Story of my other challenge 5 submission - "In for theModerators: Greg B, Nnnnsic, Geoff, Glen, gstark, Moderators
Forum rules
Please ensure that you have a meaningful location included in your profile. Please refer to the FAQ for details of what "meaningful" is. Please also check the portal page for more information on this.
Previous topic • Next topic
13 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Story of my other challenge 5 submission - "In for theAt this risk of being branded the bird-man of the board, my other shot was this one. I thought you might like to know the story behind it.
A bunch of mates and I decided to go fishing in the Kimberley. This was right during the period of Part 2, so I needed to get a shot of a decisive moment while fishing. Difficult stuff. Anyway, our plan was to cross the continent through the middle and then head up to the Kimberley. The reason we went across rather than straight there was fuel: we need to refuel every 2.5 hours and there is absolutely nothing up in the Lake Mackay area. At many places we got fuel trucked in to road houses and just landed next to their dunnies or whatever. We crossed the Simpson desert in a formation of four helicopters for safety reasons. It's a hostile place but the landscape was stunning. These small photos do not do it justice, but here goes anyway: Check out the road crossing the Simpson! Bumpy! Most of the time we stayed at outback hotels. Here we are coming in to Mt Dare Hotel on the edge of the Simpson desert. We passed Uluru and the Olgas, and took the obligatory shots. We caused quite a sensation in some of the smaller Aboriginal missions we landed at. These kids came out of nowhere. Knowing what I do now about the real nature of the theme I would have probably submitted this photo: it really was a nice moment. However, it included a helicopter (not mine!) so may have given the game away! More sand dunes up the coast of the Indian Ocean. I really like these types of patterns in nature. Then we tracked inland through the Kimberley. It is an incredible place and I urge everyone to go and do yourself a favour and take at least one joy-flight while you are there. You won't regret it. We buzzed around the horizontal waterfall, where the king tides (and the occasional group of four helicopters!) scream in and out a tiny aperture in the rock. There are tourist boats there which do the craziest of things. They scream right through the falls at times. Apologies for the poor photoshopping - the instrument panel obscured about a third of this shot. Now we are heading deep into the heart of nowhere. The landscape is both stunning and deadly. After seven days of flying, we arrived at Faraway Bay http://farawaybay.com.au for our fishing. It turns out that the proprietor feeds a kite and a sea-eagle with fish-heads every morning. "Aha!" says I, "Here comes a decisive moment" I popped off a shot but I was too slow and the kite missed! Then the sea-eagle came swooping down and I was better prepared. One of my mates was behind me and got a shot of me getting a shot of the bird. Click, pop and I got the shot I wanted. I used the kit lens, shot in manual mode at 1/320, F4.5 I hope you enjoyed the story. The competition certainly had me keeping my eye out for decisive moments throughout the trip. If you want to see higher-resolution pics, I have uploaded some zoomable versions to http://rotorheads.com.au Last edited by thaddeus on Thu Aug 03, 2006 1:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
thadeus,
What can I say? great stories + great works, stunning pics of landscape and ton of fun in flying across OZ. I wish I have time doing it like yours also wish you are going to share a portion of prizes in this challenge No:5. So 3 more sleeps to go. Birddog114
VNAF, My Beloved Country and Airspace
Thaddeus
Thanks for sharing the story and the pics. This makes me so jealous. You guys must have had an awesome time and you'd have seen parts of the country many of us will never go near. Bet four big birds descending from the sky must have looked pretty impressive to many on the ground as well. Peter
Disclaimer: I know nothing about anything. *** smugmug galleries: http://www.stubbsy.smugmug.com ***
Thaddeus, another great story. Sounds like a lot of fun getting the decisive moment.
http://wolfeyes.com.au Tactical Torches - Tactical Flashlights Police torch rechargeable torch military torch police military HID surefire flashlight LED torch tactical torch rechargeable wolf eyes flashlight surefire torch wolf eyes tactical torchpolice torch
Thank You
**** Thats all I can say ****
Awesome stuff... There must be something I have that you dont... but to make up for that it better be bloody good New page
http://www.potofgrass.com Portfolio... http://images.potofgrass.com Comments and money always welcome
Thanks everyone. I'm just going through my photos and thought I'd share a few pictures from the return trip.
Our route went basically down through the middle of the country, then across to Sydney. (The broken bits are where I forgot to turn on GPS logging!) We left Kununurra and headed straight for the Bungle Bungles. Then off to Wolfs Creek meteor crater. It's huge! Then we crossed the Tanami desert. Let me tell you, there's nothing there. But we did find some very friendly station kids who tried to chase us in their quad bikes. Their parents invited us in for a BBQ and we had a great time in the middle of nowhere. By the way, I'm not juggling the colours here - it's really that colour! Their dad had to help them start their bikes. Basically they kept zooming around the whole time. "When will they stop?" "When the petrol runs out." (he was right) The rains were coming and Mt Dare (the sunset pic in my first post) was now flooded! Naturally we buzzed the people to cheer them up. Well I think it cheered them up. We were smiling! The next day we headed off down to Oodnadatta. I need to take a 12-24 with me next time! It's easy to follow the ridgeline! A textbook dumping. These were all around us and moving quite fast. Avoiding them was like playing aerial frogger! I love these fractal shots! The redness is incredible. You can feel the heat radiating up from below. The angle of the sun casts some incredible shadows at morning and late afternoon. Clouds building up for another downpour. It's quite a bizarre experience flying through a downpour over a desert. It's actually quite risky because there's nowhere to put down. Well, actually there's plenty of places to put down, it's just that you'll get bogged and never be able to lift off again! Ever wanted to know what happens when you fly through a rainbow? Here it is! Sydney peeping out between the showers!
Fantastic mate, looks like u had a ball and thanks for the insight to your trip, bloody great.
D3,D2x,D70,18-70 kit lens,Sigma 70-200mm F2.8EX HSM,Nikon AF-I 300m F2.8, TC20E 2X
80-400VR,SB800,Vosonic X Drive,VP6210 40 http://www.oz-images.com
Thanks for sharing this second part of the story. I was jealous after reading the first half, now things are even worse
Peter
Disclaimer: I know nothing about anything. *** smugmug galleries: http://www.stubbsy.smugmug.com ***
You really do have the ability to make one envious I too can vouch for the red earth out beyond the black stump
Chris
-------------------------------- I started my life with nothing and I’ve still got most of it left
Previous topic • Next topic
13 posts
• Page 1 of 1
|