Kentucky’s Last Great Places

Most Kentuckians and visitors to the state are unaware of the Commonwealth’s unique biological heritage—much less that much of it is in danger of disappearing forever.

With over 100 glorious full-color photographs and insightful text, Kentucky’s Last Great Places highlights the incredible natural beauty found in the Commonwealth’s old-growth forests, prairies, wetlands, and other distinctive biological habitats. More than 3,000 vascular plants, 230 fish, 105 amphibians and reptiles, 350 birds, 75 mammals, and 12,000 insects call Kentucky home. Many of these species and their habitats are considered rare, threatened or endangered. Overall, less than one percent of Kentucky is classified ecologically as being in a “pre-European” condition that deserves significant protection.

Award-winning photographer and author Thomas G. Barnes combines his strikingly beautiful photographs with essays describing the splendor found in more than forty of Kentucky’s diverse natural preserves or ecological areas, including the old-growth Blanton Forest near Pine Mountain in Harlan County, Axe Lake Swamp in Ballard County near the Mississippi River, Red River Gorge, the Kentucky River Palisades, Mammoth Cave, and many others.

This spectacular oversized book provides an awareness of the biodiversity of Kentucky, what challenges there are to protecting its biological heritage, and how organizations such as The Nature Conservancy, Kentucky Nature Preserves Commission, the National Park Service, and others have protected and are continuing to protect the state’s unique biological legacy.

Kentucky’s Last Great Places is both a stunning collection of nature photographs and a means for increasing our understanding of the fragile beauty of Kentucky.


Kentucky’s Last Great Places

Start Taking Great Landscape Photographs

We’ve all been there–a beginning shutterbug, camera in hand and hopes high, staring over the precipice of the Grand Canyon, or up at the skyline of New York City–yet all you take home is some lousy rolls of hand-size fuzzy photos. It doesn’t have to be that way-an award-winning landscape photographer shows how to improve your techniques, one tip at a time, until you, too, produce photos worthy of a site’s grandeur. The secret is learning to see like your camera does, using your lenses and filters to make the most of light, focus, exposure, and choose just the right location and composition, as well as digital image processing and enhancement, to make Mother Nature your friend.


Start Taking Great Landscape Photographs

Creative Landscape Photography (Creative photography)

Illustrated throughout with images of international locations, this guide covers all scales of work from epic panoramas to intimate details of nature. The author starts by looking at basic photographic considerations: film, choice and exposure; composition; natural and artificial lighting; and night and low-light techniques. He then explores the creative considerations behind different subject areas: the wilderness; people in the landscape; man-made environments; close-up images of landscape; and a discussion on the often-overlooked aspects of landscape photography including story lines, informative versus aesthetic content, new locations and how to make the most of the unremarked. Benrie finally provides an overview of photographic equipment available, as well as digital options – the place of the computer in the landscape photographer’s repertoire plus electronic storage and distribution of images.


Creative Landscape Photography (Creative photography)