A view of a large mountain in the background

How to Submit Photographs to be Featured on MyEatonCanyon.com

MyEatonCanyon.com is meant to be a user-led Web site, and one way we do this is by encouraging visitors to submit their own photographs. This article was written to detail how to submit your photographs for our photo gallery page. 

First, there are several things we must go over. The photographs featured in our photo gallery are top-notch images. We won’t just choose anything. When submitting your photographs, please refer to this checklist to ensure your submission will be taken seriously by our team.

  1. Please ensure all photographs are of good quality and belong to you before submitting.
  2. Please ensure all photographs you submit are of Eaton Canyon. Anything that is taken in the canyon from the Equestrian Park to San Gabriel Peak is fair game. 
  3. Please do not send in as many photographs as possible. When submitting, choose about 4-6 pictures you like best. The more selective you are the more seriously we’ll take your submission.
  4. Try to take pictures of things other than the waterfall. We know the waterfall is beautiful, but we have lots of waterfall pictures already. There is so much more to Eaton Canyon!
  5. Try to avoid sending in selfies. We’re sure you are very pretty, but the purpose of the photo gallery is to showcase the natural beauty of Eaton Canyon.
  6. Don’t give us all your amazing pictures all at once. Spread them out a little bit over a few weeks. The photo gallery turns over with time. Even the most amazing photograph will be taken off eventually. If you spread out how frequently you send us pictures your images will be represented on the page for a much longer amount of time.
  7. We will take photographs from any year! If you’ve got pictures of the canyon from before 2000, we’d love to have them even if they aren’t of perfect quality.
  8. Not all photographs that pique our interest will be put in the photo gallery. Some pictures may have a practical use on other parts of the Web site. We’ll notify you if we’d like to use it elsewhere, such as in a page header or to illustrate an article.

Next, here is how you can submit your photographs: 

This explanation is for folks who don’t already know how shared albums in Google Photos work, so if you do, just make sure you do steps #1, #2 and #6.

  1. Users can upload photos to the “Submissions” album in Google Photos here. Upon visiting that link, click the blue “Join” button just below the header. Go back into Google Photos where all of your pictures are located.
  2. Add your photographer credit line. This is done for each photo you plan to submit. Use the circled “i” (for Info), then add your photo credit in the Description box. Easy peazy! Please use the following pattern for the credit, inserting your name and the correct copyright year for the image… Photo: © Your Name 2023
  3. Select the photographs of Eaton Canyon you like best by hovering over the first photo, selecting the check mark on the top left of the photo, and then selecting other photographs you also like.
  4. Once you have selected a bunch of the photos you want to share with us, tap the “+” icon on the top right of your computer screen. Select “New Album” and create a new album of your photographs. Name it whatever you wish. After naming it, select the check mark on the top left of your screen to finish creating this new album.
  5. Conduct a quality check of the photos you selected. Remove any blurry ones, pictures with people inadvertently photobombing you, or duplicates. You can remove photos by selecting each one just like before, selecting the three dots on the top right of your screen, and selecting “Remove from Album.” This does not delete the photograph, it only removes it from the album you just created.
  6. Once you have a set of 4-6 quality photos you really like, select all of them and again press the “+” icon on the top right of your screen. This time, however, select “Shared Album.” A pop-up will appear with all group photo albums you are a part of. Had you completed step #1, one of them should be called “My Eaton Canyon Photos Submission.” Select that album.  
  7. You’re done! You photographs have been added to an album for us to view. If we really like your photo, we will put it on the photo gallery on our Web site. If the photo has a practical use elsewhere on the Web site, we may email you notifying you this is what we would like to do.
  8. We will clear images out the submissions album as frequently as possible. Unfortunately, if you don’t see your photo on the album anymore and it isn’t on the Web site, that means it didn’t quite make the quality cut we’re looking for.

Happy photographing!

Here are three examples of photographs that would probably not be featured: 

Here are three examples of photographs that would likely be featured:


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Midwick gate with a pole in the center.

Midwick Gate Pole Poll Results

The community has spoken, and the wisdom of crowds works magic yet again. The results of our “Guess the Purpose” January poll about the Midwick gate pole are in.

