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Monday, December 31, 2012

My Favourite 12 Photos of 2012

In keeping with my decades old tradition of selecting my favourite photos of the past year that I started last year here are my 2012 selections.

Before I started looking at this years photos I thought to myself that this year was not one of my best photographically.  Our travels this year were not as extensive as in past years and indeed, even our annual vacation was more family orientated than photography centred.

As I began to go through my photos by month I quickly realized that perhaps the year was not so bad.

We had in the late winter a terrific day with the Eagles up in the Comox area.  It certainly seems that each year there is at least one Eagle in my favourite photo list.  This particular shot is one of my favourites because finding Eagles on the ground- and getting close enough for a good shot- has always proved challenging to me.  This juvenile was just taking off and the sand is still falling from its talons.


On another birding trip up-Island I found this Belted Kingfisher.  Another challenging bird to photograph because they are very skittish and in fact, I think they tease photographers by allowing you to think you can get close and then they fly off just as you raise the camera.  Even their call sounds more like they're laughing at you!



During spring break we drove north to the Hazeltons to visit our new granddaughter.  March is too early for most wildlife but we did see many Coyotes way out in the fields.  We also had an incredible experience with a Canadian Lynx, my first ever sighting of these magnificent cats.  Unfortunately we were not in a position to photograph it so we just enjoyed our all to quick look at it.

The Hazeltons have a rich native culture which I always enjoy.  Original, historic totems can be found throughout the area.  This is one of my favourites because the mountains behind the totem helps to give a feeling of immense geological power which contrasts with the equally immense cultural power of the weathered totems.  The passage of time seems to have a different meaning in places such as this.


Later in the spring our friends Gaye and Lee came to visit us.  We went to a local city park to see the Rhododendrons which were in bloom at the time.  While walking through the park we came across the duck pond and the red bridge reflecting in the still pond caught my eye.  This picture finds its way into my favourites because we live in a coastal, temperate rainforest.  We get a lot of rainfall which makes our forests quite lush and very green.  Thick growth cuts much of the light from the forest floor so when splashes of colour, such as the red on the bridge punctuate the green it provides perfect contrast for a photograph.  Couple that with a perfectly calm reflection and well, you have all the elements for a perfect picture.


From one extreme to the other, big and small, another bird captures my attention with equal fascination to Eagles.  Rufous Hummingbirds return to our garden every year and entertain us throughout their visit.  Patience is all that is required to photograph them, they get quite used to people and in fact even recognize you.  If the feeder is empty they know who to tell to fill it up.  It is not uncommon to see them hovering in front of the window letting you know the feeder needs attention.

 


Our summer travels took us back to the Cariboo.  A two week fishing trip shared with Gabrielle included a visit from our son Cory at Fawn Lake.  Terrific fishing and to get our canoe on a good fishing lake was awesome.  The canoe also provided a unique photography platform as well.  A whole new skill set was required as I soon learned when I had an exciting experience watching a Bald Eagle attacking a family of Common Loons.  Many pictures later, which included the unlucky Eagle completely soaked and swimming to shore I discovered that all the pictures were blurry.  The motion of the canoe coupled with a big lens required a different approach than I was using.  Like the Eagle, I went home dissappointed.  But then, if it was easy everyone would be doing it....

Re-thinking my strategy I mounted my tripod in the canoe and lashed it to the yoke.  It was a tad unnerving to take a 500 mm lens to the water in an unstable canoe.  As I carefully paddled along I found another family of Common Loons.  The canoe allowed my to glide silently towards them and get this shot of the baby.


I trolled a fly behind my canoe so I liked to stay fairly close to the shore.  As I rounded a small point I came across this Mule Deer standing in the water feeding on the leaves of the trees.  This shot makes my favourite list because of its unusual perspective.  Its not often you see deer in the water and for me, even rarer for me to see it from this angle.  It is amazing how much less afraid wildlife is when you approach by water.  The low, evening sun adds yet another dimension to this shot.



We were to meet family at a campground near Barkerville, BC.  Barkerville is a famous gold rush town with no end of photographic opportunities.  Old buildings are always a favourite for me but in this case an old truck caught my eye.  This one was outside the small town of Wells, near Barkerville.  A slight HDR treatment worked well for this shot.


In the fall Robyn's family came for a visit.  We went for a photo shoot to Blue Heron Beach near our house.  Olivia and Gabrielle on the beach...obviously a couple of favourites!



In October Laura had to go to Vancouver overnight.  We do not often get the opportunity to play tourist in the city just across the water from us on the mainland.  I had never been to the Planetarium before so this was on our list.  The Crab Sculpture in front of the Planetarium is one of the best features of Vanier Park.  This is a three shot stitched vertical panorama.


