Saturday, August 28, 2010

Adventures on eastern Georgian Bay

















Photo 1 (above): Grantic rock patterns in eastern Georgian Bay at sunset. EOS 5D mark II; 17-40mm lens; Singh-Ray LB ColorCombo polarizer & 3 stop reverse ND grad; ISO 200; 3.2s @ f/20

This was an adventurous week! I spent a few days photographing and exploring remote islands in eastern Georgian Bay with my friend Ian "nikonIAN" Brooks (http://www.ianbrooks.net/). We loaded my boat with gear and set out to camp on a remote chain of small islands sporting amazing granite folds that form elaborate patterns. I'd first spied these geologic formations in a tv documentary and they have been on my mind ever since!

The great challenge/stress of our trip was navigating the boat through a rocky labyrinth of shoals. The combonation of Ian's advanced GPS navigating skills and my inability to follow instructions, landed us on our first shoal within hours. I hit it hard enough to break the skeg of the bottom of the boat motor, but thankfully there was minimal damage to the prop. Onward we cruised (although much slower).

We managed to make a couple trips to the best islands for magic hour light, but couldn't stay as long as we wanted because of the danger in boating back in forth in low light (you can't see the shoals). Next trip I'm going to drag a kayak out with me.

The most expensive part of the weekend was when I dropped my almost brand new 70-200mm f/4 IS lens on the bedrock and literally snapped the lens body in half. I took it into Canon yesterday and they tell me it will be fixed in 4 days (and a reasonable price). This will be my first test of the new CPS program!

Here are a few shots from the trip. More to follow as I catch up on processing the raw files. 


Photo 2 (above): Grantic rock patterns in eastern Georgian Bay. EOS 5D mark II; 24mmTSE II tilt shift lens; Singh-Ray LB Warming polarizer & 2 hard edge ND grad; ISO 200; 1/13s @ f/20


Photo 3 (above): Grantic rock patterns in eastern Georgian Bay. EOS 5D mark II; 17-40mm lens; Singh-Ray LB Warming polarizer & 2 stop hard edge ND grad; ISO 200; 0.4s @ f/18



Photo 4 (above): Grantic rock patterns in eastern Georgian Bay at sunset. EOS 5D mark II; 17-40mm lens; Singh-Ray LB ColorCombo polarizer & 3 stop reverse ND grad; ISO 200; 6s @ f/20


Photo 5 (above): Grantic rock patterns in eastern Georgian Bay. EOS 5D mark II; 17-40mm lens; Singh-Ray LB polarizer; ISO 100; 1/30s @ f/18


Photo 6 (above): Northern Watersnake eating fish (Round Goby?); Canon G11 point & shoot
It pays to have a point & shoot camera handy for unexpected moments like when this watersnake came up with dinner! I didn't have time to grab my SLR system.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Vote for the boat name...

Thanks to everyone for the many great suggestions for a boat name! I've picked my 6 favorites and put a poll here on the blog to decide the final choice (it's on the top right of the page). Please vote for the one you like the best. Whichever name gets the most votes is what I'll go with!

I'm making good use of the boat and spent all of today out on eastern Georgian Bay touring with geologist  Nick Culshaw. He showed me locations (and provided geologic explanations) for some of the most remarkable rock formations and patterns I've ever seen. For the next few days, I'll be camping out on remote islands to shoot the formations in dawn/dusk light.  


Here's the boat out today (dreary light) on Georgian Bay. My friends came along, hence all of the clothing and gear.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Help me name my boat !

Here's my latest photo accessory... 16' and 50HP of boat-awesomeness to shuttle myself around to faraway shorelines. A boat needs a name and I need your help to come up with something clever! The name should be photo related and it can't be too long (it's a small boat so the name has to fit!). So far my friends have given me some good suggestions:
Shutter Speed
Over-Exposed
F-Stop
I wanted to call it "EthanMeleg.com Corporate Yacht" but my friends said that was lame.

Please post your best suggestions! If I pick your name, you can either have 1) a boat trip (if you live nearby) or 2) an 11x16 print of your choice from my entire collection.

My Mom is up for a visit and the boating conditions were perfect yesterday, so I took her out for a tour along the spectacular shoreline of Bruce Peninsula National Park. That's Georgian Bay in the background.... love that Caribbean-blue water! Below are a few photos from our excursion.