Yes, 80 percent correctly guessed that the pole installed smack in the middle of the gate once featured a turnstile. We don’t have a photo of the turnstile mechanism in our archives, so if you have a picture please forward it to us for publication at [email protected].

Several clever folks reckoned the pole once held a fire department sign with a code number. That was an excellent guess, as there was signage of that nature at some Eaton Canyon trailheads to inform firefighters about the type of terrain they would encounter ahead.

Nobody was fooled that the pole was installed to prevent motorcycles from zooming down the canyon’s trails. As an aside, even bicycle riding is not allowed on the hiking trails within the Eaton Canyon Natural Area administered by the Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation. However, trail bikes are allowed within the Angeles National Forest portion of the canyon. If you park in the lot near the Nature Center or in the Equestrian Park overflow lot, you should always walk your bike until reaching the park boundary.

Photo: © Edgar McGregor


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A bobcat that is standing in the grass

Bobcat Encounter

This is a short story of a wonderful encounter I had recently with a Bobcat in a quiet corner of Eaton Canyon.

I spend a good deal of time traipsing around natural areas observing and photographing plants and wildlife, armed with a long telephoto lens for capturing images of birds, butterflies, and mammals. I have taken to carrying a second camera body set up for taking super close-up shots (aka “macro-photography”) of small things such as insects, spiders, flowers, and fungi. Living close by, many of my photo adventures are in Eaton Canyon. When on the prowl, I generally move very slowly, observing my surroundings very closely. It’s incredible what you see when you stop and look. At times, I will simply sit quietly somewhere off the beaten path, trying to blend in and have the birds and other animals forget about my intrusion into their realm.

Earlier this month (January 17, 2023, to be exact), I was back in Coyote Canyon, photographing insects and spiders. The area is a fairly open grassy area with a smattering of Coast Live Oaks (Quercus agrifolia). Due to the recent rains, the grass was tall and lush (likely an introduced species). There were a number of dead/down Oak trees and large branches forming snags that were poking up here and there from the grass.

I’d set my rather cumbersome bird/wildlife camera setup on a log while I looked for insects and spiders in and around a couple of dead oak snags. I’d found and was photographing a Common Desert Centipede (Scolopendra polymorpha) and a very tiny Ribbon Jumping Spider (Metacyrba taeniola) when I suddenly heard an odd sound, kind of a low howl(ish) groaning sound. Looking in that direction, I saw what appeared to be a Bobcat (Lynx rufus) sitting up in the grass about 30 yards away from me. Without my binoculars or birding lens, I couldn’t be sure it wasn’t just another stump or piece of branch. Looking up, I saw that I’d wandered about 20′ from my camera with the long lens!

I moved slowly toward my camera, purposefully not looking in the direction of the suspected Bobcat (I’ve learned that birds and animals are more at ease if you don’t look directly at them). Sure enough, I once I reached my camera with my 600mm lens I confirmed that it was indeed a Bobcat. I began taking photos, fully expecting the cat to move off once he learned I’d discovered him. To my surprise, he didn’t!

Now, I’ve seen Bobcats before, and a few times in Eaton Canyon, but never have I had one be so calm and accepting of my presence. In hindsight, I realized that he certainly saw me well before I saw him, and as I was moving slowly and not paying the slightest attention to him at first, he likely determined that I was not a threat – perhaps he considered me a fellow forager in his world.

As I photographed him (nearly 300 shots in total), I observed him stalking some sort of rodents in the grass – very likely the ubiquitous Botta’s pocket gopher (Thomomys bottae). He crouched low to the ground, eyes focused forward on something or some movement invisible to me, moving imperceptibly forward, he suddenly pounced! But without luck. After this, he sat upright, alternately looking at me and away, into the tall grass, as he continued to hunt for breakfast.

This went on for quite a while. At one point, I moved closer to him in a sideways fashion, again averting my eyes as I moved. He in turn moved closer to me, once again stalking some unseen-by-me prey in the grass. At one point, he moved within ten yards of me, but after another failed stalk, turned and walked slowly away, taking time here and there to sit, undoubtedly still on the lookout for signs of rodents.

After about 20 minutes, this wonderful encounter ended much as it began as he calmly went his way and I went mine. I watched this beautiful animal stroll down into and across Coyote Canyon, and ultimately out of sight into the chaparral.

Photography © Tom Mills 2023


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