Going wide at Jacis

Have just returned from Jacis Safari Camp doing some images for their newly developed Safari Lodge — which is all part of the Classic Safari Camps of Africa book that I am updating.  had some fun with my panoramic tripod head. These images were stitched using Photoshop CS5 and I think that it did a pretty good job. I lost the sky on the original image and did my best to blend in a new one taken that same evening. CS5 has some pretty fine selection and refine edges tools but its really tricky with the leaves. It looks a bit artificial but overall I think its a nice effect. A bit more work and it might be perfect.

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The edge of the earth – and back!

If Okahirongo Elephant Camp in Kaokoland felt remote, then its sister camp Okahirongo River  was like travelling the end of the earth. It lies 200 kilometres deeper into Kaokoland along spectacularly rutted dirt roads that wend through a lunar landscape of gravel plains and mountains of mica schist streaked with quart and marble. Most guests fly into camp but we took the bumpy road and it was spectacular. The old red drum that marked the entrance to the Marienfluss Valley gave no clue to the grandeur that lay beyond. We were met by a soft yellow canvas of grass that was punctuated by wide fairy circles and which contrasted strongly with the jagged black peaks of the Hartmann’s Mountains that lay beyond. …. This text is in draft format and and an excerpt from an entry will be included in the new update of Classic Safari Camps of Africa which is to be published in 2012.

I am leading a best of Namibia photographic expedition to this region in June 2012

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Shooting in low light

This evening a client asked me for some tips about low light shooting. This is one of the most rewarding times for digital photography and I thought that it might be useful to share my thoughts and also get comments from others. It is a massive subject and this is just a touch.

 
1. For static subjects use a tripod — and have a cable release or use the timer shutter release to trigger. Camera shake is a real issue with long exposures.
2. Your camera tends to overexpose in dark conditions as it wants to make dark things look like daylight. Sometimes manual exposure works best as it allows you to keep the darks dark.
3. Shoot in manual focus if autofocus cannot find anything to lock onto. Sometimes I use a torch to set focus before shooting.
4. Switch on noise reduction settings in your camera. This does add to card write times but improves quality of image.
5. Look for interesting light sources. Skies go vivid blue, tungsten yellow. These often are the key to interesting shots and will influence your composition
6. Use high ISO levels (up to 4000) to capture moving subjects. If shooting long exposures of stationary subjects keep ISO lower to cut down on noise.
7. Wider lenses will let in more light that telephoto. Also wider f-stop eg f2.8
8. Experiment and change settings. Low light photography can reveal very exciting results — and details not always apparent to the eye.
9. White balance cloudy setting will warm up very blue scenes which are common in dark conditions. But as you will be shooting in RAW this setting can be changed after the fact in post production.
10. Using a torch or spotlight can be useful for painting scenes. When doing painting make sure you have a decent exposure time and paint smoothly.

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Desert adapted elephants

Am up in the Kaokoveld photographing Okahirongo Lodge for the new Classic Safari Camps of Africa book (due in 2012) and what a treat it is to photograph this stunning lodge. It is run and owned by two Italian women from Milan and as can be expected it has wonderful food and sophistication. Its remote up here in Purros and we have seen no other game drive vehicles nor tourists. Early this morning on a game drive we saw eight desert adapted elephants moving up the Hoarusib River. What a treat to get such great creatureswith such a stunning backdrop. Tomorrow we go on a six hour game drive to the Kunene River — and the stunning Marienfluss region.

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New photographic trips on offer from David Rogers Photographic

 

Wow, thanks for the support. Trips have filled up very fast indeed.

We have opened up some new departures and to find out more please click below and then send an application if you are interested.

 

 

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Some good advice for aspiring photographers

http://jpgmag.com/stories/3265

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Feisty little coots

 

Seven pelicans swam past our window this morning –  a spectacular sight but it was much to the consternation of our resident coot family which are raising two four day old chicks in a nest right opposite our window.  These hard working birds, which have not stopped building, fixing and now feeding their chicks, are also tenacious fighters. They have sharp spurs on their legs and these are clearly used to good effect.

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I love Cape Town in winter

The Fynbos in Cape Town is having an early flush thanks to premature spring weather. It’s glorious at Silvermine Nature Reserve on the slopes of Table Mountain where the leucodendrons and mimetes (shown here) are flowering. A pair of knob-billed coots have built a nest two metres from our lounge window which is most convenient for photography. This weekend, after about 24 days, two hatchlings emerged from the nest. The adults — who have been extremely hard working taking turns on the nests — finally tipped the two remaining eggs into the water. We wondered if they had a hint that they were not going to hatch or if this was family planning. What a privilege to have all of this around us.

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Cape Town Digital Days

 

Three years ago Tours and Trails in Cape Town launched Digital Days with David Rogers. These one day tours take in some of the highlights of Cape Town as well as the winelands and are aimed at people wanting some special photographic attention while touring the Cape.  Today I lucky enough to go around with 14 year old Tristan who was on a tour with his grandparents from the United States. Tristan had saved up his money for a new camera and was keen to get to grips with the controls. I was a bit worried about the rain that was forecast for today in the Cape area, but as so often happens: bad weather can create great photographic opportunities. The flowers were out early in Cape Town thanks to some very early Spring conditions and the Cape Point Nature Reserve was covered with flowers. A truly great day. Tristan is a promising young photographer and on his way to spend 11 days in the Okavango. What a trip.

