The Story Behind The Photo...
Have you ever walked a path so beautiful it felt like you were trespassing in a dream?
I stood on the bluff overlooking Yaquina Head, the wind whipping off the Pacific with the taste of salt and cold ocean spray. The sky was an impossible blue, dotted with clouds that looked like torn cotton. Below me, the ocean churned in deep, bruised violets and greens, crashing against the black basalt rocks that jutted out like the broken teeth of the earth.
This place is known for its ghosts. They say a young girl named Muriel vanished here a century ago, leaving only a pool of blood and a handkerchief, and that her spirit still walks the cliffs when the fog rolls in. But under the bright summer sun, the only spirits I felt were the ones living in the wildflowers. The hillside was a riot of color—purple fireweed and yellow sand verbena swaying in the coastal breeze, a soft, living quilt laid over the hard stone.
Photographing a lighthouse at midday is usually a mistake. The light is too harsh, the shadows too deep. But here, the contrast was the story. I wanted to capture the stark white tower standing defiant against the endless blue, a beacon of order in a world of wild, untamed nature. I framed the shot low, letting the purple blooms fill the foreground, leading the eye up the rugged spine of the headland to the lonely sentinel in the distance.
I didn’t capture a ghost that day, I captured a survivor. In that frame, the lighthouse isn’t just a building; it’s a promise. A promise that no matter how wild the storm or how deep the mystery, there is always a light standing watch, waiting to guide us home.