I make my blog as easy on myself as possible.
I like my new boondocking spot better than my first one, but the view is pretty much the same as before, which is lots of pine trees, and if I want to take a picture of a nice view, I have to zoom my camera in between the trees to see what's in the distance. This really limits my picture-taking abilities, in less I go somewhere, and going somewhere is expensive with diesel prices hovering around six dollars a gallon.
Fortunately, I've still got some pictures of my last Arizona trust lands location that I haven't shown yet, so I can always put those on my blog. I saved myself a lot of stress and effort by limiting the number of pictures I put on my blog. Before, if I took six pictures that day, I would put all of them on my blog that afternoon, and that would put stress on me to find pictures for tomorrow's blog. But now I can usually go for a walk and come back with several days' worth of pictures by limiting how many pictures I put on my blog each day.
Here's a little inside baseball for anyone interested.... When I talk about taking six pictures during the day, I'm talking about six pictures that were good enough to put on the blog. I probably took 20 or 30 pictures, and I'm lucky to get half of them that aren't embarrassing, and the sunset and sunrise pictures are the worst of all. I'm lucky to get 1 out of 10 pictures of those that I can use.
But despite all my mistakes, I still enjoy walking around with a camera in my hand. After all, it is a hobby, and hobbies are supposed to be fun, and it is fun for me until I open up the pictures on the computer and see the devastation my camera has wrought.
Theboondork
If you're a boondocker, sharing your boondocking spot with cattle is just a way of life.
I have to zoom in through the trees to get a picture of anything besides trees.
The clouds help a lot in choosing a picture to take, since they rise above the trees.