Sunday, August 09, 2020

A Bumbler's Outing

 

After a long absence from the blog I'm back.

On Friday, Aug. 7th I decided to go to two waterfalls I hadn't visited in several years. It didn't go well. Shortly after arriving at Greenwood Creek I spotted some Cardinal flowers on the island below the main waterfall and because the water was unusually low I decided to rock hop to the island to include them in an image of the falls. Unfortunately, I slipped and fell in the brook. I managed to keep both my camera and cell phone dry but I was pretty much soaked and bruised. The photo below was the result of what I was after and is included only because it is part of the story about my day. I don't consider it a success as a photo. I should have placed the flowers to the right and I should have gotten down lower to the ground so that the right flower would have been in front of the rock face on the right plus the feeble flow of water coming over the falls was disappointing. Because I was very wet, sore and generally disgusted at that point I decided not to try for another shot. 


I nearly abandoned my outing at that point but the day was warm and after verifying that my cell phone was okay (I would need it on my next stop) I decided to make the best of things and see what photos I could get in spite of the low water. This site is mostly about the falls so the limited water also meant limited photo opportunities but I managed a couple of decent images.



Then on to Lampson Falls where I planned to do some drone photography. I bought a DJI Mavic Mini last spring but have done only limited shooting with it because the pandemic has limited my outings. I have gotten fairly proficient using it for stills though and that was my plan at Lampson Falls. I shot some straight on aerial photos including a pair that I stitched together (below). After processing it I wished I had shot at least 3, one of the horizon and the falls, a second of the falls and the water in front and a 3rd more or less straight down. I will have to go back and try that.


I then moved to a point of land to the right where there is a shallow cascade to photograph that. That's where the second mini disaster occurred. When you don't have suitable level spot to launch a drone you  can do it from your hand. I had landed my Mini on my hand before so I decided to attempt a launch from my hand which involved holding my left hand flat with the drone on it and both holding and manipulating the control (my cell phone with a controller attached) with my right hand. First you touch a small button on the left and then a large launch button appears mid-screen. To launch you press that one while a blue line goes all the way around the outside of the button, remove your finger and then the drone takes off. Except it didn't take off as fast as I expected so I thought I had perhaps removed my thumb too soon. My thumb did cover the top of the button so I wasn't certain the blue line had completed its circle. Thinking I had messed up I decided to grasp the drone and raised my left thumb and little finger to wrap them around the body of the drone... at exactly the same moment that the drone decided to launch. The left rear propellers hit my thumb and cut it open. The impact also damaged the propellers (they don't tolerate much abuse) so I had to land it and change two propellers while trying to avoid bleed on the drone. I wasn't bleeding a lot so I managed but the first time changing propellers in the field with one hand injured did not improve my mood. I was still wet from my earlier fall. Who says photography isn't dangerous. 

I did get everything working again and shot the shallow cascade looking straight down and a couple of views of the main falls from the side.




I'm partial to the shot with the trees on the left. Feel free to comment on which view you prefer. I went on to shoot several more photos (3 of which are below) with my non-aerial camera.




My prior experiences with joining the "Order of the Bloody Thumb" all involved carpentry but I guess it isn't exclusive to carpentry, just to general clumsiness.

My one regret on my choice of drone is that the Mini doesn't shoot RAW and the files don't have the dynamic range for editing that I am used to with my EOS M3. They are pretty good for JPGs though so it is a minor complaint. I tried converting one of the drone photos to RAW with Topaz JPG to RAW AI but I couldn't see a lot to difference. I think I should get a polarizing filter for the drone though. That would avoid the highlights blowing out.

Until my next (hopefully injury free) adventure, I hope you enjoy these photos. I am planning to add video of some of my outings soon (more stuff to learn). When I do I will link them here and on my Facebook photo page https://www.facebook.com/Jim-Bullard-Photography-141640209241747/ I have been posting photos there throughout my absence here and plan to continue (with greater frequency than blog posts) so if you are on FB you may want to "Like" that page so it will come up in your feed.

I'm also considering having a Patroen account for people want to support my photography. Stay tuned.

1 comment:

  1. Well, wasn't that a fun romp through your journey! You wrote with humour but I most definitely sensed your dismay from falling, getting drenched and unscheduled thumb surgery. Those are the smoothest falls I've ever seen (haven't seen many, but I think those are special). The cardinal photo is lovely regardless, but you're likely not satisfied because - dare I say it - you're a perfectionist in your photography. All in all, your day produced some beauts!

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