Skagit Valley Tulip Photo Tours

Skagit Tulip Festival Photography Tours

Harvesting Tulips at Sunrise

Harvesting Tulips at Sunrise

Each spring the flats of Skagit Valley are alive with the vibrant, multi-colored tapestry of tulips and daffodils.  There is really nothing to compare to the sight of (seemingly) endless fields of tulips under the wonderful skies of Skagit County during the Skagit Valley Tulip Festival.

Tulip – Daffodil Season starts at the end of March and ends, of course it’s all dependent upon the weather really. The general Bloom Schedule is Daffodils first starting in late March and Tulips starting in early April. Each year is a little different, some years we’ve had a late snow, other years were very wet, delaying the starting dates a bit.

The fields of flowers are spread out over a large area encompassing parts of the towns of La Conner and Mount Vernon, Washington. Tulip and Daffodil fields are rotated regularly and each year the precise location of the flowery fields changes.

There are two tulip festival ‘tourist centers’: Rozengaarde and Tulip Town. Both of these provide tons of free parking and have both beautiful manicured multi-colored tulip beds (complete with wind mills, ponds and other back drops) as well as huge fields of tulips to wander in. Each also has a huge shop where you can purchase any and all things tulip related: postcards, prints (both large and small) cups, mugs, placemats, and literally hundreds of wonderful gifts. And of course you can always get bundles of freshly cut tulips, daffodils and Irises as well as buy bulbs for planting!

Here is a gallery of Andy Porter’s Tulip and Daffodil Images available for purchase online!

In addition to these two main hubs of tourist activity, the tulip growers also have huge fields here and there through the nearby area, like bright quilt squares. The growers provide a Bloom Map each year showing the locations of these fields, which flowers are growing there, and updates the map regularly so that anyone can see which fields are blooming.

Andy Porter Guided Tulip Festival Photography Tours

Living here in Skagit Valley not far from Tulip Heaven I am able to visit the tulip fields every day.

IMG_6122

Morning Tulip Tour Image

As tulip season gets started I head out to scout the new year’s tulip and daffodil field locations and plan where are the best spots (and times, mornings or evenings) for capturing fabulous images.

The best time of day to visit the tulip fields is early morning or late afternoon. The low light and clouds offer some incredible back drops for the flowers.

The best days to visit are Monday through Friday to avoid the throngs of people. On Tulip Festival Weekends after 10am, the entire tulip area is mired in a horrible traffic snarl. Weekends between 9am and 5pm are times to avoid the tulip fields, unless you enjoy traffic!

Evening – Sunset Tulip Tour

Pink Tulips at Sunset

Pink Tulips at Sunset

This tour is available Monday through Friday, every week that the flowers are blooming. The tour starts at 3pm and ends at 10pm. (Note: the times and itinerary are always up for change, depending on your preferences!)

Itinerary:

3:00 – Meet at Skagit Food Coop, relax, discuss photo techniques.

3:30 – Begin our photo tour at either of the two main Tulip Tourist centers (Optional)

5:00 – Drive out to several of the year’s best locations to get great evening shots of the flowers at sunset.

8:30/9:00 – Head out for a bite to eat and a review of images and tips on editing.

Cost: $150 per person            Note:  Each tour is limited to no more than 5 people

Early Morning – Sunrise Tulip Tour

This tour is available every day, 7 days a week, every week that the flowers are blooming. The tour starts at 5am and ends at 10am. (Note: the times and itinerary are always up for change, depending on your preferences!)

Itinerary:

5:00 am – Meet at Starbucks for coffee/tea and to discuss photo techniques.

6:00 am –  Drive to several of the year’s best locations to get great morning shots of the flowers at sunrise.

9:00 am – Head out for a bite to eat and a review of images and tips on editing.

Cost: $150 per person            Note:  Each tour is limited to no more than 5 people

Tulip Festival Photography Tours Planning

Yellows at Sunset

Yellows at Sunset

Weather

Skagit Valley Weather in the spring is…unpredictable. We can have snow, rain and sun, all in the same afternoon! Some days are gray and overcast, others with totally blue skies, but most often we will have a mix, throughout the day of clouds and sky. Rain is common. I have often seen days where it rained hard all day long, and in the late afternoon partially cleared into the most fantastic skies.

What to bring

  • Camera, lenses, filters, a tripod, extra batteries and memory cards.
  • Water, snacks and any other food/beverages.

What to wear

Plan to get dirty and muddy! The tulip fields are most always moist and often very wet. Wear pants and shoes that you are happy if they are covered in mud! Bring layers of clothing, sunrise and sunset can get cool quickly. Don’t forget a hat and gloves!

If you would like to sign up for a Skagit Valley Tulip Photo Tour, follow this link.  

