This one actually was shot over a year ago... and processed and scanned some time ago. Just getting around to posting it now. Some old Neon, here in Edmonton. I shot this back in March of 2018, with my Ebony 4" x 5" view camera and a Rodenstock 90mm lens. The film was Fuji Neopan Acros 100, processed in Rodinal 1:50. For some reason I am drawn to old signs and will continue to build up a collection of images like this.....
Saturday, December 28, 2019
Thursday, December 26, 2019
Working Through the Holidays
Usually I close the shop for two weeks... or thereabouts... over the Christmas holidays. As the company is involved in skylights, and work really slows down once winter weather sets in, there is usually not all that much to do over the holidays. In fact, I usually end up feeding the staff for two or three months over the winter, so that they are available and ready when construction season picks up in the spring. Even though they don't get paid for all the days over the Christmas break, they seem to look forward to the time off.
This year, the shop closed on Friday December 20th, and will not re-open until Monday January 6th. On Friday the 20th we shut down production at noon, and had our annual staff BBQ. As in the past I picked up some steaks, and a bunch of food and beer, and we had our annual Christmas party. But this time around, things were a little different. Two representatives from the company that is buying the operation showed up for the BBQ. I made the announcement to the staff that the company had been sold. A couple of years prior I had let them all know that I was looking to slow down, exploring all options, and that the sale of the company would be one of them. I'm not sure if this really took anyone by surprise as it has probably been fairly obvious that something was up. A lot of people have toured the shop in recent months and there has been all sorts of discussion, correspondence and review.
I assured all of the staff that their jobs are secure and that the new owners need them to move forward. This was backed up by the two representatives that were present. I think everyone took it fairly well and hopefully there are no issues moving forward. I assured them that come the beginning of January it would be business as usual and I would be staying on for at least a year to transition into new ownership. I guess I will have to wait and see if everyone shows up, ready to work, in the new year. But, I've always tried really hard to be appreciative of the staff and to treat them like family. Probably to my own disadvantage as at times if felt like there was a sense of entitlement, and that my efforts were not fully appreciated.
Even though none of the staff are present over the holidays, I have been in to work every day except for Christmas Day. That will continue through the remainder of the holidays. I have a lot of things to wrap up in advance of the sale of the company. We need to complete a detailed inventory count and come up with an accurate valuation. I also need to compile a list of all payables and receivables, as well as close off the accounting system in advance of the sale. The inventory count was undertaken on the weekend of December 21 and 22, and I wrapped up the odds and ends on Monday the 23rd. I spent the weekend at the shop doing the count with the assistance of one of my partners. Since then I have been working on the valuation, and the rest of the paperwork.
With my retirement on the horizon, I don't really feel all that bad about forfeiting my Christmas holidays this year. I just keep reminding myself that in a year I will be fully retired and that all the days will be holidays. A small price to be paid for freedom from the daily grind.
March Calendar Image
This is the March image from my new calendar. I took this shot inside an old grain elevator down in Vulcan County. I was visiting my brother Wes in Calgary in January of 2016 and we went out for a day trip to do some exploring. I shot this with a 65mm wide angle lens on my Ebony 4" x 5" view camera. I've started passing out copies of this calendar to friends and family over the holidays and so far I've got lots of compliments.
Saturday, December 21, 2019
Carpentry Projects
I've made the decision to retire and quit working so much. The sale of my shares in my skylight company is imminent. I will be working through 2020 to transition the company into new ownership. After that I may be involved on a minor basis as a consultant, but I think I'd prefer to make a clean break and step away at that point.... still a little undecided though.....
In the mean time I need to take steps to get all of my stuff out of the shop. The company has occupied our current premises since 1978. I was the first worker in the building. My Dad sent me there as a sixteen year old kid to paint some racks and get ready for the move of the company materials and equipment into the space in that summer. Here I am, over 40 years later, still working in the same place... but not for too much longer.....
