Archives for Photography


Autumn in Yosemite

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I recently had the pleasure of visiting Yosemite to take part in a small photography workshop and had a great time, meeting many people and (of course) seeing amazing sights.  Dave Wyman and Ken Rockwell were the hosts, providing instruction and locations over a 3 day period.  This was my first “official” workshop, having done many photowalks – both organized and not – over the last few years.

I flew to SFO and then drove a rented Ford Escape for the 4.5 hour journey to Yosemite. Trip there was easy enough, although I didn’t get into the park until dark and there was a fair amount of roadwork going on which confused the GPS. I Eventually found Yosemite Lodge, though, and was able to bump into Dave to find out where to meet & when, etc. for the next day.

Day 1 began at 7:30am at Curry Village and was a busy day, heading first to Stoneman Meadow (views of Half Dome and more), a nearby creek and bridges (beautiful reflections in the calm of early morning) before heading out to the Girls Club and Ansel Adams Gallery.  Ken gave a good talk on the fundamentals of shooting landscape photography, going over exposure, color balance, lighting and more.  Ken is an excellent speaker and teacher, with the most important message being “just get out and shoot”.

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After Ken’s talk, we headed to the Ansel Adams Gallery and the nearby cemetary, taking numerous pictures along the way.  It was great to mingle with the crowd and compare shots, angles, etc. to see how everyone approached their photography.

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The afternoon was spent at El Capitan Meadow, Valley View, Tunnel View, Fern Springs (Yosemite’s smallest waterfall – OK Dave that’s reaching…;)) and the Bridalveil Falls parking lot to see the rainbow that Dave promised, which did show up even though the water was sparse.  We ended the day at the Yosemite Chapel, running a road block and meeting a family of deer to boot.  A bunch of us headed back to Curry Village for pizza and beverages (beer for Dave & I, chocolate milk for Ken).

Day 2 was, for the most part, about driving and finding gas… OK not really but it felt that way.  We started the day heading down to the Merced River for some early morning reflections of Half Dome in the water, and began a slow hike looping around to the Supervisor’s Cabin.  Lots of great views along the way.  After breakfast we headed out to the Foresta Barns, a brief drive outside the park.  Afterwards we continued to drive to Mariposa and the giant Sequoias – right about here is where our car (myself and 3 others) decided gas was a priority, especially since the gas station at our meeting place was closed for renovations.  No problem, an hour out of the way to Oakhurst and we made it back to the Sequoias in time to meet up with everyone else.  Good thing I filled up, too, because after the trees we headed up to Glacier Point, about a 20 mile drive from the Park entrance.  This was the highlight of the day for me, as it (and Washburn Point just before it) offered amazing views of the valley and a straight-on look at Half Dome.  Worth the drive, to say the least.  The day ended with a nice dinner with new friends from California and a late night of viewing pics in Lightroom.

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Day 3, the last day (already?) was only scheduled for the morning, but we did manage to see a lot.  We met at the Ahwahnee Hotel for breakfast (the “ritzy” place of Yosemite) and then wandered around the area for new photo ops.  A few of us walked back to the Lodge (at least 3km, I’d say) and met up there for final goodbyes and exchanges of info.  I gave out a few Moo cards to people, I hope they manage to get to my site and read this ;).

As my flight was booked for the next day, I went back to my room for a few hours to relax and then met up with Jay and his wife, plus a very nice couple from Florida (OK guys I need spelling on your names….) for dinner.  Called it a night fairly early to get up at 6 to start heading back to SFO and home.  Long drive but nice weather, then a 3 hour+ wait at the airport for a delayed flight back home.

I have finally managed to upload images to Flickr and Smugmug, so please have a look and leave any comments or questions.  I hope to do more of these in the future.  Thanks again to Dave & Ken – next stop Vancouver, OK guys…? 

PS I have created a group on Flickr called “Autumn Light In Yosemite 2008” for anyone that is on Flickr to post their pictures to.  To use it, join the group (an option on this page) and then upload your pictures as normal.  Select one of your pictures that you would like to submit to the group and select “Send To Group” in your toolbar on the Flickr Page and choose the “Autumn Light in Yosemite 2008” group.  Optionally, you can also add the tag “AutumnLightInYosemite2008” as another way of pooling all of these shots together.  Searching for that phrase (no spaces) will return all pictures in Flickr with that tag. E-mail or leave me a comment here if you have any questions at all.

Blues Festival Photos Published

I am pleased to say that 6 of my photos from this year’s Pender Harbour Blues Festival were published in the local papers last week. Two in The Local, four in the Coast Reporter.

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Great to see, especially the Coast Reporter article which appeared on the front page of their Arts & Entertainment section. In fact the full page is the article and photos (less the ads at the bottom). Kudos to Carole Rubin for writing a nice article and requesting my photos for submission!

