Now you can explore the wild mountains and valleys of the Sierra Nevada from your desk. Beautiful as well as useful, each month of the Sierra Nevada Desk Calendar includes a grid for notes, lists holidays, and shows the preceding and following months. The easel-style stand is attractively finished, and calendar pages are easy to turn on the wire binding. Celebrate the Sierra Nevada wilderness at your desk all through 2021.
Sierra Nevada Desk Calendar features: Elegantly finished, cloth-wrapped easel | Quality 200gsm art paper | Monthly calendar with boxes for quick notes | Displays previous and following months | 6- by 9-inch page size | Stands in only 2 by 6 inches of space | Move it anywhere; easy to see on your desk
Locations pictured in the 2021 edition include:
• Fresh snow on the sages and the Eastern Sierra Mountains, Inyo National Forest
• Giant Sequoia Trees, Sequoia National Park, on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada
• Eastern Sierra mountains, reflection in the Mammoth Lakes Basin
• Nevada Falls, Yosemite National Park
• Spring runoff, Rock Creek, Inyo National Forest
• Sunset over the Upper Kern Basin, High Sierra Nevada Wilderness, Sequoia National Park
• Rose Lake on the west side of the High Sierra Nevada, John Muir Wilderness
• From the west side of the Sierra, a view of Mount Whitney from Crabtree Meadow, Sequoia National Park
• Storm brewing over Bubbs Creek Canyon, Kings Canyon National Park
• Fall colored aspen leaves swirling in the stream, Inyo National Forest
• Autumn aspen grove in the Toiyabe National Forest, Mono County
• Rime ice coats the pine trees at Mammoth Mountain Ski Resort
About the Eastern Sierra
Extending some 400 miles north to south, the Eastern Sierra mountain range includes some of America’s most remarkable landscapes. Lying mostly in California with a small portion in Nevada, the Sierra Nevada is home to three national parks: Yosemite, Sequoia, and Kings Canyon; 20 wilderness areas; and two monuments. Other notable Sierra features include Lake Tahoe, the largest alpine lake in North America, and 14,505-foot Mount Whitney, the highest point in the contiguous United States.
About the Photographer
A resident of the Eastern Sierra since 1982, Londie has explored and photographed the Sierra Nevada backcountry by foot and on horseback for weeks at a time. On one such adventure Londie led a photo expedition, along with a cowboy packer leading five mules carrying camera equipment and household essentials. For two months they rode more than 250 miles across the rugged Sierra Nevada on the John Muir Trail.In addition to photographs from the Sierra Nevada, Londie is recognized for a variety of subjects photographed throughout the United States and abroad. Her images have appeared in national magazines, books, and in hundreds of calendars.
© 2020 Tide-mark Press