We had planned to do some climbing for a few days, using the meadows in Garnet Canyon as our basecamp, but the late summer weather in the Tetons changed our plans. Instead, we decided to backpack to Alaska Basin, located in the Jedediah Smith Wilderness of the Caribou-Targhee National Forest. Since Alaska Basin is not located within the boundaries of Grand Teton National Park, we wouldn't need a permit to stay there.
I left the 4x5 at home and instead brought along my Mamiya 7, a medium format rangefinder that produces a 6x7 cm negative. Weighing only 2 pounds, with another 2 for my tripod, I was saving roughly 15 pounds by not carrying my 4x5 system. Though smaller than a 4x5 negative, the 6x7 cm format is an excellent compromise between weight and quality.
Hiking throughout the day under heavily overcast skies, the cloud cover finally dissipated just as the sun was setting. Sunset on Buck Mountain reveals Buck Mountain (11,938 ft, in Grand Teton National Park) and some of the many small ponds in Alaska Basin.