Also ‘grats out to my brother, Chris Andersen, for writing the article in the Local. Nice job considering you were running on about 2 hours sleep after, oh I don’t know, putting together the entire festival.

I hope to do a lot more of these, of course, including the Pender Harbour Jazz Festival in September. Should be a blast.

2008 Pender Harbour Blues Festival

I had the privilege of being asked by my brother Chris to come shoot the Pender Harbour Blues Festival this last weekend.  He is the recently appointed President of the PH Blues Society and put together an awesome lineup for this year’s event.

I came over on the ferry Friday afternoon, checked in to the Sunshine Coast Resort (very nice place, btw) and then headed to the Backeddy Pub to meet up with Chris and the first act.  Bradley & McGillivray were performing, backed up by Chris and Pat Haavisto as the rythym section and accompanied by special guest Murray Porter.  Chris introduced me to everyone which was great and made me relax a bit.  This was the first night, first session of shooting for me, so I brought two bodies and two lenses to be sure I could be flexible.  The D300 had my spanky new 50mm f/1.8 (the bargain of the century, imho) and the D70 had my trusty 18-200 VR for the wide shots.

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Lighting was, well, horrible.  The beginning of the set was partially lit by daylight but of course that meant wacky white balance… then later it was dark outside and almost as dark inside ;).  It was a challenging situation but I managed to get some decent shots by the end of it.  Very thankful now for the D300 and ISO 3200 …

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After the first set I headed over the Garden Bay Pub to shoot the other act that evening, Neil Harnett.  He was joined by a “house band” Mark Vance put together that consisted of Peter van Deursen on keyboards, Lisa Simons on bass and Don Powrie on drums.  Right away I knew this was going to be good, both because the band was great and because the lighting was sooo much better:

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While I was at the Garden Bay Pub I met Carole Rubin, a local writer and reporter for the Coast Reporter paper.  She was very friendly (all weekend, actually) and gave me a lot of info on the area, the people and the festival.  It was great hanging out with her.  She also liked my photos and asked for whatever I could give her for her article, which I had no problem doing.  During the set break, Neil came to Carole’s table and had a quick interview and then was introduced to me (I mean I had just taken 150 shots of him, least I could do ;)).  We sat down with Carole and had a good conversation – interesting guy.

I stuck around for the last set, taking more pics, and headed back (late) to my room.  Couple hours of going through photos and it’s my usual 3am bedtime.

Saturday was a busy schedule, with 3 events.  The first was a session by Murray Porter at Bud-A-Bing’s Burger Shack (I kid you not).  This was a trailer parked across from the Marketplace IGA in Madeira Park, at the front of a nice park area.  Chris asked that I pick up Murray (and his partner Elaine) from the same hotel I was staying at, so we all headed down about noon.

I had done a bonehead thing the night before in my half-awake state – I had meant to charge the D300 battery but had mistakenly put the D70 battery in the charger (which was still fully charged of course).  So the D300 stayed home and I brought the D70s and 18-200 VR.  Turned out to be better than OK as it was a sunny day (surprisingly) and I got a bunch of decent shots.

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After the Burger Shack show I had a short break then headed to the Pender Harbour School of Music for the Workshop.  Murray Porter, Bradley & McGillivray, Chris, Pat Haavisto and Barry O’Hara all joined in, providing great playing as well as good discussion on making music, writing songs, the blues and more.  James Rogers showed up as a surprise a bit later, looking for a place to buy guitar strings but he ended up stepping in for a few songs which was good for the rest of us.  Not a huge turnout but very enjoyable nonetheless.

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There was time for a break between the Workshop and that night’s show at the Garden Bay Pub, so I took it.  Murray and Elaine asked for a ride to the Pub so I dropped by their hotel room first and had a glass of wine and relaxed for a bit before heading out.  The act for the night was James Rogers, who had played at the Workshop earlier.

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Great show, really entertaining.  The house band from the night before joined him and they were a great backup.  Peter is an amazing keyboard player, and Lisa and Don provide great bass and drums respectively.  For the last set, James invited Murray on stage as well as Ruth & Sheldon (Bradley & McGillivray) to sing a couple of songs. That really got the place going.

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Sunday, thankfully, was only one event – at least one I could make.  Back to the Garden Bay Pub for the 3rd time in as many days, for the Jam Session.  Another very entertaining show with quite a few new faces, mostly locals, stepping up to perform.  One woman really rocked the place – Dalannah Gail Bowen:

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She’s well known in the community and used to play the Garden Bay Pub a lot 10 years or so ago.  Actually a Jazz singer but you’d never know it from how she belted out a couple of great Blues/R&B tunes.

Headed back a bit early to the ferry, bringing Murray & Elaine (which was fine by me).  Good company and I wanted to get back earlier as Carole wanted images by Sunday night.  I ended up missing the 6:20 but got on to the overload ferry about 30 min. later, thankfully.

All in all an amazing experience.  Lots of great music, great people, great memories.  Can’t wait until next year ;).