Rural landscapes: Road through the valley

SOUTH DINOSAUR TRAIL, NEAR DRUMHELLER, ALBERTA

Evening is really the best time to photograph the Red Deer River valley in this section of the Canadian badlands. But as you can see, there are a few choice morning views, too. I used a tripod and telephoto lens to make this photograph, along with my usual Nikon D90 and polarizing filter. I made an even more telephoto view – cropping out the sky – of this scene, but I think this photo works a bit better.

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Wildlife: Waterton deer

RESTING DEER, WATERTON LAKES NATIONAL PARK, ALBERTA

This Canadian Rocky Mountain national park, tucked into the southwest corner of the province of Alberta, is generally a windy place. But the weekend we camped there was so uncomfortably windy that we couldn’t sleep. Then it started to rain. So we went home.
But before that, we did get a few sunny breaks, and that’s when I spotted this deer resting in a patch of forest near the campground. I must have spent a half hour hanging out with him, getting progressively closer and having more and more time to improve my compositions.
By the time this photo was made, I was lying on my stomach to put the foreground grass firmly out of focus and put nothing behind the deer except forest. And I had time to position myself so the deer’s head was perfectly positioned between two tree trunks. Nikon D90, 80-200 mm. lens (handheld at F2.8).

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Urban landscapes: Midway magic

MIDWAY MAGIC, CALGARY STAMPEDE, CALGARY, ALBERTA

I made this photograph  last summer at the Calgary Stampede, one of Canada’s most famous summer fairs, with a Nikon D90 and tripod. At the time, I had an incredibly painful sciatica nerve issue, but the long-exposure pictures I was making were so eye-popping that I barely noticed the pain. I’m looking forward to another night with the lights this year, the Stampede’s 100th anniversary.

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Natural landscapes: Potts Falls

POTTS FALLS, MUSKOKA, ONTARIO

This stunning forest waterfall is part of a little area of Ontario’s cottaging mecca that I call waterfall heaven. within a kilometre, there are three amazing cascades to photograph. I spent nearly an hour “working” this waterfall, trying various perspectives and focal lengths. This looooong exposure was made using my old Nikon D50 (since replaced), tripod and polarizing filter.

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Rural landscapes: Leaskdale Stream

LEASKDALE STREAM, ONTARIO

Leaskdale is a tiny hamlet northeast of Toronto, Canada’s largest city. It’s probably best known as one of the places Anne of Green Gables author L.M. Montgomery lived. In fact, she wrote many of her novels in this quaint village and the Presbyterian manse where she lived from 1911 to ’26 has been declared a historic site and carefully preserved.
This stream is about a kilometre away.
Originally photographed on Velvia slide film, this picture was burned onto CD during processing and I worked with that version. The rock is absolutely crucial to the success of this composition; it it wasn’t there, I doubt I would have bothered photographing this scene.
Nikon FM2, tripod, polarizing filter.

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Natural landscapes: Dinosaur Provincial Park

MORNING IN THE BADLANDS, DINOSAUR PROVINCIAL PARK, ALBERTA

Definitely one of the most amazing places I’ve ever made photographs, Dinosaur Provincial Park is a is a UNESCO World Heritage Site about two and a half hours drive southeast of my home in Calgary. It’s one of the richest dinosaur fossil areas on the planet. Forty  species have been discovered at the park and more than 500 specimens have been removed and exhibited in museums across the globe.

This is definitely an area best seen at sunrise and sunset, especially in summer, when midday heat makes hiking a tiring experience. Midday light also bleaches the colours; sunrise and sunset help create the glorious hues you see here.
Nikon D90, tripod, polarizing filter, enhancing filter.

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Natural landscapes: Evening on the Bow River

EVENING ON THE BOW RIVER, BANFF NATIONAL PARK, ALBERTA

I photographed this along the edge of the Trans Canada Highway in one of Canada’s most iconic national parks. That’s Castle Mountain soaring above the trees. I could have gotten a higher perspective by crossing the road (away from the river) and climbing a hill, but no matter how I tried, I couldn’t keep the road and a few distracting shrubs along the river edge out of the composition. So I opted for this view instead, relying on the fabulous evening sky to make the picture memorable.

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Rural landscapes: Spring in the foothills

SPRING IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN FOOTHILLS, SOUTHWEST OF CALGARY, ALBERTA

I made this photograph a few weekends ago during a wonderful Sunday morning communing with God’s glorious creation. Just enough colour on the trees (spring comes late to the Canadian province of Alberta) and lots of snow still on the Rocky Mountain front ranges. This is a telephoto view designed to compress the distance between the road/trees and peaks.
Nikon D90, tripod, polarizing filter.

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Natural landscapes: Schooner Cove Trail

THE TRAIL TO SCHOONER COVE, BRITISH COLUMBIA

Schooner Cove is part of glorious Pacific Rim National Park on the west coast of Canada’s Vancouver Island. This is wet, temperate rainforest and the morning I walked the trail certainly reflected that.
Fortunately, the rain was light and intermittent, so I was able to make lots of satisfactory long-exposure photographs without getting excessively soaked. This is a carefully designed composition, to ensure no distracting white sky got into the picture. Nikon D90, tripod, polarizing filter.