One of the things I need to deal with is all of the little carpentry projects that I've had on the go for the cottage in Nordegg. I now have the kitchen cabinets done and just need to haul the last section out. This past little while I've been working on the bunk bed for the girls room. The frames that will hold the mattresses are now done and have received the typical three coats of laquer. I'm now working on the end frames that will support the mattresses. These are fabricated from the spruce logs that I cut and peeled earlier this summer. This is my first attempt at rustic furniture construction and so far it has gone pretty well. I've cut tenons in all the support branches and drilled holes in the upright posts to accept them. The frames are now all assembled. Just need to finish sanding everything and then complete the requisite lacquer finish. In between I will need to cut some dadoes into the uprights, into which the mattress support frames will be fitted. A couple of braces left to be fabricated as well. Should be able to wrap up most of this over the coming week or two. Then I can move on to some of my remaining projects as I transition out of ownership......
Friday, December 20, 2019
December in Drumheller - Orca Skeleton
I took a trip down to East Coulee on the weekend of December 14 and 15. Frank and his employees at Dinosaur Valley Studios are just finishing up a project. This involved building a painted steel armature to support the skeleton of a Killer Whale. This is a modern Orca, and not a prehistoric mammal of any kind. The whale washed up on a beach on Vancouver Island some years ago. The specimen has scientific value, so we were not permitted to permanently attach the bones to the armature, or to drill any holes, or glue anything in place, or damage the specimen in any way. This support structure has custom made cradles, hooks and brackets to support every bone without damage. I was down on the weekend to take a bunch of still photographs of the specimen, in various stages of assembly, for the client. We set up a temporary backdrop, and some studio lights to do the photography. Most of this was just shot with a digital camera but I did take a couple of 4" x 5" large format film shots with my view camera. Here is a link to a news report about the project.
https://calgary.ctvnews.ca/video?clipId=1854710&cache=yes
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
Pebbles, Morning Beach
Here is another image from the October trip out to Vancouver Island. This detail shot was taken with a long 300mm lens on my 4x5 View Camera.. It was on Morning Beach, at the north end of Denman Island. Morning Beach is a Community Park along the shore of Denman Island. It is not part of the adjacent Marine Park that encompasses Tree Island and Seal Islets. This image was from the first batch of Ilford FP4+ film that I processed from that trip.
Friday, December 13, 2019
February Image
This is the image I chose for the February page of my 2020 calendar. This is a shot of the ice bubbles on Abraham Lake, with Mt. Michener in the background. I shot this in January of 2017 with my 4x5 view camera and a 110mm lens.
Thursday, December 12, 2019
Low Tide
Another shot from the recent trip to Vancouver Island. Hope no one is getting bored of these shots of eroded sandstone. The subject is so unique, and photogenic that I just shot it to death. Eventually I will move on to something else. This one was shot with my Ebony 4x5 view camera and a 180mm lens. Like the others I have posted thus far, this one was on FP4 processed in Perceptol.
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
January Image
This is the January image from my 2020 Calendar. This shot was taken in an abandoned old farm house up in Smoky Lake County. The images was taken back in November of 2016. The light levels in the old house were very low and as a result the exposure was a long one... 60 seconds.
Monday, December 9, 2019
Procrastination
After months of procrastination I finally finished up the last section of kitchen cabinet for Nordegg. It has been essentially done for quite some time. Just had to mount the drawer fronts, and the doors. I got that finished up last week and then this week I wrapped everything up for transport. The next time that I go out to Nordegg with a helper, I'll take it along.
This is actually the middle section of cabinet in a U-shaped kitchen. So, in order to put it into place I'll need to disconnect the sink that I have temporarily installed, and remove the temporary plywood counter top. Then the fridge will need to be pulled out of the way so that the left side of the cabinet can be pulled back. The center section will go into place, then the left side back into place, and then the fridge rolled back in.
I will likely put the temporary countertop and sink back into place for now. We haven't decided exactly what we'll be doing for a permanent countertop. Probably go with some quartz or granite but haven't really looked into that yet. Need to get these cabinets installed first and then final dimensions can be confirmed for whatever we decide to use on top.
