Page 1 of 1

Frenchmans Cap Part 3 & Final with comment. 21 shots, 3.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 05, 2005 12:43 pm
by tasadam
My previous 2 in the series are here(1) and here(2)

By request, here are some more shots taken from the walk we did.

Image
Morning of the 2nd day, Lake Vera.
I think the blurry branches in the foreground adds to the depth, and the ripply water is a fantastic backdrop for this image.

Image
Midday, 2nd day, Barron Pass.
The stark sharpness of this old tree with the sunlight really strikes me. At the right time of day with a clear and dark blue background, this could really be something special.

Image
Midday, 2nd day, Barron Pass.
Looking southwest over some glacier formed lakes, the lighting on this pine with its lichen in the wind was too good to walk past.

Image
End of 2nd day, Lake Tahune.
If you cover the bottom half of this photo, you get a typical photo of the area. But with the startling reflection of Frenchmans Cap in the water, your eyes can be drawn away from what would normally be an interesting image in itself, almost into a movie scene from something like LOTR.

Image
End of 2nd day, Lake Tahune.
As per comments above, typical of the area, and too good to leave out.
Perhaps I could have brightened it up a bit to enhance the greens but my monitor isn't the best and I might make it worse.

Image
Mid morning, 3rd day. The challenge ahead.

Image
Early afternoon, 3rd day. From the summit (obviously), how blue the sky was! Even with the whispy clouds.

Image
Late morning, 4th day.
Over North Col and behind Frenchmans Cap on the way to the Franklin River, a startling amphitheatre of white quartzite.

Image
Less than an hour on.
How quickly the weather can turn. The clouds were just amazing. If my monitor is playing tricks again, try darkening it up and see how much definition you get in the clouds!

Image
Early afternoon, 4th day.
Franklin River is in th deep ravine in the centre of the pic. The other ravine in the foreground right that meets up with the Franklin is Tahune Creek. They join at the Irennabys and that's the destination for this day (below black cliff in centre of pic). 1 km down from highest point behind us here.
In 3 days time (including 1 rest day at F.River) we will be in the far left top corner of this pic - Flat Bluff leading on to Raglan Range.

Image
Image
During 5th day.
Going to extremes for a good cause.
Check where the water level gets to on the cliffs when the river is at its peak!

Image
Good Cause number 1

Image
Good Cause number 2
How I would have loved to have a neutral density filter here...

It's hard to believe that our ex-premier Gray described this as‘nothing but a brown ditch, leech-ridden and unattractive to the majority of people’
I am happily a "minority".

Now. Desperate times call for desperate measures. You don't know what weather you are going to get, but spending a week in the southwest of Tassie and you to will find a need to do something like this...
Image
Middle of the 5th day.

Image
5th day, tripod abuse number 149,520

Image
5th day.
Taken from inside the tent - this is the branch of a Huon pine tree.

Image
5th day. The polished rocks that form the banks of the Franklin River really come to life after a bit of rain. If it hadn't rained, we would not have got this and many fantastic photos like it.

Image
5th day, sunset.
I didn't try different exposures here, I just took a few with guesswork for the time of exposure. I don't think I could have got it better, this is one of my favourites. Hard to balance light ie rock too dark and some of water too bright, but overall I love it.

Image
Afternoon, 7th day, Raglan Range.
Now if you were a little kid, and you woke up one day and looked out your window and saw this, I reckon you'd wet the bed or something... The monsters in these trees are captivating. Big daddy on the right, with his cap on backwards, looking down... the fog making it all the more spooky.
Actually, it's low cloud - we're at the 1000 metre mark.

Image
Same place.
This is a late inclusion. Having seen the previous photo, I couldn't leave this one out. The weather has really done a job on these trees over time, it's a wonder many of them stand the way they do - especially this one.
I was going to crop this to take out some of the foreground bush to the right, but having tried, I liked it better the way it was. (Must be why I took it that way).
How lucky we were to have things damp and foggy, really added to the experience of being here.

I hope you enjoyed this little look into our circuit walk of Frenchmans Cap, out via Raglan Range.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 05, 2005 12:53 pm
by sirhc55
Adam - the last 2 are awesome and spooky at the same time.

Thanks for you know what - and I agree with your multiple byline :lol:

PostPosted: Sat Nov 05, 2005 2:27 pm
by wendellt
Adam

You certainly get around, Tasmania is such a wonderful place, it has the most varied landscape as your pictures show.

number 2 and 13 i like best. What are the white things in the water?
how long did you exposure this image, it the movement as seen by the trails on the river really work very well

Your image of 'Over North Col and behind Frenchmans Cap on the way to the Franklin River' is testament to your bravery and vision, i would never venture out that far but the view and experience is certainly worth the risk, maybe one day but certainly not now, i'm perfectly content viewing a tassie lighthouse from the safety of a car.

PostPosted: Sat Nov 05, 2005 8:06 pm
by mudder
G'day,
There are some wonderful images here, the ones of the old tree (#2), Lake Tahune is bloody great and the last couple of the dead trees in the low cloud are magical... Looking forward to more :)

PostPosted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 10:55 pm
by tasadam
wendellt wrote:Adam
number 2 and 13 i like best. What are the white things in the water?
how long did you exposure this image, it the movement as seen by the trails on the river really work very well

Hi.
Have a look at # 11 and 12 - there are little foam bubbles floating down, so they left a lovely trail on time exposure. #13 was taken at exposure of 2 seconds on F22, 29mm focal length.

Obviously, the time for exposure would depend on a few factors - how fast the water is flowing therefore how much distance the "floaties" travel per second, how much available light and whether you have a neutral density filter if there's too much light, what effect you are trying for...

As for me, good ol' shotgun approach - take heaps at different settings and see what you like the look of when you get back. It helps to look at what settings you use for photos that do and don't work as well, so you can see what settings give the effect you are after - so you don't need the "shotgun" approach - in time I hope to learn exactly what settings look right for certain shots. For example, to get the real silky waterfall shots, I like about 4 seconds, but often I have too much light to allow for that - so a ND filter is on the shopping / Christmas list.

Thanks for the comments.

Mudder
I think I've covered the Frenchmans walk, but have done many other walks so when time and bandwidth permits, I will hunt some more of others and make a thread. I'm glad you liked #2 of the tree - I wasn't sure about it at first but it grew on me how striking it is.

Certainly the last couple - lucky. The batteries had died a day and a half ago and I was squeezing the last out of them for these shots. It really was magical.

Cheers, Adam.