Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Greenland 2022

I was scheduled and ticketed to visit Borneo in June, 2020. So yeah… thankfully, Natural Habitat refunded the trip cost, and Expedia got my airline tickets refunded  I continue to book most of my reservations through Expedia since then; they’re very good about working things out when wrinkles occur.

Borneo was closed for travel for some time. And I booked a trip to East Greenland while COVID settled down and vaccinations ramped up worldwide. Remote and cold Greenland didn’t seem like a hotspot for outbreaks. We had to test for COVID to fly to Greenland, and again to transfer from Tasiilaq to our base camp nestled in a remote fjord. All from our group passed both tests. 

But weather in the region prevented us from getting to the base camp. We spent our time in the heavy rains and wind in Tasiilaq before transferring to Kulusuk, where he had a spot of nicer weather. The Natural Habitat guides kept us duly entertained, and the company provided generous accommodation for us not being able to get the full tour from base camp. 
The Natural Habitat trip was East Greenland Arctic Adventure.



UPDATES: I did eventually make it to Borneo in June, 2024. And many of us did contract COVID in the outpost hotel in Kulusuk. There was another big group of Americans there while we were there, and it seems they were not operating under strict testing protocols. I was COVID-free from the initial outbreak (early 2020) until September, 2022. My case was mild (I had vaccines and boosters in me by then), and that was my only infection so far.


Friday, December 14, 2018

Norway 2018

I spent a month in Norway. The Oslo Airport hotel was a base of sorts. From there, I flew to The Lofoten and back, and took one of the many available Norway in a Nutshell railway/road/fjord tours to Bergen and back, and flew to Svalbard for my journey into the Arctic Ocean in search of polar bears. I was grateful for dark nights when I returned to Oslo from that expedition. 

A month in Norway with so many picturesque shooting locations will fill your memory cards and computer with images. Even with massive culling. So ... this is a big preso/video.



I toured Svalbard and the Arctic Ocean on the M/S Origo with Wildphoto (Longyearbyen).

I toured The Lofoten with 68 North / Cody Duncan (Lofoten).

I snuck in a quick tour of the countryside and Fjords with Norway in a Nutshell.

And I made a day trip from Longyearbyen to the abandoned Russian mining city of Pyramiden.


Saturday, February 25, 2017

Planning for 2018: Norway

I'm "laying low" in 2017 as far as international photo safaris are concerned. I wanted to have financial leeway to do things relative to The Great American Eclipse 2017, and I wasn't sure what shape that would take.

But as it is Presidents' Week 2017, it's time to assemble plans for summer, 2018. So far, I'm booked for

Wildphoto Travel's Svalbard Classic

and am eyeing

68 North's Lofoten Islands Midnight Mountains (this is the 2017 link).

Depending on schedules, I might be able to putter about on some version of

Norway in a Nutshell.

Wildphoto Travels' Svalbard Classic puts you on the ice-hardened but nimble M/S Origo out of Longyearbyen on a "hunt" for landscapes, walruses, and polar bears via a partial circumnavigation of the isolated archipelago located 10 degrees south of the north pole. Here's how that trip went for them in 2013.

Lofoten Midnight Mountains involves hiking in the picturesque Lofoten archipelago, just above the Arctic Circle on Norway's west coat.

Norway in a Nutshell is a popular tourist travel package that allows travelers to get out of Oslo and see the Norwegian countryside and coast via train, bus, and boat.

Obviously, I have time to work out logistics and details. And see if I can learn a bit of Norwegian (Bokmal) via Duolingo prior to departure.

Photo Tour of Oslo
TripAdvisor seems to like this one. I'll pin this here for future reference.

UPDATE 6/3/17: Trips to Africa and Brazil get you thinking about sunscreen and mosquitoes. You still need mosquito protection in Alaska in the summer, but no need for malaria prophylaxis.

Tromping on Norwegian terrain and on a boat, it seems it might be nice to have some grippy boots. Vibram now offers Arctic Grip for traction on wet ice. Traction on wet ice? I'll be keeping an eye on this stuff. Gear Junkie. Digital Trends.

The Art of Polar Bear Photography

Friday, December 30, 2011

Iceland 2011 multimedia show

What to do upon returning from a bountiful photo safari? Process the stills, pare them down. Pare them down again. Post them to an online service. Share the link.

But what about the captured video and panoramas, etc. How best to wrap the memories up for later reminiscing?

My choice: Keynote. Honestly, I feel like I can do almost anything in Keynote. Presentations: of course. Page layout: yes. Multimedia vacation "slideshows": indeed!

In any case, here's the preso/show from the Iceland photo tour this year. I didn't compile it until 2015, and I didn't export it as a movie/post it to YouTube until 2016. Better late...

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Iceland 2011: First Light & f-stop Tours

I was eager to get myself and a camera to Iceland, and I spotted an ad in Outdoor Photographer for a photo tour that was set to go over during the summer. So I signed on and ponied up.