Saturday, December 7, 2019
2020 Calendar
For the past five years or so I have been printing an annual calendar. I get about 20 copies made up and give them away to family and a few close friends. Every month features one of my large format black and white images. For the past two or three years I have printed calendars in "Landscape" format. This year I decided to print in "Portrait" format so that I could feature some of my vertical images. I have included images that date back about three years. This is partly to showcase some of my verticals, but also because I didn't do all that much shooting in 2018, and haven't processed most of my work yet from 2019. Here is a scan of the cover. This is a shot of Jasper Lake in Jasper National Park. I took the image in October 2016 on the Monochrome Guild's Fall Photo Weekend.
Friday, December 6, 2019
Sandstone, Grass and Pool
Here is another shot from Ford Cove on Hornby Island. This is also from the recent trip in October. I used a longer focal length 300mm lens to get in a little tighter on the detail of this outcropping eroded sandstone. The grass and pebbles in the tidal pool give some indication of the scale. It's pretty intimate and small in this case. I used my 4x5 Ebony view camera and shot this on Ilford FP4 film, processed in Perceptol developer.
Thursday, December 5, 2019
October and November Game Camera Images
I pulled the memory card from my game camera and found a few cool images from the past few weeks. Always a little more activity when I put out some oats. All the local furred and feathered residents seem to continue to stop by and check what's going on...
Wednesday, December 4, 2019
Nordegg Weekend
Margarit and I went out to the cottage on the last weekend of November. We brought no kids, and no pets, so it is was unbelievably quiet and relaxing.
We left the city on Saturday morning about 9:30AM. We stopped at the Antique Store in Rimbey and had a look around. We ended up buying an old wood pitch fork, which we will hang on the wall out at the cottage. As we were rolling west out of Rimbey the thermometer on the truck registered a temperature of -20C.
About an hour later we rolled into Rocky Mountain House. We made a lunch stop at Cucina, one of our favorite restaurants. It is owned by an Asian couple that immigrated to Canada several years ago. The menu is a mix of Korean, Italian, with a little red neck red meat thrown in to appeal to the locals. We haven't managed to stop here all summer as we usually had a vehicle full of pets, or it was way past meal time. This time around it worked and we had a really nice lunch together. After lunch we hit a couple of the Antique Stores in Rocky and Margarit bought a few small items.
Later in the afternoon as we headed west towards Nordegg, it got quite a bit warmer. As we drove up over the ridge at Saunders the truck thermometer registered a temperature of -3C. Obviously there was some warm air pushing over the mountains.
When we got out to the cottage, there was no one around. We took a walk around the subdivision in the afternoon and there were only two other vehicles out at cottages on Tamarack Trail, and only a handful more in the more established section. It was very peaceful and quiet.
Once the fire in the wood stove got going, and the chill was taken out of the cottage, it was really cozy and warm. We couldn't seem to get the stove to draft properly at first and promptly filled the cottage with smoke, setting off the smoke detectors. Eventually we got the fire going and aired out the place. The furnaces didn't even kick in and the fire was all that we needed all weekend. We made an evening meal of homemade pizza and salad and then watched a documentary DVD.
On Sunday it was even warmer. The tempereature got up to about +4C. We had a big breakfast together and then relaxed, lazing around the cottage. I put some oats out for the deer and filled up the bird feeder. A Whitetail doe eventually wandered over and had something to eat but mostly it was the squirrel, the magpies and some whiskeyjacks that were gorging themselves. That squirrel was really defensive and kept chasing the magpies away.
By mid afternoon we reluctantly packed up and headed on our way. We decided to take a quick spin up the valley to see if the lake had frozen yet. There was barely a puff of breeze at the cottage and most of the way up the valley it was reasonably calm. Once we got out to the Bighorn River we could see the wind sweeping snow over the peaks of the Bighorn Range. Abraham Lake had a little ice at the east end, but mostly it was still open. At Allstones Creek it was pretty breezy and there were waves on the lake. Once we turned the corner towards Windy Point and the Mt. Michener viewpoint it was a full blown gale. Windy Point lived up to its name once again. It was a challenge to hold the truck doors open and there were large rolling whitecaps on the lake. I took a couple of photographs with my medium format panoramic camera but Margarit had to hold the truck door open beside me to shelter me from the wind so that my tripod didn't blow over. The temperature was +2C, but with the wind, which must have been at least 50kmh, it felt more like -15 or -20C.
