Monday 31 December 2007

Seals and Dolphins

How was your Christmas

On Christmas Eve we walked from Portgordon towards Spey Bay and back before having a nice veggie roast dinner. We don't really do the Christmas thing.

Then on Boxing Day we took at drive along the coast from Buckie to Lossiemouth stopping along the way to look for Dolphins but we only saw seals. Not that there's anything wrong with seeing seals, in fact I love to watch them, its just that we see them an awful lot more often.

With both of us busy with work committments for Thursday and Friday we didn't get out again until Saturday and this time decided we go up onto the Black Isle to Chanonry Point. This is the narrowist point of the Moray Firth which still has deep water. The light was terrible and it rained pretty much all the time we were there just varying the intensity.

We were however rewarded with some good views of a pod of five Common Bottlenose Dolphins engaged in their herding method of fishing. They were obviously more interested in fishing than anything else, and unlike in better weather, did not come near to the shore to play. As this group moved towards Fort George then back out to the wider Firth and then back to Fort George again it was beautiful to watch although not especially photogenic. The weather did nothing to help.

After watching the pod leave the narrowing between Fort George and Chanonry Point we retuned to the campervan for a spot of lunch. Sitting quite happily drinking my tea I looked out the windowscreen and there in front of the campervan some 30 yards out were two more Dolphins heading even further inland. They were equally busy with there own lives as not to hang around and were infact moving with quite some speed. It was stunning to see these wonderful animals going at pretty much full speed and still retain such utter grace that to the observer time stood still.

And to think - our government is thinking of issuing exploration licenses for the Moray Firth to gas and oil companies. The activities of which will have a massive and probably fatal impact on these, the most northern group of Bottlenoses in the world and one of the east coast most loved neighbours and attractions! If you read this please visit the www.wdcs.org website - every person that voices an objection counts. I'll be keeping you updated from here as to how you can get involved.

As the hours of daylight this far north are not plentiful at this time of year we didn't have a lot of time there.

Today I am working for the local paper but hope to get out, perhaps to Fort George over the next two days.

I wish everyone, wherever you are, a Happy New Year, but most importantly a peaceful 2008.

Jan

Monday 24 December 2007

Merry Christmas Everyone!

Well, it's Christmas Eve and I'd thought I'd update the BLOG before settling down for the evening with NORAD tracks santa (well, its better than the rubbish on the TV).

I got the new lens (see last entry) and I am quite impressed. The slower aperture does cause a few problems but I think that a lot could be accomplished with practised technique. I haven't used a lens of this sort of the length for a while and so I need to get back into the swing of things.

The shots obtained on the brief trial run were certainly impressive as far as image quality goes. The clarity was as hoped and the colour rendition pretty good too. There was very little fringing which I had expected at the 500mm end and I was pretty impressed with the sharpness even at f6.3 and I think that using it at f8 or f11 would really give that added punch although I got more than I was expecting.

The build quality is excellent as you would expect from a pro quality lens. The downsides? well, there aren't a lot of 86mm filters about and they certainly aren't cheap. I would like a Sigma EX DG one but at over £75 that's going to have to wait a wee while. I have ordered a Japanese high quality UV for now to protect the front element and of course insured the lens.

I hope to be able to get out and get some interesting shots of the seals at Portgordon over Christmas and also perhaps of some of the birds of prey seen close to the house.

I have various engagements towards the end of the week and again in the next week but then hope to be able to spend some serious time in January perfecting my techniques with this lens, and familiarising myself with it so that its use becomes second nature like the rest of my equipment.

Keep an eye on my website www.jancrane.co.uk for new images over the coming weeks.

Have a wonderful Christmas and New Year.

Jan

Thursday 20 December 2007

New toys

The weather has been fantastic for photography now for best part of a week. Very very cold and not getting above freezing at all for the last four days. Unfortunately I have had committments and haven't been able to get out and make the most of it.

I do have a new toy coming. I have purchased a Bigma. Now to those who don't know this is a Sigma 50-500 f4-6.4 EX DG HSM (I think we run out of letters at this point.....). Being a Sigma EX (and at over £700 new) I expect pro quality build and most importantly optics. I would have preferred a faster 2.8 lens but to cover this length you need two lenses at least and severa THOUSAND pounds, and a chiropractor for when your back gives out!

I'll post a review on here when I've run a days testing on it.

Until then, try not to slip over and to the idiot who overtook me on the ice and then spun out yesturday - serves you right you idiot.

Stay warm!

Jan

Monday 17 December 2007

130 Dolphins and I didn't see one!

Well, would you credit it? The trip was great. The weather fantastic, the boat was really nice, the crew were brilliant and I had a wonderful relaxing afternoon....looking at the rocks and the cliffs from the water rather than the land (which was interesting)....looking at birds (many which you don't see unless your at sea).....and the sea.....but NOT a cetacean in sight.

