November 3, 2009

The 2009 Blue Ox Moose Tour

G’day everyone,

Spend, say, three days in Baxter State Park in Maine, especially in Spring or Fall, and you’re bound to encounter a moose.   Though, on any given day, you could beat the bushes from the first glimmer of dawn until the last bit of twilight gutters without ever seeing Alces alces.  I know.  I’ve done it, as have many people.  In fact, I spoke with a couple I met in the park during this year’s tour who told me they paid a professional guide $400.00 for one day to help them find a moose.  They eagerly followed the guide to several dozen ponds, wallows, and wetlands throughout the park, in vain.  The guide apologized and kept their money. 

On the one hand, Baxter State Park, central Maine for that matter, is the moosiest area in all of New England.  On the other hand, it’s a huge area with thousands of wetlands, ponds, and lakes where one might see a moose out in the open.  The thing is that on any given day moose will indeed make an appearance in any of these areas.   But not necessarily every day and not consitently in the same location.  Question is, will you pick the same location a moose has chosen to visit on a particular day?    

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Bull Moose
Canon EOS 1-D Mark II N 
Canon EF 300mm f/2.8 L IS USM lens with Canon 2x teleconverter
1/400″ @ f/5.6, ISO 400
Gitzo GT3541LS carbon fiber tripod with Wimberley Head

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Posted by Gustav under Fall,Fine Art Prints,Maine,Wildlife,Workshops & Tours | Comments (0)

October 22, 2009

My Hot Shot – The River at Coteau-du-Lac

The River at Coteau du Lac

There are times when I go out for a shoot with specific expectations, and don’t get the shot I wanted because there’s bad light, wrong weather conditions or something messing up the composition. There are times when I pre-visualize a shot, things line up perfectly and I get exactly the shot I wanted. And then, there are times when I go out, not expecting to get a single good shot, and end up getting a killer image.

This was such a time. And these images are the most surprising and satisfying.

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Posted by Rob under Filters,Fine Art Prints,Hot Shots,Landscapes,Quebec | Comments (8)

October 6, 2008

Autumn, 2008

 

G’day everyone,

 

A couple of frosty mornings in mid September, with temperatures in the low thirties, ignited the forests up here in northern Vermont about a week early this year.  People remarked that the color appeared virtually overnight – like the flash of light from a bulb burning itself out, fall foliage was an explosive event.  As I write this, wind and rain are already stripping the leaves off of the trees, wallpapering the roads with wet leaf litter and making them treacherous on the curves.  Just down the muddy road from my house, sugar and red maple leaves cascade down Tamarack brook,  bunching up in the deep pool below the falls where they swirl in the eddy, forming a vivid galaxy on the tea-colored water.  Further south, colors are just beginning to peak.  Good thing because the Fall Foliage Magical Mystery Tour begins Sunday.  We’ll head toward the central part of the state where the colors aren’t running down the rivers just yet.

 

  

Autumn at Tamarack Brook
Canon EOS 1-D Mark II N, Canon EF 17-40mm f/4 L USM lens at 17mm
Moose 81A Polarizer
30 seconds at f/19, ISO 100
evaluative metering, aperture priority
Gitzo G2220 tripod, Bogen 3047 head, cable release

 

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Posted by Gustav under Cape Cod,Fall Foliage,Filters,Fine Art Prints,Shows & Exhibits,Technique | Comments (1)