After packing up here we headed for home. We saw one solitary wild horse on the drive home, and had seen one herd on the way out. Other than a couple of deer there was not much wildlife out by the highway. We stopped in Rimbey on the way home and had dinner together at a place called James' Bar and Grill. The menu was extensive and the food was homemade and really hearty. A place we will definitely consider stopping at again.
The three girls survived the weekend at home in our absence. They did not accomplish much in the way of chores and housecleaning and didn't even live up to our low expectations. But all in all the weekend went pretty well and hopefully Margarit and I can head out together again sometime soon.
Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Hornby Shore
This shot was taken on our first trip out to Hornby Island. It was just a short distance from the Marina at Ford Cove. When we returned a couple of days later the sky was clear and the tide lower. But I kind of like the moodiness of the sky in this first image. This is from the first batch of negatives that I've processed. Ilford FP4+ in Perceptol. I shot this with my 4x5 view camera and a 135mm lens, with no filter.
Monday, December 2, 2019
Helliwell Spit
Here's a scan of another negative from the trip out to Vancouver Island. This shot was taken at Helliwell Provincial Park on Hornby Island. This the last shot of the day, after hiking around the perimeter of the park. It was a beautiful spot, but I found very little that was visually motivating. Perhaps I was just worn out from a long day of shooting and not seeing anything. It was close to 4:00 in the afternoon when I saw this spit, projecting out into the Strait of Georgia, with the Sunshine Coast on the mainland,visible in the distance. I took this shot before we packed up and headed back through the woods, to the parking area and the truck. From there we had to drive across Hornby to catch the ferry to Denman Island. Then it was a drive across Denman and another ferry to get back to Vancouver Island and the drive up to our rental house at Courtenay. A great place to visit, but running your life based on these ferry schedules would become very frustrating over time.
Vancouver Island Negatives
This is the first scan of the first batch of negatives from the recent Vancouver Island trip. This image was shot on FP4+ film, in 4" x 5" format, processed in Perceptol 1:1. I expose the film at 100iso and develop for 11:45 minutes at 24C. The shot was taken with my Ebony 4x5 and a Rodenstock 90mm lens, with #25 Red Filter. The 90mm focal length is roughly equivalent to a 28mm lens on a small format camera.
The beaches of Hornby Island feature some spectacularly eroded sandstone. This spot, near Heron Rocks and Ford Cove was particularly spectacular. There will be more images from the trip posted in the coming days.
Thursday, November 28, 2019
Back to Nordegg
This past Saturday, November 23rd, I headed back out to Nordegg. It was hoped that Margarit would be able to join me, but that was not to be. Too much stuff going on at home and with the girls. I didn't make it out until around 2:00 in the afternoon Saturday. Mostly I just wanted to check on the place as no one has been out for five weeks... since Thanksgiving. I can monitor the temperature and thermostat remotely, as well as check my security cameras online. But there is nothing quite like a personal visit to make sure all is good.
I went out for a walk on Saturday afternoon and met some new [to me] neighbors. A couple from Red Deer that have had a cottage out in the subdivision since 2006, and recently made the move out here permanently. Really nice people and we had a great visit.
In the evening I just mostly sat around the cottage, listening to music, nursing my sore ribs, and checking some e-mails. I put some oats out for the deer. Once it became too dark to keep an eye on them out the window, I would watch them on the phone app of my security cameras. The cameras use Infrared to record a black and white image in darkness, and it is not visible to the human eye, or wildlife. At one point a Red Fox wandered into the clearing, sat down for a few seconds, and then wandered off.