Not one, no Dolphins, Whales, Porpoises or even a seal.

But, I will most certainly be going again....better luck next time!

Got some great shots of what we did see at sea and at the harbour on the way back so the trip was worth doing. Mark, who came along for the ride, wasn't seasick (first time on a boat) and also wants to go back again.

There aren't anymore trips now until 2008 but we'll be there. First chance we get!

Take care everyone, especially if your around this area - its not got above -4 today and this evening we are already at -8 and dropping and its not 9pm yet!

Brrrrr.....

Jan

Friday 14 December 2007

Dolphin trip now on

Yippee. I can't wait. Finally the weather has been kind enough to enable us to take our long awaited Cetacean watching trip out of Buckie harbour on the Gemini Explorer.

We sail at 12.00 tomorrow, Saturday, and should return after around 2.5hours. We are hoping to be able to photograph some of the 130 Dolphins that live in the Moray Firth and we are also looking out for the Minke Whales that have been sheltering in the Firth over the last couple of weeks of gales and storms.

It will be nice to get closer to the cetaceans and to see them close up in their own environment. We picked our boat operator with great care and followed the guidelines set out by the WDCS of which I am a member.

Hopefully the weather will remain kind and the Dolphins will permit us to share their environment and space for a wee while and we will be able to get some superb shots.

More soon...

Sunday 9 December 2007

I want to be a tree

Well, not quite.

One of the most difficult things about photographing wildlife in their environment is getting in their environment with them BUT without either them noticing or by effecting their behavour. It is essential not to destress any animal and so camoflage is often the best way to go. You can observe and photograph with greater ease and in a way far better for the subject.

Now, there are many types of camoflage and other ways of achieving this. Your main purpose is to break up the edges of your figure that you can not be so easily distinguished from your surrounding. Hunters have known this for years which means that unfortunately you have to frequent some of their shops sometimes to equip yourself.

I will say that this point that I recently became a vegetarian. After spending so much time trying to understand the other species that inhabit our planet I feel that I can't justify harming them any longer. When you really begin to study the lives of any living creature you begin to see life in itself in new ways.

I am also refraining from buying non-ethical products wherever possible (which is a bit of a problem when some of the best photographic equipment is produced by countries with very bad ethical reputations when it comes to our fellow man let alone animals).

I would also like to say though, that I do not condemn all hunting. Where it is a requirement of survival and there is no alternative to sustain human life then I can accept it but it should be done in a way that causes the minimum amount of suffering. Native Americans understood this. Although they hunted and killed many wild animals every part was utilised and they only took what they needed. They show use the right way to manage the earth. Unfortunately the white settlers did everything for profit and pushed many species to extinction while littering the ground with rotting carcusses that did no more than spread disease.

Anyway, back to the camoflage. I looked at the army style but it made me look very silly - whatever you choose you know it's not going to be the most flattering thing but really....well I just looked like some bad wanabee commando actionman or something. In the end I went for a realtree type jacket, trousers and gloves. I can't quite get to the point of camo balaclavers yet but who knows? At the moment I'm going for the moss green hat.

Now here I want to make a point for the manufacturers - WHY DON'T YOU MAKE ANYTHING FOR WOMEN!!!!!?

I do not for one minute believe that I am the only women in the world who needs camo! I know for a fact that there are women hunters all over the United States (where most of this clothing originates) for starters. It's like stepping back 10 years into the outdoors market when all the decent stuff was mens and women were only supposed to go up small hills in summer. This is the 21st century! Get real, please.

I did however find one thing out. If you are a size 10, 5ft 4" female or thereabouts you can get into the childrens clothes (they make clothes for kids but not women?!). As it happens I am (according to the makers of my camo gear) the size of the ideal Age 14 male. I would suggest that a size 12 may just get into the Age 14 jacket too (depending on what you want to put underneath). I like a little room for added quilting or fleece (and sometimes both) as it gets very very cold in may of my most favoured locations.

A size 8 women would probably find an Age 12 fits fine. But, if you are any taller than about 5ft 5" then the trousers at any size will be too short. This won't be a problem if you like wellies or long boots and tuck them in, or use gaters a lot.

I am a little chunky around the middle (scar tissue and my winter padding....lol) so I would say a 12 might get away with the Age 14 trousers too - but I would try them on as I have yet to find two size 10s with the same measurements all over (not counting twins).

My biggest problem is gloves. Most stockists only carry adult medium and large. The adult medium gloves are big and even with a liner glove on I won't want to handle my camera and make setting changes much as there is far too much room in all the fingers.

As a waterproof outer with a grippy liner glove the medium is just about ok for me. I would have liked a better fit but I have spent over a month looking for a glove that actually fits snuggly enough and given up. If the hand is right then the thumb is either too short or too long. On the rare occassion the thumb and hand were fine the fingers were either too long (most often) or they were too flappy and I couldn't get a grip. I tried childrens which again fitted but they don't make ones for kids with adequate insulation for me. 40g of thinsulate is NOT enough.

