Kevin Palmer

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  • I continue to find that southeast Montana has more photogenic abandoned houses than anywhere else I've been. I could make a whole album of photos. I found this one near St Xavier.
    St Xavier Homestead
  • Once the sky became dark enough, a small patch of green aurora appeared in the northern sky. It was all that's left of the strong geomagnetic storm from the night before. This was the only picture I was able to get of this abandoned homestead before the aurora faded away.
    All That's Left
  • After the sun went down, the sky turned pink in the east beyond the Moulton Barn. The barn is all that remains of a homestead first settled by the Moulton family over 100 years ago.
    Twilight at Moulton Barn
  • A flock of birds flew out of the tree as I stopped to shoot this little abandoned house near St Xavier.
    Fly Away
  • I continue to find that southeast Montana has more photogenic abandoned houses than anywhere else I've been. I could make a whole album of photos. I found this one near St Xavier.
    Of Times Gone By
  • I continue to find that southeast Montana has more photogenic abandoned houses than anywhere else I've been. I could make a whole album of photos. I found this one north of Fort Smith.
    Other Side of the Fence
  • Southeast Montana has more cool-looking abandoned buildings than anywhere else I've been. I found this creepy cabin outside of Ekalaka.
    Creepy Old Cabin
  • Southeast Montana has more cool-looking abandoned buildings than anywhere else I've been. This old house outside of Ekalaka was leaning so much it seemed to defy gravity.
    Defying Gravity
  • I love all the abandoned structures found in Eastern Montana. I came across this one while storm chasing outside of Ekalaka. Mammatus clouds were boiling above.
    Broken Windows
  • In January I went out to capture one of my favorite photogenic trees late at night. It sits by itself in a field near a small abandoned house. Cassiopeia, one of the most recognizable constellations, is like a celestial clock. In 23 hours and 56 minutes it will make one rotation around the North Star. But unlike a clock, it spins counterclockwise. When closest to the horizon the 5 brightest stars make the shape of a W, but when it's highest overhead it looks like an M. From anywhere above 35°N, Cassiopeia is circumpolar. That means the constellation neither rises nor sets, always staying above the horizon. In order to get a sharper picture I shot a 12-minute exposure of the foreground, and the tree branches didn't even move an inch. Windless nights are quite rare during winter in Wyoming.
    Night On the Homestead
  • Two trees soak in the last sunlight of the day as the sun sets behind the Grand Tetons. This field is behind the Moulton Homestead.
    Teton Two
  • The horizontal cloud stretching out from the supercell is known as a beaver tail. It is formed from moist inflow winds feeding into the storm. The winds were very strong as you can see from all the dust picked up underneath. There was a tornado ongoing at this time which damaged 2 homesteads near the Nebraska/Wyoming border. But it wasn't visible from my location and I couldn't get any closer because there weren't any roads heading east.
    Beaver Tail