On Sunday morning it was overcast and quite a bit cooler. My truck thermometer showed a temperature of +11 on the drive out on Saturday but on Sunday it only got up to a couple of degrees above freezing. I think it must have rained a bit overnight and then turned to a skiff of snow. It was really windy and dull and not a particularly nice day. I was much lazier than I have ever been out there and didn't do much of anything. I laid in bed for quite a while, resting my sore ribs, before I got up and had a late breakfast. By mid afternoon I decided to pack up and head for home.
None of my cameras... not even the digital, or for that matter even the iPhone, made it out to take any photographs on the weekend, so I have no images to add to this blog post.
I saw three separate groups of wild horses on the way out on Saturday, and then again on the way home on Sunday. I also saw a Great Gray Owl on a stump. But other than that it was a rather low key and uneventful weekend. I got back home in time to catch the second half of the Grey Cup game on TV, and then turned in early.
On Sunday morning it was overcast and quite a bit cooler. My truck thermometer showed a temperature of +11 on the drive out on Saturday but on Sunday it only got up to a couple of degrees above freezing. I think it must have rained a bit overnight and then turned to a skiff of snow. It was really windy and dull and not a particularly nice day. I was much lazier than I have ever been out there and didn't do much of anything. I laid in bed for quite a while, resting my sore ribs, before I got up and had a late breakfast. By mid afternoon I decided to pack up and head for home.
None of my cameras... not even the digital, or for that matter even the iPhone, made it out to take any photographs on the weekend, so I have no images to add to this blog post.
I saw three separate groups of wild horses on the way out on Saturday, and then again on the way home on Sunday. I also saw a Great Gray Owl on a stump. But other than that it was a rather low key and uneventful weekend. I got back home in time to catch the second half of the Grey Cup game on TV, and then turned in early.
Monday, November 25, 2019
More War Wounds
When I played in the Hockey tournament in Banff I bruised myself. I think it was in the last game of the tournament on Saturday.... But I did crash to the ice a couple of times during the games on Friday night. One of those times my hockey pants twisted out of position and I essentially had no padding.
On Saturday afternoon and evening when the girls and I were wandering around Banff my backside was really sore and it was extremely painful to walk up a slope or a set of stairs. Now a week later, the bruises are showing up. I have a huge purple bruise about the size of a dessert plate on my posterior. These is another smaller one on my hip.... and then a few days later one showed up on my tailbone. I can't really share pictures of these as it would be sort of X-rated.
When we played the two late games on the return to our regular season schedule on November 19 and 20, I made sure and really got these injuries more painful and fell onto them a couple more times.
The game on the 20th was a really rough one, and the officials didn't do a very good job of keeping the game under control. At one point around the midway mark, some kid on the opposing team cross checked me heavily into the boards. This was in retaliation for a hit I laid onto him along the boards a few seconds earlier. The difference was that my hit didn't draw a penalty, but his resulted in a 4 minute double minor. My ribs felt really sore after that hit and I had a headache... but I managed to finish the game. Now, a few days later, I think at least one of my ribs is cracked. What I thought was just a bruise must be something more. Every time I twist or bend over or lift something there is this burning pain in my ribcage... kind of like heartburn but centered in the bone. We now have a break of of over a week until our next game so I'll have to wait and see if I'll be able to play....
Got the guys number though... he better watch out next time...!
Friday, November 22, 2019
Three More FP4
These are scans of the three additional negatives, taken on the recent trip to Jasper. These were part of the batch of FP4 film in 4" x 5" sheet format that I recently processed. The first is a shot of the snow covered boulders at Medicine Lake. The second is the Maligne River downstream from Medicine Lake. The last is Mountain Creek at the top of Punchbowl Falls.
Tuesday, November 19, 2019
Banff Hockey Tournament
The Renegades Hockey Team was in Banff this past weekend and played in a tournament. I booked most of Friday off work, though I did slip into the office briefly in the morning before hitting the road for the mountains. Margarit and Annelise came along with me for the weekend.
