Action Photo Tours

Action Photo Tours We specialize in small group photo tours and workshops off-the-beaten path. Important Note: The photos shown in social media are part of our personal portfolio.

Some locations shown are not places where we are permitted to guide. Visit our website to learn where we can take you. At Action Photo Tours, we strive to give each participant the most educational and enjoyable experience possible. To that end, we keep group sizes small. In addition, we offer competitive pricing, great destinations, and plenty of adventure to go around! Book a trip with us and learn how to use your camera like a pro.

05/29/2026

Imagine towering cottonwood trees glowing with brilliant yellow leaves. Now picture those golden trees reflected in floodwaters spread across the dunes. It’s a scene so beautiful it feels almost unreal—a true paradise found. And the best news? We’re heading back in October 2027 to photograph this spectacular landscape at the height of its fall colors.

Raise your hand if you want to know the details! ✋

I’m heading back to one of my favorite places — the Southwest.Front of mind for me is the ongoing drought across Utah an...
05/27/2026

I’m heading back to one of my favorite places — the Southwest.

Front of mind for me is the ongoing drought across Utah and the Colorado River Basin. Federal projections this spring warned that inflow into Lake Powell could be among the lowest on record, and emergency measures have been taken in recent years to protect water levels and hydropower generation at Glen Canyon Dam.

Lake Powell remains breathtakingly beautiful, but it is also a visible reminder of how fragile water is in the desert.

As photographers, we often chase the beauty of these places — the glow of sandstone at sunset, the quiet of the canyons, the Milky Way stretching across the night sky. But standing above Lake Powell, it’s impossible not to think about the changes happening in real time: receding shorelines, exposed rock, and a landscape being reshaped by drought, demand, and climate.

I hope images like these inspire people not only to appreciate the Southwest, but also to care deeply about its future. The desert has always been a place of extremes, but water is what makes life here possible.

I just finished teaching a course on Night Photography in Spain. Being back under dark skies has reminded me just how mu...
05/24/2026

I just finished teaching a course on Night Photography in Spain. Being back under dark skies has reminded me just how much I love night photography.

In years past, I spent nearly all of my springs in the Southwest, taking full advantage of the incredibly dark, clear skies that make this region so special. There’s something magical about those long nights—watching the Milky Way rise, waiting for the perfect alignment, and seeing the desert landscape slowly come alive under the stars. A couple of years ago, we were even danced with Lady Aurora in New Mexico!

I’m sharing three Milky Way timelapses from some of those beautiful, sleepless nights. Night photography requires patience, planning, and a willingness to stay out when most people are sound asleep—but the rewards are always worth it.

ONE spot open for Moab Monsoon!  Aug. 7-11, 2026. August is one of the most exciting times to photograph the desert Sout...
05/22/2026

ONE spot open for Moab Monsoon! Aug. 7-11, 2026.

August is one of the most exciting times to photograph the desert Southwest, and we’re ready to take full advantage of it. When monsoon storms roll in, the red rock landscapes around Moab can come alive with dramatic clouds, storm light, rainbows, reflections, and even lightning.

We’ll get off the beaten path to photograph hidden gems outside the national parks, while still including a few classic Moab-area locations. So, get ready for huge viewpoints, arches, rock formations, reflecting pools, and plenty of opportunities to chase the best light and weather.

05/22/2026

Don't forget about timelapse!

Timelapse photography has a really cool way of showing the heartbeat of a place. Recently, I shared a few timelapses of the Shanghai skyline at night, and what stood out to me most was how clearly they captured the feeling that this city truly never sleeps. Once the sun goes down, Shanghai doesn’t quiet down — it wakes up. Lights start glowing, traffic moves like streams of color, clouds drift quickly overhead, and the whole skyline feels alive with energy.

That’s one of the best things about timelapse photography: it lets us notice movement, change, and life in ways we normally miss in real time. Timelapse also has a way of turning time into something emotional and cinematic. It tells a story. It reveals patterns, energy, and transitions that usually slip past unnoticed. Whether it’s stars moving across the night sky, fog pouring through mountain valleys, or the nonstop rhythm of a city street, timelapse gives us a fresh way to look at the world around us.
Enjoy a few of the timelapses I’ve made over the years — each one capturing not just a scene, but the energy, rhythm, and feeling of time passing through it.

05/18/2026

What’s it like to be in a city that doesn’t sleep?

We found drone nirvana!This is one of those places where every flight feels like a discovery. From high above, the lands...
05/09/2026

We found drone nirvana!

This is one of those places where every flight feels like a discovery. From high above, the landscape turns into a wild canvas of color, texture, patterns, and impossible geology—painted mountains, abstract mineral formations, cracked earth, turquoise pools, and endless sculpted badlands.

For those who love aerial photography, this workshop is something special. The variety is incredible, and the creative possibilities are endless. We currently have one opening for our December 2026 Argentina workshop. If aerial photography is your thing, this is an adventure that belongs very high on your list.

I was recently back in Patagonia, and what an incredible place to photograph.Of course, Patagonia is famous for its gran...
05/07/2026

I was recently back in Patagonia, and what an incredible place to photograph.

Of course, Patagonia is famous for its grand landscapes—the jagged peaks, turquoise lakes, dramatic skies, and those beautiful fall colors that light up the hillsides. I always love creating the classic images that showcase the scale and beauty of this region.

But on this trip, I also spent time looking for the lesser-seen scenes—the quieter moments, the wildlife encounters, and the fleeting bits of atmosphere that often tell just as much of the story.

One of the highlights was having the good fortune to photograph a white-throated caracara in flight. Of the four types of caracara found in the region, this is the rarest, making the encounter even more special. Capturing it against the warm Patagonian backdrop was one of those unexpected moments that made the trip truly memorable.

There’s something so elegant about a giraffe standing tall on the open African savannah. At first glance, it’s all about...
05/05/2026

There’s something so elegant about a giraffe standing tall on the open African savannah. At first glance, it’s all about that graceful silhouette against a fiery sky. But sometimes the magic is in the tiny details…. In the first image, did you spot the bird flying overhead? What details in these images do you notice the most?

Is it always better to see the mountain tops?  Sometimes the mystery is stronger when you don’t.  Here are a few dramati...
05/03/2026

Is it always better to see the mountain tops? Sometimes the mystery is stronger when you don’t. Here are a few dramatic examples from my recent Patagonia adventure.

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48 N 200 W
Kanab, UT
84741

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