Photographer’s Note
The Old Point Loma Lighthouse stood watch over the entrance to San Diego Bay for 36 years. At dusk on November 15, 1855 the light keeper climbed the winding stairs and lit the light for the first time. What seemed to be a good location 422 feet above sea level, however, had a serious flaw. Fog and low clouds often obscured the light. On March 23, 1891 the light was extinguished and the keeper moved to a new lighthouse location closer to the water at the tip of the Point.
Today the Old Point Loma Light House still stands watch over San Diego, sentinel to a vanished past. The National Park Service has refurbished the interior to its historic 1880’s appearance -- a reminder of a bygone era. Ranger-led talks, displays and brochures are available to explain the lighthouses interesting past.
Quoted from the National Park Service web site
plimrn has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
plimrn
(19664) 2008-01-31 11:39
Hi Walter,
The color and detail is impeccable in your view of this classic lighthgouse.
I live in San Diego much of the time as well. I'm just trying to learn to use my D300 too. Lots of new options!! Xuaxo pointed me to your site with Winter Storm which is truly awesome But I thought I'd look for a D300 photo.
Pat
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Walter Koenig (Amoxtli)
(93) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2008-01-19
- Categories: Architecture
- Camera: Nikon D300, 12-24mm f/4 Tokina AT-X 124 AF Pro DX
- Exposure: f/14.0, 1/800 seconds
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2008-01-26 8:56