We left the city shortly after lunch and arrived in Banff by about 4:30. After checking into our hotel and dropping off our luggage, I had to head over to the rink. The girls dropped me off there and then went on into town. We only had twelve of our players signed up for the tournament so that made things a little challenging right from the start. To make matters worse, we had to play twice on Friday night.
The first game was at 6:00PM against another team from Edmonton called the Jagr Bombs. This was a fairly close game but we eventually fell behind and lost by a score of 6-2. Immediately after that game we moved our gear to a different dressing room. We had enough time to head upstairs to the lounge for a couple of beers and then head back down to the room to get dressed for a second game at 8:45PM. This was against another Edmonton based team called the Pumas. We should have been fairly well matched against these guys but they were fresh and we were worn out from the long drive and the previous game. We got blown out of this one by a score of 6-0.
After the game Margarit and Anna came and picked me up. We headed into town for a late dinner. One of the only places that was open late, and allowed minors was a Mexican place called the Magpie and Stump. It was pretty good and I was really hungry. By the time we finished dinner I was exhausted. It was all I could do to walk the six blocks back to our hotel, where we immediately crashed.
The next day we played a game at 12:15. This one was against a team from Estevan, Saskatchewan called the Tri-City Chiefs. This was a very closely matched game and lot of fun to play. We managed to hang on for a 6-5 victory. The top two teams in our division of four played in a championship game on Sunday morning. We didn't make it to that game but I understand that the Jagr Bombs beat the Chiefs 8-1.
On Saturday, and again on Sunday morning the girls and I wandered around town. We checked out the Christmas market and some of the shops and galleries. We couldn't really join the team at the bars on Saturday night as we had Anna along with us, and didn't want to leave her alone in the hotel. So we passed on that part of the weekend but really enjoyed ourselves all the same.
Monday, November 18, 2019
Pyramid Aspens
Here's another scan from the recent Fall Photo Weekend in Jasper. This is Pyramid Mountain in late afternoon light. This was from the recently processed batch of FP4 large format film.
Sunday, November 17, 2019
Ilford FP4+
Shortly after my return from Jasper I headed down to the darkroom and processed a batch of Ilford FP4+. This was twenty sheets of 4" x 5" large format film. I processed in Ilford Perceptol developer. My standard development is to dilute the stock 1:1 and process for 11:45 minutes at 24 degrees. This consistently yields a negative with a normal contrast range.
This batch included five sheets from the recent Fall Photo Weekend in Jasper, ten sheets from the trip out to Vancouver Island, and five sheets that date back to 2017. This was the first time I have been able to get into the darkroom and do any processing for quite some time. I always find it very exciting when I flip the lights on after processing and take that first look at the negatives. I will be scanning and posting a bunch of these images over the next little while.
This one is from the recent trip to Jasper. It is a shot of the Colin Range, as seen from the shore of Medicine Lake. I used a long 500mm lens to get in tight on the mountain. Note the trees partway down the face... these are full size, adult evergreens... this gives some idea of scale. The sky, at this high altitude was a very deep blue, and it turned completely black with the use of a #25 Red Filter.
This one is from the recent trip to Jasper. It is a shot of the Colin Range, as seen from the shore of Medicine Lake. I used a long 500mm lens to get in tight on the mountain. Note the trees partway down the face... these are full size, adult evergreens... this gives some idea of scale. The sky, at this high altitude was a very deep blue, and it turned completely black with the use of a #25 Red Filter.
Friday, November 15, 2019
Fall Photo Weekend - Day 3
This would be the last day of the Monochrome Guild's Fall Photo Weekend. There were six members left in the group at this point as Gabor had headed home on Sunday afternoon. This was the Remembrance Day holiday and by coincidence we were driving past the Royal Canadian Legion in the Jasper townsite at the 11th minute of the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month....
Arda, Gord and Court all had their own vehicles and they set off on their own after we finished breakfast. Steve and Meghan were riding with me and we took a drive up the Pyramid Lake Road. All weekend long I had been rather shocked and dismayed at the extent of the damage done to all the lodgepole pines by the mountain pine beetles. Virtually all of the mature trees were reddish brown. Up on the Pyramid Lake Road some large areas had been clear cut, and I assume this was to deal with that infestation. We made a stop up at Patricia Lake and there was still a little open water with some steam rising off of it. On this morning conditions were mostly cloudy, and the temperature was about -11C to start. It warmed up a bit later in the day, and the skies broke open somewhat.