 

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It’s not about the lens

When Tim and Sabine Featherby invited me to run a photographic workshop at Baines River Camp, I was delighted. The camp, which takes its name from artist Thomas Baines has just six rooms with the Zambezi River right in front and the stunning escarpment at its back. In this very intimate of lodges I was to find hard-working and loyal staff, a wonderful natural environment and excellent workshop facilities that facilitated better teaching and learning than I can remember.

“This is exactly the sort of group that we had in mind when we built the lodge”, Tim told us on the first evening as we sat along its long conference table and projected images onto a large cinema sized screen. “We wanted Baines to be the sort of place where like-minded people could get together and practice their skills in a friendly environment. “We do not want these workshops to be about who has the biggest lens,” he told our group. “It is about composition, learning and having fun.”

The next morning we were up before dawn for a 20 minute boat ride up the Zambezi. We watched as the sky turned from black, to red and then to orange and eventually put to shore at Sunset Strip as the first rays of sun emerged over the tree line. Here we found our guide Leonard, who had left camp nearly two hours before, waiting in the Land Cruiser to take us into the albida forests and our prearranged appointment with the early light filtering through the trees.

We saw kudu, waterbuck, buffalo and large troupes of baboons moving through the spectacular forest. But it was the impala that darted about — and jumped more than two metres off the ground — that captured our attention and we followed their movements with our lenses making use of our DSLRs incredible abilities to track moving subjects.
“I can’t believe this is sharp”, said Janine, looking at her pictures.  “In the past I could only take pictures of animals if they did not move.”

We went on game drives and boating trips — and worked hard on our landscapes, riverscapes, game, birds, sunsets, sunrises and everything in between. What made Lower Zambezi really special for me was the opportunity to explore the river by boat. We saw elephants swimming between the islands, hippos lazing on the banks and some of the largest crocodiles I have ever seen.
“Push up your ISO to 2000 and you will be able to shoot larger animals and birds in flight even while we are speeding past,” I suggested.

None of the group had used Lightroom previously but very quickly they got the hang of how to process RAW images, change white balance, pull and push light, add graduated filters, crop and do all manner of other development techniques to get the very best out of their images.
“Shooting in jpeg is like cooking a fillet in a microwave,” I told them. “If you shoot RAW you can slow roast it to perfection.”
Even Sophie who had shunned the idea of shooting more compressed jpegs turned to RAW and ordered a new, larger hard drive on the next flight in.

Another important aspects of workshops is the selection process. “On a workshop like this we each shoot about 2000 or more images — and in the end you should expect to have about 50 that stand out,” I said. “Do not dilute your work with anything but your best. You would not send off a half finished version of a letter, so do not show anyone work you are not very proud of.”
Such was the drive to learn and get images processed and selected that there was scant time for siestas. If the generator was not turned off at 11 pm, I’m sure that the workshop participants would have been squinting at their screens into the early hours.
I was thrilled to see how everyone got into the swing of things… we were having great fun and the learning curve on this workshop was steeper than I have ever seen.

And let me not forget the dining, The chef produced fresh bream, game carpaccio, zesty soups and decadent deserts that made us all need to open our belts by an f-stop or two. These trips are about having fun and our evenings were spent chuckling over sundowners and enjoying being in the bush.

If you put the words “hippo” and “canoe” into the same sentence you are bound to get some gripping yarns, and Leonard had a few of his own. He is one of Zambias most experienced river guides and in nearly 20 years has had just one close encounter. It happened when he went paddling with his previous boss and his two teenage boys, and a pair of German tourists.
“The boys would not keep quiet even though I asked them to again and again,” said Leonard. “On a blind corner of the river one of the hippos became stressed. I heard a splash and when I looked back I saw the Germans flying through the air.  Fortunately they fell back into their canoe and held onto their paddles, so I shouted to them to move. The hippo grabbed the paddle in its ferocious jaws … and it took what seemed like forever before the German let go and the hippo dived back underwater.”
Our group was a game one — and such was their faith in Leonard — that we  were all up for a canoeing trip the following morning. We drifted for 14 kilometers in just over two hours past bee-eaters, buffalo, baboons, elephants and quite a few of the “fat boys”. We got so much closer to the game than was possible in the boat or a game drive vehicle and we all agreed that this was real bucket list stuff.

After on our final fantastic bush braai under the stars, Tim dangled a 50% discount off their next trip to the photographer with the winning photograph. So it was with a great deal of excitement that we showed the top 10 images on the big screen. Everyone was in the final shortlist, but it was Jeanine’s flying impalas that took first place followed by Sophie’s beautiful image of impalas in gloomy light.

Jeanine’s winning image of the impala jumping

We did not find any animals with paws and claws on this trip but the photographs and learning opportunities were varied and fantastic. I am so looking forward to leading more trips to Baines Camp and Lower Zambezi in the months and years that follow. I hope to see you there. See the pics

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