Entries in Tasmania (12)

Monday
Apr072008

Meandering The Midlands Highway

We made it to Bicheno at 6 last night, turning a two hour drive into a full day's journey. Never travel with photographers if you're in a hurry to get somewhere, and expect to take extra time if you're with Winston and there are cows anywhere to be seen. (Oddly enough Winston also consumes mass quantities of beef.) In many ways the countryside looks very familiar to us Northern Californians -- Tasmania is at latitude 42° south - San Francisco is at 42° north -- but then you run into a wallaby or a quaint English village and the illusion is dashed. And I've never seen skies quite like this in Petaluma. As we were driving along the Midlands Highway, we passed a giant sign made of red wood that read "T-R-E-E."
We stopped to visit the farm next door, and the farmer told us the story of the sign. In 1996, to publicize the deforestation of Tasmania, a group called Landcare painted a huge dead Eucalyptus tree bright red. The tree was burned by disgruntled farmers, but resurrected as this red sign by artist Ray Norman, Jack Jaffray, Landcare and others in March 1997. It stands by an experimental grove of trees, planted to show what the area might look like if it were returned to forest. The tension between "progress" and the environmentalists in Tasmania can be seen everywhere. I'm sympathetic with the greens who want to preserve this wild and beautiful place, but it's also true that the character of this island comes from its settlers. The quaint town of Ross is a perfect example. It was as if we were in the English countryside. Ross has the oldest bridge in Tasmania, built by convicts in 1836. One of the convicts, a forger, carved elaborate abstract designs into the bottom of the bridge. The historic Ross bakery was the inspiration for Hayao Miyazaki's 1989 animated movie, Kiki's Delivery Service. The bakery is mecca for visiting Japanese tourists who come to see the bakery and Kiki's room. My daughter Abby asked me to get a picture of the room. It looks like the ghost of Bruce Dale is visiting it.
I've uploaded more of my pictures on my SmugMug page. To look at them full screen, press the Slideshow button. You'll see many more pictures on the real photographers' blogs at digitalmedia.oreilly.com/adventure. We stayed up late last night putting up a web gallery of our best pictures, so far. If you want to see why I am blown away every day by these world-class photographers, take a gander at www.xyzadventures.com/galleries. And don't forget you can buy prints of many of our pictures to benefit Save The Tasmanian Devil at our public reception, 13 April from 5-7p at the Henry Jones Art Hotel in Hobart, TAS
Sunday
Apr062008

On The Road To Bicheno

Bruce Dale, Winston Hendrickson, Angela Drury, and I head out of Hobart on the road to Bicheno.
Caution: this video might make you carsick!
Friday
Apr042008

The Long And Winding Road To Bruny

Yesterday Bruce Dale, Peter Krogh, Winston Hendrickson, and I took the morning ferry to Bruny Island, a secluded vacation retreat off the southern coast of Hobart - population 600. Bruce drove, because he'd driven on the left before - in fact, he'd driven all the way from England to India following the gypsies for a book some years ago. After hearing some of his harrowing stories from that trip we feel pretty lucky to have returned in one piece. We stopped many times along the way and spent the entire day there. Our goal was the Bruny Lighthouse, but our best pictures were from Cloudy Bay lagoon. That's my poor attempt to capture its beauty below, but Bruce took a panorama that should be amazing - we waited an hour for the light to be just so. All of these pictures were taken with my Canon 5D. Most with the 24-105 zoom except for the Farmers' Market pictures which were taken with the 50mm f1.2. All of them were adjusted in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2.0 and most of the Bruny Island pictures were re-touched in Photoshop to remove a dust blotch that was on my sensor.
I've uploaded around three dozen shots from our first three days in Hobart to my SmugMug page (try the slideshow). Let me know what you think. I'm learning so much from these amazing photographers, and enjoying my first visit to Australia even more than I expected. I'm taking today (Saturday in Australia) off to go through the thousands of pictures and hours of video I've shot. I also have to rest up because I'm doing the radio show tomorrow morning at 4 local time. After the show I hope we'll get a chance to go up to the Tahune Forest AirWalk. After the radio show Monday morning we take off for Basecamp 2 at the Diamond Island Resort in Bicheno on the east coast of Tasmania.
Wednesday
Apr022008

Lightroom Adventure - Day 1

The adventure doesn't officially begin until Friday, but photographers are trickling into Hobart one by one. Yesterday there were only five of us, British Photographer of the Year, Jackie King, National Geographic wizard, Bruce Dale, Lightroom wiz and all around innovator, Peter Krogh, brilliant Japanese photographer and documentarian, Aihara Masaaki, and our host, Mikkel Aaland. You'll see images from all five in the video I whipped together from our first foray into Hobart last night.
Peter did that amazing 135 image montage of our plane landing in Hobart. The infrared images are by Bruce Dale. Many of the rest of the stills are from Mikkel Aaland. I shot and edited the video using the new Canon HV30 and Apple's iMovie '08. Thanks to Inverted Silence/Jim Kang for the song Berimbau. We've been having so much fun, and the adventure has barely begun. If you're in Hobart, please join us for our closing reception Sunday evening, 13 April at the Henry Jones Art Hotel. We'll have prints on exhibition and for sale to benefit Save the Tasmanian Devil. I spent part of the day exploring the waterfront and just got back from the Female Factory and the Cascade brewery. We're going to do some Lightroom work tonight and I'll start posting images tomorrow.
Monday
Mar312008

Greetings from Sydney

Mikkel Aaland and I just arrived in Sydney on the way to Hobart, Tasmania. Qantas took great care of us on the way - it was my first time in the "bubble" up top of a 747 and I slept like a baby. Maybe that's because they give you your very own set of jammies.

Photo Credit: Mikkel Aaland
Aussie Mike met us at the gate and got us into the Qantas Club. I took a much needed shower and feel like a new man. I'm headed off to the "meetup" at the SYD Starbucks. Hope to see a few of you there!