I really really like Permaloft lined gloves although they are more expensive but couldn't get the right fit. I need a small finger and medium hand in the ladies and the mens are just too big all round.

Another advantage of buying from the childrens ranges is that you don't pay VAT. This means my childrens jacket was around £45, the trousers £31. The adult version of exactly the same jacket (with the same design, features, and fabrics etc) was over 3x that!

Dearest hubby, who likes to come on some of my trips (and carries the tripod - thanks MARK!) will have to pay well over £250 for the same outfit that cost me under £100. What is that all about?

Cheaper versions are available on ebay etc and we may try and get him kitted out that way. Especially if you can order from the US at the moment. Although you need to allow for tax and duty etc, the £ against the $ at the moment still makes this an attractive method.

Of course, when I head off for the US to photograph wolves in 2010 I shall be taking an almost empty suitcase out there - just for the shopping. Even at normal rates of exchange we in Britian are still being ripped off. If something costs $140 it should not cost £140 as the £and $ have never had a 1:1 as far as I can remember. This means that we are constantly paying well over the odds.

While I'm having a rant about this I'll prove the point: I went to Canada and the US for New Year about 8 years ago. At the time I lived about 4 miles from the Terra Nova (best tents in the world...probably) factory. To buy the tent I wanted in Sheffield (about 12 miles north) was £399. Now this tent has travelled 12 miles...... In Toronto the same tent was 295 Canadian$. Which was about £220 at the time including taxes.

Therefore my tent travelled from Sheffield(ish) to Toronto, was bought by me and shipped back to Sheffield(ish) for around £150 less than if I can bought it from its origin. Now, does that make any sense? Not exactly good for the environment was it? Even allowing for shipping and tax its cheaper to order a Terra Nova tent from Canada that it is from a retailer within walking distance of the manufacturer.

Well, enough of my muses for this morning. It's raining heavily as it has been all night, my dolphin trip has been cancelled again and I am not sure what I am going to be able to photograph today but I am going to try an get out somewhere.

Take care everyone,

Jan

Wednesday 5 December 2007

Dolphins & a little bit about monitor calibration

We had been planning a trip to see the moray dolphins in their environment but the long range weather forecast is making a sailing highly unlikely for our planned trip and several days either side of it.

We'll keep and eye on it and contact the skipper the day before just incase its come in early and blown itself out by the time we are free to go.

I calibrated my laptop yesturday and have to recommend this action to anyone involved in photography whether they are professional or not. The difference is quite striking and my pictures look even better than before (which is great) but I can now see that some of the simplest applications of photoshop that appeared to be enhancing the image weren't in fact doing anything like it. I may have even sabotarged one or two of my own pictures!

I had always argued that you could use the Gamma wizard in Photoshop to calibrate the monitor - well trust me on this - it doesn't come close. Your eyes are not suitable for this, whoever you are or however well you think you can match colours etc.

Its a bit like using cheap print film and getting your prints made by machine and then using Fuji Velvia slide film and for the first time seeing what you've been missing.

The downside? Well, you can see flaws in lenses more but conversely you also get to see just how good the good ones are. The only other downsides are that you need to repeat this calibration at least once a month and if you do a lot of work on your PC/Mac then once a week even. And you have to buy the calibration equipment in the first place. When digital first started out, and yes, I was there right at the beginning. Cameras were £35,000 for less pixels than you get your phone, monitors were designed for office use and proper ones for photographic or design work were very serious money. Calibration devices were also running into several hundred pounds and so very very few people operated on any more than the "it looks ok when I print it" or "I'll make the final changes when I see the proofs" and a lot of guesswork.

The good news is that now you can get a Spyder Express (or similiar) for around £55. Now this may still seem a lot for people who only do this as a hobby but think about it for a minute. If you were a film using that less than 10 rolls of film (not including processing). Not exactly a big layout in the scheme of things anyway.

So I'll leave you on that note and head out to try and capture some shots of Ben Rinnes' snow capped top before the snow on the top turns to rain again.

Take care,

Jan

Monday 3 December 2007

Yet more bad weather BUT

Well the weather again is what the met office lovingly call "unsettled". What that means in Scottish terms is that is very wet, very windy and it doesn't get properly light before it gets dark again.

We did have a nice day at the weekend though. Albeit a cold and still windy day at least it stopped raining for a wee while.

As a result I got out to do some Dolphin and Seal spotting. Got lucky with the seals (well not really if you're local as you get used to knowing where to find them) but alas we didn't see any Dolphins.

I am looking at an offshore trip sometime soon but the weather is not currently permitting many sailings and if there aren't enough takers then they don't sail.

