El Yunque – The Rainforest
Expedition Overview
El Yunque is the only tropical rainforest in the United States National Forest system, receiving between 100 and 240 inches of rain annually depending on elevation. The cloud forest at the summit sits above 3,500 feet where trade clouds move through the sierra palm canopy at eye level. The waterfalls — La Mina, La Coca, Juan Diego — run year-round from highland streams, their volumes shifting dramatically by the hour. Micro-habitats change every hundred meters of elevation: the dense understory of the tabonuco zone at 500 feet is a completely different photographic world from the open sierra palm forest at 2,500 feet.
José J. Rivera-Negrón approaches El Yunque without the La Mina Falls tourist shot — arriving 45 minutes before the first tour group, then climbing past the established viewpoints to find what the forest looks like where most visitors never reach. Rain is treated as part of the work, not an obstacle to it.
Expedition Itinerary
Day 1: La Mina — Water and Light in the Lower Forest
The day begins at 6am at the forest entrance while morning mist still fills the lower tabonuco zone. La Mina Falls receives direct light for approximately 90 minutes in early morning — the entire session is timed to that window. After the waterfall work, macro photography begins in the understory, where moisture-covered bromeliads, heliconia, and endemic coquí tree frogs offer compositions measured in centimeters. Rain is near-certain by afternoon and should be anticipated.
The Goal of the Day: Use a 2-to-8-second exposure to render La Mina Falls as silk while keeping the surrounding volcanic rock fully sharp — find the exact shutter speed that creates motion without destroying texture.
Day 2: Cloud Forest Summit — Long Exposure and Atmosphere
The upper El Yunque trail reaches the cloud forest at 3,500 feet, where trade clouds move through the sierra palm zone at walking speed. Sessions alternate between landscape work in clearing weather and intimate macro work during full cloud immersion. The late afternoon from the observation tower catches the moment when cloud cover pulls back and the Atlantic appears 18 miles north — a 10-to-20-minute window that arrives unpredictably and differently each day.
The Goal of the Day: Photograph a moving cloud not as sky but as atmosphere moving through trees — 30-second exposure, tree trunks sharp, the cloud itself rendered as pure motion.
Book Your Expedition
Note: Final price may vary based on specific expedition details and customizations.
Expedition Leaders
José J. Rivera-Negrón
Expedition Leader & Documentary Photographer
José J. Rivera-Negrón is a Puerto Rican photographer whose work centers on resilience, human connection, and the documentary truth of places rarely photographed well. Born in Puerto Rico, his path to photography came through adversity — years that shaped fundamentally how he looks at light, at faces, and at the stories that ordinary streets contain. He shoots with the attention of someone who understands what it means to see a place clearly for the first time. A Light & Composition award-winning photographer with over 49 award recognitions including 4 Photo of the Month wins, he leads expeditions across Puerto Rico with the intimate local knowledge of someone who grew up on the island — knowing which beach is deserted at 5am, which street corner catches the right light, and which people will let you photograph them honestly.
What to Bring
Macro lens (90–105mm) for understory work. Wide-angle zoom (16–35mm) for waterfall and forest compositions. 10-stop ND filter for waterfall long exposures. Sturdy tripod with good legs — terrain is uneven and wet. Waterproof camera cover or rain sleeve. Water shoes or trail shoes with aggressive grip. Microfiber cloths for lens condensation. Extra batteries — high humidity drains them faster than expected.