The outfit was First Light Photography Tours, run by the well-traveled Andy long out of Colorado. They seemed to cater to birders, but the Iceland trip came across as more of a landscape tour. Still though, the other clients who signed on were avid birders who had been with FLP before, and had visions of Puffins, Arctic Terns, Kittywakes, etc., dancing in their heads, as I would eventually discover.

A hitch developed between payment and trip: the promise that meals would be paid for was an oversight on FLP's part. A previous partnering with an Icelandic guide operation afforded that, but the one for our trip did not. To FLP's credit, they allowed clients the option of paying for their own meals or keeping to the terms of the original agreement. It may well be that I was the only client to stick to the terms as advertised. (I know I had the least expensive camera body in the group, a Canon prosumer DSLR, the 60D.)

I did acquire a serious tripod for this trip. All indications were that a sturdy tripod was essential in Iceland. So I got a Gitzo GT3541L. Just kinda rolls of the tongue, a name like that. A tripod like that nearly makes you a serious photog, save for the fact it bears a center column. Serious photos shun center columns just as they do UV filters.

The journey from Sacramento, USA to Keflavik, Iceland was not without glitches. The Delta flight from LAX to JFK was delayed to the extent that it appeared it would arrive after my connection to KEF departed, down from a 2+hr layover. I scrambled to make alternate arrangements; the best I could do was a booking on the next day's flight to Iceland.

Later I discovered that there was no need for my panic, and the Delta personnel at the LAX gate should have known this. The aircraft I was riding from LAX to JFK was the very same aircraft scheduled to fly from JFK to KEF. But since I had made emergency plans, and contrary to what the gate agent told me, Delta cancelled my original booking so as to book me on the nest day's flight. This all had to be sorted at JFK, and resulted in the loss of my long-ago-booked window seat in favor of a middle seat facing a bulkhead.

This is why I don't fly Delta so much if I can possibly avoid it.

In any case, once in Iceland, our local guide was the delightful Mike Kissane of f-Stop Tours. He's an American ex-pat who found love in Iceland. So he's a rare guide who's conversant in his L1 of English as well as his L2 of the impenetrable Icelandic. We ventured from Reykjavik to points north, west, south, and east.

While the other folks on the tour were great, they were quite keen to get bird shots. We would stop at a lakeshore to photograph a swan a quarter mile away. But if we arrived at a birdless locale, there was a palpable urgency to move on to the next stop where there might be birds. We blew past countless decaying concrete barns overrun with verdant mosses. I talked Mike into stopping at one on our last day in the wilds, and there was great puzzlement in the van as to why we were stopping.

But the niggles and perceived slights paled in comparison to Iceland's beauty. I was left with a sense that I wanted to return to see more. We ran up the west coast a ways, and along the south and partway up the east on the Ring Road. And we toured the sites of the Golden Circle. But we did not get into the north or the northwest.

And the Sirius Konsum dark chocolate is really very special.

I stayed on after the official tour and got some architecture and graffiti shots by walking the streets of Reykjavik.

2011 06 Iceland Gold Photo Album


B&GER Entry: I’ve seen amazing photographs made in Iceland and long wanted to try my own hand at it. I found a photographer tour going over, so I signed on. There was too much drama in the flights over, but Iceland was beautiful. The photographers were a curious mix (and I was no doubt among the curioust). The local guide was great, and we saw quite a bit of the island. From the colorful steel-clad buildings of Reykjavik to the weather-beaten dwellings of Flatey. From the robust cascades at Hraunfoss to icebergs of Jökulsárlón. From the tectonic plate junction of Thingvellir to the black sands of Ingólfshödi. Volcanoes and glaciers, geothermal areas and basalt beaches. Icelandic horses and puffins (and many more bird species). Lonely churches and derelict concrete barns. We had unexpectedly warm, sunny weather. Luckily I packed a mini travel tube of sunscreen. I didn’t expect to use any of and ended up using it all. I stayed two days after the photogs left to wander Reykjavik and tour Thorsmork. But I didn’t get to much of the interior and missed the desolate northern half. An air tour of the glaciers and volcanoes would have been worthwhile, too.

Friday, July 1, 2005

Rio Americans in Paris 2005

With Rio Americano teacher, Alec Hodgins, his wife, Christine, and the Jokers of French (RAHS).

We flew from San Francisco (SFO) to Paris (CDG) direct, over the top of the world. It was never dark outside during the 11-hour flight.

We connected the students with their host families, then proceeded to our 3-star hotel. We had a week in Paris with little/no obligations. Somehow we managed to fill the days.

When the students returned, we motored down to the Loire Valley to see the sights. We got to Chartres Cathedral, Chateau Chambord, and Clos Lucé, among other.

My image collections can be found here:

Rio Americans in Paris I (Spring) Photo Album