The day after Thanksgiving, I picked up a  rental car and started driving to Socorro, New Mexico. This was an 11-hour  drive, but I had committed to picking up my friend Jennifer from the Albuquerque  airport about 10 AM on Saturday. The rental was a Kia Sorrento SUV, big enough  to hold a bunch of photo gear. I was thankful that the price of gas had fallen  well below $2/gallon, and that the SUV managed about 20 mpg.
I could have  gone a variety of different routes to Socorro, but I went with the advice of my  Garmin GPS, by way of San Angelo, Roswell, and Carrizozo. (Sadly, it was too  late to pay my respects at Smokey the Bear’s grave on the way through  Capitan.)
Saturday, November 29 – Tuesday, December  2
5:00 AM. Time to get up and start three and a half days of  intense, frustrating, yet relaxing, bird photography at the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, south of Socorro.  It wasn’t long before I saw one of my photography mentors, Arthur  Morris.

Artie is arguably the world’s greatest bird photographer.  He leads photo tours all around the world. He’s sometimes a little rough around  the edges, but a very good teacher. You can learn a lot from Artie just by being  nearby as he yells advice to his workshop students, and as he weighs the options  to keep shooting or move on to another spot. I also recommend his book, The Art of Bird Photography II,  a 916-page book for which I did a thorough editorial review.
Favorite  2008 Artie Morris quote: “These silhouettes are the easiest situation for  auto-focus. If you can’t get your camera to auto-focus here, you should take up  knitting.”
I also saw a couple of other pro photographers I know, Robert O’Toole and  Larry Ditto. Larry lives  down in McAllen, and had his own workshop group at Bosque. I first met him on a  trip to the cloud forest near Gómez Farías, Tamaulipas, Mexico. I also  introduced myself to another pro I recognized, Laurie Excell, leading her  own small photo tour.
My friend Jennifer and I first met on a photo  workshop in Utah a few years ago, and we’ve stayed in touch and done other photo  adventures together. She’s an oncologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer  Institute, and an assistant professor at the Harvard Medical  School.
Rounding out our trio was my friend Nicole, a great photographer and  one of my best friends.
Here are a few of my favorite images. Click on  each to enlarge. (More available on bhpowell.com.)

It’s kind of hard to see here, but the moon, Venus, and Jupiter are all in  the sky on this Monday evening.

Here’s a silhouette of my friend Nicole, as we tried to hold on  to the last bit of light.



This next shot is with an infrared fisheye, pointed straight up as snow geese  flew overhead. You can see a bit of the ground at the corners.

Tuesday morning, we were up for one final dawn photo shoot,  then back to the hotel to check out, and off to Albuquerque. I dropped Nicole  and Jen off at the airport, and drove on to a work meeting in Albuquerque.