Feel free to call or email with ANY questions. 360-809-0661 andyporterphotography@gmail.com

Sunset over the Skagit River

Bridge over Skagit River

Bridge over Skagit River

Getting out to capture cool pics is about cloud watching. Days when its clear or overcast lack interest for me. The trick is that you need to pay attention! I have seen many days here in Skagit Valley when it poured rain all day and was miserable, only to partially clear in the late afternoon/early evening and produce some of the best skies ever. Today for example the sky was completely clear all day, but late in the afternoon the clouds appeared and we had a magnificent sunset. I was rather late getting out with the camera and so opted for a spot about 5 minutes drive from my house: The Highway 9 bridge over the Skagit River. I shot with a fast shutter speed to compensate for all the shakin’ goin’ on from the traffic over the bridge. This produced some interesting lines from the currents in the water.
Skagit River at Sunset

Skagit River at Sunset

Barn on Fir Island

Another day of mild winter temps and beautiful afternoon skies invited me back out for another visit to Fir Island. My attention was drawn to this huge barn. All the recent rain provided plenty of mirror space.

Barn along Fir Island Road, Skagit Valley

Barn along Fir Island Road, Skagit Valley

Barn along Fir Island Road, Skagit Valley

Barn along Fir Island Road, Skagit Valley

Barn along Fir Island Road, Skagit Valley

Barn along Fir Island Road, Skagit Valley

Fir Island also provides a winter home to snow geese!

Snow Geese on Fir Island, Skagit Valley

Snow Geese on Fir Island, Skagit Valley

Padilla Bay: A Photo Album

The Padilla Bay Estuary is a place to experience sky and water, clouds and colors. There is an old barn with a dock, on the water asking to have its image captured. Remnants of rusted equipment are strewn along the shore. Birds of all types visit, and the clouds grace the sky with shapes and colors.
Here is a series of images from the last years visits.
1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

17

barn and water 1m

frozen bay 2

frozen bay em

padilla 4m

padilla barn 2m

padilla barn 6 m

Padilla Bay at Sunset

Padilla Bay

Padilla Dec 1

padilla tree 2m

PB 6

pb1

My Favorite Images of 2014, Part 3

Here is the final (for now!) installment of my favorite images from this year. Thank you for following and Merry Christmas, Happy New Years and happy shooting!

Spider Meadows, Glacier Peak Wilderness

Spider Meadows, Glacier Peak Wilderness

Skagit Barn

Skagit Barn

Stars at the Diablo Overlook, North Cascades National Park

Stars at the Diablo Overlook, North Cascades National Park

Left Fork Canyon, Zion National Park, Utah

Left Fork Canyon, Zion National Park, Utah

Palouse Falls State Park

Palouse Falls State Park

Upper Lyman Lake, Glacier Peak Wilderness

Upper Lyman Lake, Glacier Peak Wilderness

Camped in the Glacier Peak Wilderness

Camped in the Glacier Peak Wilderness

Wheat Field at Sunset

Wheat Field at Sunset

Prusik Peak, Alpine Lakes Wilderness

Prusik Peak, Alpine Lakes Wilderness

Samish River

Samish River

Milky Way over Skagit Valley

Milky Way over Skagit Valley

Tulips in Skagit Valley

I have captured many images of tulips here in Skagit Valley. I generally make more than a dozen trips each year to the tulip fields in April.
This is one of my favorite images.

Red Tulips in Skagit Valley

Red Tulips in Skagit Valley

Fall at the Skagit Valley

Skagit Valley is in Northwestern Washington State, nestled between the North Cascades Range and the Pacific Ocean. This view is facing up valley.

Skagit Valley Fall Sunset

Skagit Valley Fall Sunset

Looking up at the Overlook

Last two nights and two sets of photos, first on Friday night, Sept. 19th, at the Diablo Lake Overlook, on the North Cascades Highway…

Milky Way over Colonial and Pyramid Peaks

Milky Way over Colonial and Pyramid Peaks

Starry night over Diablo Dam

Starry night over Diablo Dam

and then on Saturday night at the Samish Overlook near Blanchard Mountain.

Skagit Valley, Northern Hemisphere, Planet Earth, in the outer rim of the Milky Way Galaxy

Skagit Valley, Northern Hemisphere, Planet Earth, in the outer rim of the Milky Way Galaxy


We don’t often get the confluence ot no moon and clear skies here in Western Washington so I am counting my blessings!

Padilla Bay: Barn and Tree, Water and Sky

The Padilla Bay Estuary offers some wonderful opportunities for imaging. The pathway leads through an open scene of grasses, water and several lone trees…
Padilla Bay
padilla tree 2m
Padilla Bay

The abandoned barn and old, rusted equipment provide alluring back drops…
Padilla Bay

Padilla Bay

Padilla Bay

As the sun goes down it all glows with colors.
Padilla Bay

Padilla Bay

Padilla Bay

Padilla Bay

Soon the colors change from blues to reds…
Padilla Bay

Padilla Bay

The panoramas are endless…
Padilla Bay Panorama

First Daffodils of 2014

Skagit Valley Daffodils
These images were taken at sunrise, on March 13th, 2014!

Skagit Valley is famous for tulips in the spring. And daffodils! Each year the annual Skagit Valley Tulip Festival harkens the arrival of spring to the Pacific Northwest.
Skagit Valley Daffodils
There are hundreds of acres of tulips and daffodils. If you want to visit, here is a link to the Bloom Map.

Daffodils bloom first, there three large fields alight now, with more to come. The arrival of the tulips generally happens in the first week of April, but it always depends on how many sunny days we get!
Skagit Valley Daffodils