This is a second image in the saguaro cactus flower series. This image is a high resolution, focus-stacked 5-image photograph created with a Nikon D850 camera, Zeiss Milvus f/2 100mm macro lens, and a Manfrotto carbon fiber tripod with Manfrotto 410 tripod head. The silky-white flowers and buds are found on the giant saguaro (sah-wah-roh) cactus. With its outstretched arms, this cactus has long been called the icon of the American West. It grows only in the Sonoran Desert in southwestern United States and northern Mexico. There are multiple challenges in photographing these flowers: the flowers bloom late at night and are usually dead or wilted by the afternoon; they bloom only for a few weeks in spring; and they primarily bloom only at the ends of the arms or at the very top of the cactus, which usually places the flowers out of reach, 10-40 feet above ground level. I photograph the flowers at first light, usually between 4:30 and 5:30 am, well before sunrise when the light is soft and even and the flowers are still fresh. Finding saguaro cactuses with "low hanging" arms that may possibly display photographic-worthy flowers the next morning is how I spend most of my sunlight hours in the Sonoran Desert. The wonderful design of this set of flowers, nestled in an arrangement of buds, made the hours of searching worthwhile.
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Black and white of both photos is really nice. Love it.