Thank you all of the kind comments.
sheepie wrote:Alpha_7 wrote:Lovely Photos, if you have some time can you relate your experience on the travel photo tour for us ?
Yes, please provide some more feedback on the tour - where it went, what you got out of it, etc.
The major locations we visited are listed on
their webpage. We covered quite a lot of locations, many you wouldn't see on a regular tourist trip. In fact the van would just stop whenever we came across a scene someone was interested in. There were so many stops that they all tend to blur together, but they made a list of each photo stop for the record (which I should get in a couple of weeks).
The photo tour is also better because of the smaller number of people (there were only 4 of us on the tour with John and Kathy as guides. Normally there would be 7). On only a couple of occasions we ran into a few buses spewing tourist, which made photography impossible. For example for the photo with the church I had to wait for the buses to leave as they park in front of it.

We spent about an hour there so I had time to do that. You can't easily do that on a regular bus trip.
wendellt wrote:would you rate going on a specialised photographic tour beter than an independent trip?
If you mean an independent trip where you hire your own van and do it yourself, then the benefit is in having someone there who knows there is a good spot on a little side track. Having someone who has found the best spots already means there is more time for photography. But we also followed new little farm roads because someone wanted to see what it was like from the top of a hill.
radar wrote:I had found them a while back and it looked like a great tour, but for me, a bit too pricey. Let us know if you got your money's worth.
I guess it is rather pricey, but that amount included accommodation, transport, a guide, technical advice, snacks and meals (meals aren't included in future trips). Value for money is subjective, but I think it was worth it. Put it this way I have had more expensive holidays.

My only warning would be not to expect this to be a relaxing holiday. To get the dawn and dusk light means long days. One day we had a 4:30am start so we could travel an hour to Milford Sound for dawn at 5:30am. And the setting sun gives interesting light at 9:20pm!
sheepie wrote:Some nice images there. My favourite isn't chosen for technical merit or anything like that, it's chosen for character:

Yes the Kea were very funny to watch, but you see them differently when they've destroyed two of
your windscreen wipers.
Alpha_7 wrote:BTW my favourite image is the first one.
The Milford Sound area is well known for being very photogenic. It's somewhere you could keep going back to.
Thank you all
Daniel