Mt. Rainier, on an overcast day. I like the way the intervening mountain range is somewhat hazy, and Rainier is even more hazy, but the details are All There™.
Yes, I still haven’t seen cows at this spot in Enumclaw. Although the base of the mountain is not visible from that location, I like the composition, and the layers near to far. The slightly brighter layer of cloud seems to deflect over Mt. Rainer moving from left (north) to right (south). That is quite possibly what is happening; we see it fairly often.
The above image is a small part of a much larger panorama:
This panorama of Mt. Rainier spans three 100-megapixel photos. Printed out at high resolution, it would be quite nicely detailed at 7-10 feet wide.
Technical info: This is made of three shots. I carefully leveled the tripod so I could swing the head from side to side without any tilt. This is the eastern horizon for most of the communities east of the mountain.
Shot with the 150mm f/2.8 lens on the Phase One XF camera. Shot at ISO 400, 1/8000th of a second and f11. That combination gives me really good depth of field, and avoids any issues with vegetation swaying in the wind, cloud movement, etc. If there had been cows, they would have been frozen in their tracks at that shutter speed. Any smaller aperture than f/11 and I would have lost some detail. I don’t normally shoot at high ISO, but…I thought I’d try it out and Capture One, my image editing software, handled that well.