I wonder what you might have gotten by using a reflector or turned more toward the sun? This sunlight is very strong, so you might even need to find some open shade on a day like that.
Good poses, good frame.
Thanks Designer, great catch and I definitely agree, some fill light would have been appropriate here. This reshoot was more of a quick test to see if a different lens would have given noticibly different results, which it did. It was pretty cold out that day and my family already spent the prior weekend hiking to different locations for pictures, so I really only had about 5 minutes to take these. I will definitely consider throwing a reflector in the bag next time!
There's one thing that I hate to bring up about this particular photo (and potentially an unlimited number of others similar to it), because once you see it in a photo you've made, you can never again un-see it! And that is backlighted ears...which in this case are not too distracting. At times, in this type of back-lighting with sun-light (not sky-light, not strobe light, not fill-light usually), the rays from the sun can transilluminate the ears, and cause a pink to reddish coloration. On some people, this can be very noticeable. I never really used to see this, but some years ago, I started striving to avoid allowing strong, direct sun to hit the ears in such a way that they could be transilluminated; sky-light as backlighting will not cause this ear glow, but the light from the sun itself often causes it. Designer above references the rim-lighting as being stronger than the frontal lighting, and while that's not necessarily a bad thing, I think it always pays to make sure that the ears are not overly lit-up. In this case, your ears are small and not very prominent overall in the shot; had the pose been different, or this just a solo photo of you, the ear issue might have developed into a distraction.