Category Archives: Jamaica

Year in Review: 2010

2010 was a year of contrasts for me when it came to travel. I started off with a quick stop in Dubai on my way to Thailand. Dubai is absolutely incredible. The amount of construction going on is mind-numbing — dozens of new skyscrapers going up simultaneously, each trying to outdo the others in terms of whimsical and ground-breaking design. And of course, no trip to Dubai these days would be complete without a stop at the current world’s tallest building, seen above through a bus window as I was on my way to the indoor snow skiing slopes. That’s right. Indoor snow skiing slopes. Dubai was a trip.

But the trip wasn’t over by a long shot. Next came Thailand.



Thailand is one of those places that sticks with you. The longer it’s been since I was there, the more I seem to think about it. I have a feeling I’ll be back.

Next, a quick trip to Jamaica:

The highlight of which may have been this night visit to the bioluminescent bay. Organisms in the water cause it to glow when the water is disturbed — as it was here when a couple of people from my boat took a swim:

Tough to shoot, but a fun experience.

There were several US trips that I won’t take the time to list here, and a Fall drive up the North Shore of Lake Superior to Thunder Bay, Canada.


On the heels of that trip, I was off to Germany:

Crossing the bridge in that first shot, I actually set foot in Austria, too.

2010 was a great year for me in terms of travel. I enjoyed each and every place I visited and would eagerly return to any of them. 2011 is already shaping up to be another busy one, however. I have one more year to serve as the Chair of the Freelance Council of the Society of American Travel Writers and already have a fair number of SATW meetings on my calendar including one in San Diego this week. Fiji and New Zealand are also on the agenda for 2011 and I’m sure there will be some surprises as well. Stay tuned…

Back from Jamaica

100429raft_sotc

After a brief delay due to a missed flight and re-routing through Pennsylvania, I am home once more. Sorry for not posting from the road but internet access was not always available to me, nor was there much time to even offload cards. I arrived home with nearly all of my shots still in-camera rather than on my portable hard drives. But as they say in Jamaica, “no problem, mon”.

The shot from the river raft above was a fun one. At the beginning of the run, I was shooting “normally” — trying to keep everything crisp and sharp, raising the ISO along the way to compensate for the setting sun and diminishing light. It was somewhat overcast and nearly sunset by this time and I gave in to the inevitability that I was going to change my game.

Embrace the darkness. Embrace the blur.

Rather than increasing ISO further and dealing with noise in post-processing, I held steady at ISO 800 and began shooting intentionally for some motion blur. At first I panned with passing rafts to isolate their pilots (captains?) and get dreamily blurred foliage behind. After several passes with that technique, I turned my attention to the pilot of my own raft. I steadied the camera on a bamboo cross-support of the raft and fired away. This particular shot is at f/5.6 — to give myself a wee bit of depth-of-field in case the focus was off — and half a second. By using the raft itself as a kind of tripod, I could maintain sharpness on it while the world swam past. I was amazed at the amount of detail and color that the sensor could capture in those dark conditions. More than you could see with the naked eye.

I nearly filled a card shooting in this way because I knew the ratio of keepers would be extremely low. But, what the heck, if I got one good one, I’d be happy. As it turns out, I have several. Had I been shooting film, I would certainly have been more conservative and I probably would have missed some real keepers.

Tent Rocks National Monument

Tent Rocks

Now that I have some time back in the office, I’m hitting the files hard — trying to get caught up on post-processing. I’m not too far behind but it can get out of hand quickly. The last couple of days I’ve been working on images from my trip to New Mexico earlier this year. The one above was taken during a hike at Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument. I’m using Lightroom for my initial post-processing work now — moving to Photoshop for more detailed work. Even though I know the tools in Lightroom and ACR are pretty much identical, I find that there is a luminous quality to the images I get out of Lightroom. Maybe it’s just psychological due to the darker interface in LR but I like it. This image displays that characteristic in the bounced light coming through the slot canyon at the top.

Hot stuff

neon sign

Between a busy schedule and a weird bug that I’m having with Photoshop (any file with a text layer seems to crash it), I haven’t posted much lately. Here’s one more from Albuquerque — a neon sign in the Nob Hill area. More when things cool down…

Land of Enchantment

sandia peak

I’m back from New Mexico and once again wading through images. This was a great trip with a little of everything including snow that — while almost totally missing Albuquerque — managed to close highways to the north, east and south. This shot shows some of the remaining snow later in the day at the top of Sandia Peak on Albuquerque’s east side. Some of the warmth is coming from the setting sun and some from the oddly tinted glass of the tram windows.

Albuquerque, New Mexico

Albuquerque

I returned from the Southwest on Tuesday after nearly two solid days of driving in the rain. Ever since, I’ve been trying to keep my head above water. Not from the rains, but from the mounds of work that accumulated while I was away. Some things I can keep up with while I’m on the road. Others have to pile up and wait for my return.

This is a shot from Sunday in Albuquerque. I had hoped to catch the last day of the balloon festival but high winds forced the cancellation of Sunday morning’s launch. You win some, you lose some. I’ll have to make a trip back some Fall when I can spend the whole week catching the night illuminations, etc. That’s the way to do it anyway.

Monday saw a brief tour of Santa Fe before the long drive back. That half-full CF card is still in the Nikon — I haven’t even had the time to download it yet. Very unlike me. Anyway, some fun stuff is on the way. Stay tuned…

Shiprock

shiprock

I’ll admit it. I shot this out of a moving car window. Sometimes you do what you gotta do.

High, high winds — supposedly a system pushed inland by hurricane Norbert — were blowing in the Four Corners area when my group of journalists were taken to Shiprock for a picnic lunch. Along the way, Shiprock would come and go through clouds of blowing dust and I decided to shoot a series of shots through the window just to see what I could get. I bumped up the ISO to 200 and shot at around 1/1500 of a second to eliminate the bouncing motion of the van. This is one of those shots. I crunched the contrast to make up for what was lost to the dust in the air. In other shots, I’m having trouble seeing the rock at all.

When we made our stop for lunch, I hopped out of the van and grabbed a few “real” shots. Gusts of wind around 65 mph made it difficult to stand, let alone keep a scene framed with a telephoto lens. I’m happy with several of those images but I think I prefer this shot with the rock in cloud shadow for its mood.