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Natural landscapes: Evening glory at Emerald Lake

EVENING AT EMERALD LAKE, BRITISH COLUMBIA

I fished around in the archives to find this September 1996 photograph, made at one of the most picturesque Canadian Rocky Mountain lakes in awesome Yoho National Park. At the time, my favourite camera was a medium-format Pentax 6×7.
I used Velvia slide film for this photo, plus a tripod, polarizer and (if I remember correctly) a 45-mm. wide-angle lens.

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Natural Landscapes: Morning at Grice Bay

MORNING AT GRICE BAY, VANCOUVER ISLAND, BRITISH COLUMBIA

Pacific Rim National Park, on Canada’s west coast, is rightly known for beaches and Pacific Rainforest. But drive a few kilometres inland and you’ll find the peaceful waters of Grice Bay, surrounded by coastal mountains. I would have liked to have gotten to this outstanding spot in earlier morning light, but what I’ve captured here still works to my satisfaction. And the rowboat is a HUGE, unexpected bonus! Nikon D90, polarizing filter, two-stop hard-edged graduated density filter (to darken the sky), tripod.

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Urban landscapes: Pedestrian underpass

PEDESTRIAN UNDERPASS, KAMLOOPS, BRITISH COLUMBIA

While seeking landscape compositions of the Thompson River, I stumbled upon this illuminated walkway pipe under the Trans Canada Highway. The tight confines and strong circular lines intrigued me, so I went to work with my Nikon D90, tripod and 18-55 mm. zoom lens. Experimented with all kinds of light balances, with and without a flash (this photo is likely with a flash) and did some long-exposure zoom pictures like this. Ended up with lots of interesting photographs of a very unlikely subject.

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Natural landscapes: Cathedral Grove

CATHEDRAL GROVE, VANCOUVER ISLAND, BRITISH COLUMBIA

All it took was a one-hour walk through just half of this un-freaking-believable forest of 300-year-old trees on Canada’s west coast to produce more than a dozen photographic “keepers”. This is Pacific rainforest at its most grand and stunning – and it has a winding, two-lane road running through the middle!
Nikon D90, tripod.

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Natural landscapes: Tonquin Park Beach

DAYBREAK AT TONQUIN PARK BEACH, BRITISH COLUMBIA

This beach is in the quaint, picturesque town of Tofino, on the west coast of Vancouver Island in Canada’s westernmost province. As you can see, it’s a stunning locale and I managed to get there for some pretty decent daybreak skies. (Thank you, God, for creating such magnificence!)
I used a hard-edge, two-stop graduated density filter to darken just the upper section of the picture, so the sky – which was much brighter than the ground – wouldn’t be overexposed when I made the picture. Nikon D90, tripod.

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Natural landscapes: Clouds at Long Beach

AFTERNOON CLOUDS AT LONG BEACH, PACIFIC RIM NATIONAL PARK

This park is on the stunning west coast of Vancouver Island in British Columbia. I recently returned from several days there, enjoying incredible beaches, rainforests and wildlife. The amazing thing is, we weren’t supposed to get sunny conditions on our one full day there. And yet, check out this picture! Already thinking about a return trip. Nikon D90, tripod, polarizing filter and, possibly, a hard-edge, two-stop graduated density filter to darken the sky (just can’t remember for sure if I used it on this photo).

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Urban landscapes: Vancouver at dusk

VANCOUVER AT DUSK

Some of the waters around Vancouver’s Stanley Park are sheltered enough to remain still much of the time. This makes for ideal skyline shots of this stunning city on Canada’s west coast. I scrambled to make this loooong exposure, using a Nikon D90 and tripod, before the darkness set in so thoroughly that the buildings would be lost against the night sky. How did I do?

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Natural landscapes: Daybreak in Kamloops

DAYBREAK ON THE THOMPSON RIVER, KAMLOOPS, BRITISH COLUMBIA

The first picture I’ve posted from a week-long vacation my wife and I took through British Columbia. While she slept, I was up before dawn to check out the river that flows through Kamloops. Used my new two-stop, hard-edge graduated density filter to darken the sky. Nikon D90, tripod.

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Natural landscapes: before the opening

SPRING TULIP, WHITBY, ONTARIO

Every morning I walked past this beautiful flower on my way to the garage to get into my car and drive to work. I knew it would make a good photograph, but I had a limited time because I knew the best composition would be *before* it fully blossomed.
One morning, I came outside after an overnight rain, saw the tulip covered in drops and knew the moment arrived. Went back inside, hauled out my old Nikon D50 (since replaced by a D7100) & tripod and used an 80-200 mm. zoom lens (also retired) at the most wide-open F-stop in order to keep the background thoroughly out of focus.

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Natural landscapes: Englishman River Falls

ENGLISHMAN RIVER FALLS, VANCOUVER ISLAND

Went back to the 1990s for this photograph, made with my old Pentax 6×7 medium-format camera, tripod and Velvia slide film. Vancouver Island is loaded with glorious sites like this and I’ll be seeing them in the next few days. Woo-hoo! 🙂

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Rural landscapes: Spring in the foothills

SPRING IN THE FOOTHILLS, SOUTH OF LONGVIEW, ALBERTA

Spring is a remarkably short season in southern Alberta. The grass stays brown until May and the unpredictable weather patterns mean a surprise snow storm is always possible. Then, in almost a blink of an eye, it’s summer and that’s that! I made this photograph in April 2009 of a favourite subject; I’ve pointed my camera at this very photogenic ranch in several seasons; this one was with my old Nikon D50 (since replaced by a D90), along with a tripod and polarizing filter.

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