The final selection comes from the Vancouver Aquarium.  Just inside the main lobby is the Jellyfish Tank.  One could spend many hours watching the graceful up and down motions of these creatures.  The colours and the peacefulness of this shot make it one of my favourites of the year.


And so, as another year passes I look towards 2013 and cannot help to wonder what kind of photographs will my favourite 13 of 2013 be?

 

Monday, February 27, 2012

We Must All Take The Good With The Bad...

So, this weekend was a blend of ups and downs.  We went up-Island because the weather up there looked better than it did down here.  We found the sunshine in Courtenay along with a few dozen Bald Eagles.

While shooting in our usual places we were approached by a local man who told us to follow him and he'd show us where we could find a LOT of Eagles.  We were also able to get down to a beach there where we had great light on more Eagles than I bothered to count.

Here are a few of the more than 12 gigs of pictures that I took.

1)  This one has something to eat that he picked up off the beach.


2) Liftoff!


3) Low, close and fast.  You have to be quick for these shots!


4) He's spied something he likes!


5) Coming around again for a closer look.


6) Missed it!  They're not always successful, sometimes the seagulls get it first.



On our way home we stopped at Deep Bay and shot Grebes and Long-tailed Ducks until my card filled up again and I had to change it.  That's when it jammed, bent some pins and now my D300 is going into the shop!  Dang!



Sunday, January 1, 2012

My Favourite 11 Photos of 2011

Happy New Year!

A new year gives time to reflect on the previous year.  We travelled extensively last year with a trip down to Moab in the spring and another trip all the way up to Alaska and down to Washington in the summer.

All this travelling gave huge photo ops and it was tough to pick 11 shots from all of those that I took.

So, after adding and culling here is my 11.

Starting by date taken the first comes from Moab, Utah.  This is a foot bridge over the Colorado river.  I liked the way the colours blend together and that the leading lines draw your view right into a seemingly solid rock wall.  The trail in fact lead off the bridge and then to the left.

(1)



Next favourite comes from Arches National Park.  This is Delicate Arch which is the arch that is featured on the Utah State licence plates.  To get here involves a hike up a slick rock trail which gains 480 feet in the 1.5 mile hike (3 miles return).  Part of the trail traverses a ledge that reminds one of an Indiana Jones movie with a steep rise on one side and a sheer drop on the other.  We were fortunate to have rain squalls moving through and I was able to capture one of those behind the arch.

(2)



Next comes from near Pendleton, Oregon.  We took an evening drive out on a road that seemed to go nowhere through green fields as far as the eye could see.  We came across this old homestead and had to stop.  I always think about the history of a place such as this- the families that were raised here, the hopes and dreams of people long gone. 

(3)



My photography covers many interests.  This next shot is a Bumblebee in an Aster blossom.  Shots like this normally need uncluttered backgrounds which is not always easy.  In this case it worked.

(4)



The next group of shots are some of my favourite bird shots of the year.  The first is a Hooded Merganser.  This bird had eluded me for years until I got this shot in the spring in Buttertubs marsh in Nanaimo, BC

(5)



This Bald Eagle comes from Lac la Hache in the Cariboo region of BC.  I photograph many eagles here on the coast so it is ironic that my favourite should come from so far from home!  It is a favourite because I caught it gathering nesting materials which you can see grasped in her talons.

(6)



Sir Ru, our resident Rufous Hummingbird returns every year to our yard.  This guy gives me no end of photo ops and of all my shots this year this is my favourite.  I mentioned earlier about uncluttered backgrounds.  This one demonstrates what I strive for perfectly.

(7)



Our yard also is home to a family of Northern Flickers.  For the past three years they have raised three babies a year and most of them spend the entire year in our garden.  They tend to get quite familiar with us and so allow me to get some up-close-and-personal shots of them.

(8)


In Manning Provincial Park we found this Common Loon.  We did see loons elsewhere and even managed some great shots of them but this particular one was quite cooperative and allowed me to get quite close.  I spent the better part of an hour watching and shooting this one.  There is nothing that can compare with watching and listening to the Loons to make one feel they are truly in the Canadian wilderness.

(9)


These next two shots are of a 2 year old Grizzly Bear which we found in Hyder, Alaska.  We had the opportunity to shoot a big male, this cub and his mother over three days while they were feeding on Chum Salmon.  To be so close to Grizzlies in their natural habitat was a high point of my year.  Watching the playful antics of this cub makes one realize that despite the ferocious nature of the Grizzly Bear children are the same no matter what the species.

(10)


(11)



And now 2012 begins.  My camera batteries are charged and ready to go.  I wonder what my 12 for '12 pictures will be?