldom live for longer than 8 years. However, there are records of lionesses living for up to 20 years in the wild. In captivity both male and female lions can live for over 20 years. They typically inhabit savanna and grassland, although they may take to bush and forest. Lions are unusually social compared to other cats. A pride of lions consists of related females and offspring and a small number of adult males. Groups of female lions typically hunt together, preying mostly on large ungulates. The lion is an apex and keystone predator, although they will resort to scavenging if the opportunity arises. While lions, in general, do not selectively hunt humans, some have been known to become man-eaters and seek human prey. The lion is a vulnerable species, having seen a possibly irreversible population decline of 30 to 50 percent over the past two decades in its African range; populations are untenable outside designated reserves and national parks. Although the cause of the decline is not well understood, habitat loss and conflicts with humans are currently the greatest causes of concern. Lions have been kept in menageries since Roman times and have been a key species sought after and exhibited in zoos the world over since the late eighteenth century. Zoos are cooperating worldwide in breeding programs for the endangered Asiatic subspecies. The male lion is highly distinctive and is easily recognized by its mane. The lion, particularly the face of the male, is one of the most widely recognized animal symbols in human culture. “The King’s Portrait ….... ” was featured in Live, Love, Dream

  • May 22, 2009 East of Haines Junction, Yukon /

  • Featured in Northern Landscape – August 28, 2009 / Featured in Live and Let Live – August 21, 2009 / Featured in For The Love of Canon – August 20, 2009 The beautiful blue-green colour of Emerald Lake is created by sunlight reflecting off a white layer of “marl” on the lake bed. Marl is a white calcium carbonate (CaCO3) clay that forms in the water and then settles, often unevenly, onto the lake bottom. It forms when enough carbonate (CO3), from dissolving limestone), reacts with calcium (Ca) in the water. The limestone hills around you were created 150 – 200 million years ago by reef-building corals growing in a warm sea. Corals and lime-secreting algae cemented themselves together in 100 metres of water where there was sunshine and clear water. As the water gradually rose the coral reef built upon itself, growing toward the light. This valley was covered by a glacier during the last ice age and shallow lakes were formed when the glaciers retreated 14,000 years ago. Retreating ice deposited limestone gravel, eroded from the surrounding hills, on the valley floor. The carbonate rich gravel affected the ground water and led eventually to the formation of marl in the lake. / (http://www.yukonheritage.com) / / Canon EOS 50D; Canon 17-85mm lens / Dynamic Photo HDR / 1/64 sec.; F/8; 30mm; ISO100

  • This shot was taken late on the afternoon of 2 September 2008, as I walked around the streets of Whitehorse, in Canada’s Yukon. The flowers, part of an autumn street box, were in perfect light and the range of bright colours brought me to a standstill. I do not crop, enhance or post-edit my images in any way. Shot with a Pentax K100D, using a 18-125mm lens. F8, 1/250 sec, ISO 400, focal length 125mm. Canada08-Whitehorse02September-1097

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