After we finished up at Patricia Lake we went back through town and headed east back towards home. We had hoped to stop out by the dunes at Jasper Lake but as is often the case, the wind was just howling. It was particularly strong on this day and was whipping up huge clouds of dust. I got a great shot of this on my iPhone, but unfortunately conditions would not permit an attempt to shoot this with the big camera on film.
Later we made a brief stop out by Pocohontas. We took a short drive up the Miette Road to Punchbowl Falls. The road was closed for the season beyond this point. The water in Mountain Creek was down to a trickle and the falls were mostly frozen. We were able to get right down to the waters edge at the top of the falls and shoot the ice details. By this point it was 2:00 in the afternoon so when we finished up here, we packed out gear in the truck and hit the road for home.
We stopped for a coffee in Edson, and had to yield to a moose crossing the road near Niton Junction, but otherwise it was an uneventful drive home. Road conditions were not great east of Edson, but improved the closer we got to Edmonton. We arrived back in the city around 6:00 and after dropping off Steve and Meghan, I headed home and offloaded all my stuff.
We stopped for a coffee in Edson, and had to yield to a moose crossing the road near Niton Junction, but otherwise it was an uneventful drive home. Road conditions were not great east of Edson, but improved the closer we got to Edmonton. We arrived back in the city around 6:00 and after dropping off Steve and Meghan, I headed home and offloaded all my stuff.
Thursday, November 14, 2019
Fall Photo Weekend - Day 2
When we got up on the morning of Sunday November 10th, it was very cold, and there was a little fresh snow in the Jasper townsite. After coffee and breakfast we packed up our camera gear and headed out. We drove up the Maligne Road and stopped at Medicine Lake. The temperature was about -14C in town, and it was slightly colder at the higher elevation of the lake. There was a lot more snow up there too. The lake was almost empty, as is the norm at this time of year. The trickle of water left in the lakebed was mostly frozen, with just a couple of very small open patches.
Medicine Lake was created, before modern times, when a rockslide off of the Colin Range dammed the Maligne River. In summer, the water flow from the mountain runoff exceeds the outflow and the lake is created. In late summer and fall when the water flow is reduced, the lake drains away through the porous rock and the almost dry lake bed is left behind.
We spent a couple hours shooting here and the temperature eventually rose a little. It was actually quite pleasant because there was no wind, and the sun came out. After we finished shooting here we headed back down the valley and made a stop along the Maligne River. It was much colder here as we were in shadow, out of the sun, it was very humid by the open water, and a breeze picked up a bit. After spending an hour or so here we made our way back down to the main valley of the Athabasca. Here there was very little snow, and in the large open valley, there was still some direct sun at this late afternoon time. We stopped in a meadow and did a couple of shots of Pyramid Mountain.
Gabor had to work on Monday so he said his goodbyes to the rest of us, up at Medicine Lake and hit the road for home by about 1:00 in the afternoon. While Gord, Steve, Meghan and I were shooting Pyramid Mountain, Arda and Court went down by the Athabasca and shot the ice bloom on the river. As the late afternoon light faded, we packed up our gear and headed back to our hotel.
We relaxed and had a couple of drinks in our room, and then ventured outside again. We made the five block walk into town and went back to a the same restaurant as the previous evening. This was a family run Greek place called Something Else. Just like the night before, the food was very good. After dinner we walked back to our room and stayed up until about midnight, visiting and having a few drinks and snacks together.
Gabor wandered around with his digital camera and took snapshots of a most of the Guild members in "Action". We were all working with our cameras and attempting to capture the scene before us on black and white film. Gabor shared these images with the group after he got back home and gave me permission to include them here on my blog. It was shortly after these images were taken that he had to hit the road for home.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)