Photo 1(above): That's me with the boat on the shoreline of Georgian Bay. EOS 5D mark II; 17-40mm lens; Singh-Ray LB warming polarizer; photo shot by my Mom


Photo 2 (above): The cliffs of the Niagara Escarpment in Bruce Peninsula National Park plunge into the clear blue-green waters of Georgian Bay. EOS 5D mark II; 17-40mm lens; Singh-Ray LB warming polarizer


Photo 3 (above): Framed by a shoreline cave, my Mom looks out at the blue waters of Georgian Bay from Bruce Peninsula National Park. EOS 5D mark II; 17-40mm lens; Singh-Ray LB warming polarizer;


Photo 4 (above): That's me at the helm. Photo shot by my Mom with a Canon G11.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Lake Superior Provincial Park camping trip

I've just returned from a trip to Lake Superior Provincial Park, which ranks on the shortlist of my very favorite places in the world. The landscape is grand, the shorelines wild and the potential for dramatic skies over Lake Superior keeps luring me back there time and again. During a lakeside dinner of fajitas on Saturday evening, I studied the clouds and predicted a wash out sunset. A half hour later I was sprinting  down the beach with my camera gear to shoot the most dramatic skies and kick ass sunset I've ever hit on Superior. That's the way it works in landscape photography - the best skies often materialize when you least expect them. Here are some of the photos from the trip.


Photo 1 (above): Sunset and dramatic clouds over Lake Superior shoreline in Lake Superior Provincial Park. Canon EOS 5d mark II, 17-40mm lens, Singh-Ray LB ColorCombo polarizer & 3 stop reverse ND grad; ISO 200, 3.2s @ f/20; mirror lock up & cable release


Photo 2 (above): Sunset and dramatic clouds over Lake Superior shoreline in Lake Superior Provincial Park. Canon EOS 5d mark II, 17-40mm lens, Singh-Ray LB ColorCombo polarizer & 3 stop reverse ND grad; ISO 200, 2.5s @ f/20; mirror lock up & cable release


Photo 3 (above): Afterglow over Lake Superior cobble rock shoreline in Lake Superior Provincial Park. Canon EOS 5d mark II, 17-40mm lens, Singh-Ray LB ColorCombo polarizer & 3 stop reverse ND grad; ISO 200, 20s @ f/22; mirror lock up & cable release


Photo 4 (above): A shoreline campfire and playing guitar after sunset on the Lake Superior shoreline in Lake Superior Provincial Park. Canon EOS 5d mark II, 17-40mm lens, Singh-Ray 2 stop hard edge ND grad; ISO 640, 13s @ f/13; self timer (that's me on the right)


Photo 5 (above): Long exposure of clouds (streaking) after sunet on the Lake Superior shoreline in Lake Superior Provincial Park. Canon EOS 5d mark II, 17-40mm lens, Singh-Ray 2 stop hard edge ND grad; ISO 200, 247s @ f/11; mirror lock-up & cable release


Photo 6 (above): Evening light over sand ripples on the Lake Superior shoreline in Lake Superior Provincial Park. Canon EOS 5d mark II, 24-70/2.8 lens, Singh-Ray LB warming polarizer & 2 stop soft edge ND grad; ISO 200, 0.6s @ f/22; mirror lock-up and cable release

Monday, August 02, 2010

Sunrise boat trip to Flowerpot Island

Many great photo locations are most accessible by water. Though I have been paddling canoes and kayaks since I was a kid, it can be a heck lot of work - and logistically challenging - to get to places when the light is best. I finally broke down and bought a small boat last week (16' aluminum with a 50HP engine) to open up a new world of photo possibilities. My first photo shoot with the boat was out to nearby Flowerpot Island:
 

Photo 1 (above): Self-portrait at sunrise, Flowerpot Island, Fathom Five National Marine Park, Tobermory, Ontario. Canon EOS 5d mark II, EF 17-40mm lens, Singh-Ray LB warming polarizer & 3 stop soft edge ND grad, ISO 200, 1/6s @ f/14


Photo 2 (above): Getting air next to the flowerpot, Flowerpot Island, Fathom Five National Marine Park, Tobermory, Ontario. Canon EOS 1Ds mark III, 24mm TSE II tilt shift lens, ISO 800, 1/500s @ f/4.5.

The great sunrise was short-lived because of overcast skies, so I decided to mess around with my tilt-shift lens. One of the great benefits of the lens is the ability to achieve depth of field at fairly wide-open apertures. By tilting the lens I was able to shoot this at f/4.5 yet have plenty of depth-of-field and a fast enough shutter speed to stop motion in air. That's me jumping... my friend Cainan machine-gunned the the shutter release for me.