Photography
Related: About this forumFire Lookout Dawn - Bitterroot Range (looking east into northwestern Montana)

Idaho Panhandle - Labor Day 9/3/2024
©2024 Bo Zarts Studio
hlthe2b
(113,464 posts)Bo Zarts
(26,291 posts)I just haven't had the heart to replace him. He was the perfect fire lookout dog.

Nick watching for deer from the fire lookout tower in Oregon in 2009.
dameatball
(7,664 posts)hlthe2b
(113,464 posts)(now I know why the bear dared to come so relatively close)...
flying_wahini
(8,260 posts)When can you sleep?
Permanut
(8,231 posts)NJCher
(42,903 posts)How did you get that pic? Did you have to crawl up another mountain to take it?
Bo Zarts
(26,291 posts)A DJI Mini-3 PRO to be specific.
NJCher
(42,903 posts)but plenty of people would like to live in a glass house, but have no way to have privacy plus the glass house.
There are situations like this on the ground, but few and far between.
I had a friend who spent $40k on drapes for privacy for one glass wall on a house in the woods.
Anyway, lucky you, and I always enjoy your photographs. On this one I particularly liked the orange and yellow at the top and the gradation of the blues and greys of the mountain. Then the little glass house, all lit up. Very cozy.
Bo Zarts
(26,291 posts)The standard L-4 design for US Forest Service fire lookout live-in cabins, which specifies one 15'x15' "glass" room, goes way, way back. The glass .. while esthetically pleasing .. is to facilitate spotting forest fires .. nothing else. I have even worked in lookouts that are so old, and without remodeling, that they have "wavy" glass panes from the 1920s and 30s. And if someone can see in, even out in the wilderness, then it is totally their problem (in many more ways than one).