Check out the website though as I have added some new pics from this weekend.

Friday 30 November 2007

Project

A new project is formulating in my mind - We Walk Through Empty Glens

its title is coming from the line in a favourite Runrig song

the impetous behind this project is that there still remains evidence of the glens pre-clearances in an area not far from my home. I want to document it before it slips away. The ruins are quite humbling, in that the more remote they are the more preserved they tend to be. The landlords and overseers may have torched the roofs of these dwellings but they were built of sound stone and fine construction and much of them still remains in the more remote glens.

I want to capture them, and the impressions of the lost lives and spirits within them while the evidence remains there. Every year the weather takes it toll and tourists are venturing into the remoter glens often taking little souveneirs of their visits and this is also taking it toll on these ancient dwellings.

Many, particularly those close to villages and town, have been robbed out. The stone removed, and reused in slightly more modern building but the remote ones are left to crumble slowly. There is one I especially want to get to that I have only briefly looked at which still has the picture frames on the wall, the pots in the fireplace and a broken chair and table at one wall. This has stood, complete like this, since the clearances dessimated the glen. Its a fine walk in - about 5 hours from the nearest car parking point (and you have to do the same back). I guess that's why so much of it remains. I have only once glimpsed it. There are four cottages in the glen. The condition gets better the further into it you go, but its boggy and has no paths. Its little used, even by the sheep, that ousted the original occupants of the glens.

Here you walk with one foot in the past and hear the voices echo through time to you of those displaced and lost to their homeland. Here you really feel the full force of the sentiment behind Runrigs most excellent song. And though you walk through empty glens you can feel the people returning, the desire to make Scotland great again.

I feel it, I hear it, and I'm only 1/4 Scot.

Jan

Rain, rain, glorious rain

Well, not so glorious but its all we've had all week!

We now have two forecasts for the local area - one says rain and gales and the other says sunny and bright with slight winds and the occassional shower possibly falling as snow. Since they totally contradict eachother all bets are off.

I have now booked into another Chris Weston workshop to further enhance my knowledge of photographing Tundra mammals in snow conditions etc. This is for February the week before we fly down to the Birmingham NEC for Focus 2008.

I'm hoping for some improved weather this weekend as I am still trying to get another seal shoot in before we loose all the light completely.

I'll let you know if and how I get on.

Sunday 25 November 2007

Hello & Welcome

Hi

Welcome to my blog. In addition to updating the News & Features of my website I am going to be posting a blog whenever I can. The blog will be more personal - with tales from my photographic enterprises, commissions etc as well as offering hints and tips to other photographers.

After all digital is new, relatively, and although I jumped ship very early (like when digital cameras were the same price as a terraced house) I still learn things that make pictures betters and/or life easier every time I pick up a camera/work on the computer/talk to other photographers - in fact pretty much everyday.

The weather has been really terrible up here on the north east coast of scotland (where I live). I live here funnily enough because of the weather. Now, that sounds a bit arse about face but Scotland is now the only part of the British Isles to really experience seasons. As a wildlife and landscape photographer I want seasons. I like snow, and cold frosts from the point of view of the landscape. I love the light we have up here - although in winter we get so few hours of it! Even that has its advantages - you know that the best time to take photos is usually the two hours after dawn and two before dusk? Well, in winter that means 8.30ish-10.30ish and then 2.00ish-4.ooish. Beats a southern sunrise at 3am handsdown! I get more sleep for starters and in winter the light never really gets bad so long as it got good in the first place.

Of course, this week, it didn't get good. It just got grey, and then we got wet. It rained almost non-stop for three days at the start of the week, then it hailed, then it snowed, then it rained some more.

You can't even photograph sealife when the weather is this bad. IF you can get a boat out then you'll be hard pushed to find the dolphins or the even the seals and IF you do then you'll probably find they are concentrating on feeding and not their usual playfull selves.

I like to watch, and photograph, the seals that come assure about 10 minutes from where I live but having watched them over the last two years I know that they don't come assure when its raining. I think this is because they don't like the rain hitting their faces and especially their eyes. They tend to squint for a couple of minutes at most when its raining before making there way back into the water. They often stick close to shore and even rest on their backs floating as a way to rest but they won't sit on the rocks if the rain comes down.

They don't pup near me so they have no reason to stay ashore. At the moment the numbers close to me are reduced as the females have gone to their normal spot to have their young.

I have to agree with them that here is not a good place as people have little respect for them and often get far to close and let their children run about the rocks near them. I wouldn't want to raise my young here either if I was a seal.

I am waiting for the time when some kid falls on the rocks (which are pitted, covered in seaweeds and lichens and full of rock pools), breaks their ankles and then we all get pushed further back and taking photos becomes ever harder due to the idiot behaviour of some family (invariably tourists).

Oh, well, enough of my musings for today. Welcome again to my blog.

Jan