Monday, November 5, 2012

Sunday Drive: Taking a trip out of town for a mini photographic adventure to Te Ko Utu Park Cambridge. .

             In support of National Novel Writing Month 
 (I am committing to writing a blog post every day with photo's for one month. )
                         Te Ko Utu Park Cambridge.
How many of you who live within the Bay of Plenty or the Waikato know about Te Ko utu Park and lake in the middle of Cambridge? 
My husband Graham  has been living in this area all of his life and he had never heard about it or been there.
 In my opinion it's one of Cambridge's best kept secrets. 



                     The exotic tree specimens are really beautiful and perfect for backlit phtograpraphy.








                                                             Beautiful spring shoots





I have  many fond memories of it as a young child because I went to St Peter's Catholic School in Cambridge. 
 

I  spent lots of idyllic moments with the Nuns and my school friends doing nature studies around that lake.
 In those days it was an overgrown wilderness filled with  dragon flies as big as your hand and millions of croaking frogs and screeching cicadas. 


It  was  here that I had my first experience of collecting  tadpoles, putting them into preserving jars and watching them develop into baby frogs. 


Considerable  development of the site had been undertaken in the fifteen years since I last visited it by the Waipa council and Cambridge Tree Trust amongst others.

The bull rushes have been cleared, the perimeter has a wooden base around it, and carp and catfish have been added to keep it clean.
 A large aerating waterfall with pump has been put in to help alleviate stagnation and by the looks of the relatively clear water, it's working. 

Hundred's of varieties of European trees  have been planted around the perimeter. 
There are lillipads and weeping willows, copper beeches and elms, oaks and spruces, silver birches and too many other trees for me to name 
 The place could have been picked out of pages from a book about English country gardens. 

 
The leaves of these beautiful trees had that newly minted Spring freshness of colour about them and the day was hot and sunny. 

There were no frogs to be heard at all but in their place were nesting Pukeko with their young Scaups and Dab chicks. 
Apparently they released a set of white swans a number of years ago but they escaped.
 There were small collections of ducks and I'm sure I saw an eel.
  Maybe it was a catfish but I didn't see any whiskers. 



The walk around the lake was civilised and not too difficult and I was in heaven snapping reflections in the water, back lit leaves and to other vegetation. 




After the walk we went up to the band rotunda  and the rose garden and the hot house up the top of the hill near the bowling greens.



I used to go to Brownies just down the road from this site so I knew the area very well. 
Graham and I spent some time going around the rose beds smelling roses.
It's  a wonderful thing to do. 

Smelling roses, one of our favourite things to do when we visit the beautuiful botannical gardens of  New Zealand.



If you haven't done it so far this summer don't waste any more time. Head off  to a rose garden near you.  
There are plenty of them around the Waikato and Bay of Plenty
Mine are just starting to come out.
I can't want to bury my nose in them. 

 Creative Quotes of the day. 

One of the most tragic things I know about human nature is that all of us tend to put off living. We are all dreaming of some magical rose garden over the horizon-instead of enjoying the roses blooming outside our windows today. Dale Carnegie




 Henry David Thoreau 




 Walt Whitman 

 All photographs and  images on this blog are for sale.
Email me at jkeen@clear.net.nz with your enquiry. 

Phone 07 3463435 

All photographs are copyrighted by Janet Keen and may not be used  for any purpose without written permission. 

Sunday, November 4, 2012

National Novel Writing Month Landscape Photography

Already its the 4th of November and I  am two days behind with  my commitment to write a blog post with photo's every day.

So I'll do three today. 
Here are my favourite shots from the two day Landscape Photographic workshop that I went on last weekend with the Rotorua Camera club and professional Photographer Craig Robertson. 

This is at Waiotapu.
If you take someiIdentification, Rotorua residents can get in for free.
 This is a pretty good service I think.
I would go as soon as it opens up.
 It gets pretty hot out there and make sure you go to the loo begore you go for the walk because its huge and there are no loos out in amongst the geothermal features.

 This lake looks like spearmint icecream.

Very chocolatey
 
Custady perhaps?





This is my favourite shot I love cracks, it looks like a jigsaw or mosaic
 
The yellowish green in this peasouper lake is the wierdest colour I have ever seen.
You can't stop looking at it because it looks like it shouldn't be this colour.
It smells very sulphury.




Last Thursday night we finished off the workshop with Craig Robertson with a shoot out at the boardwalk at Lake Okareka.
 I love this boardwalk.
 There are lots of water fowl and beautiful vegetation to look at.
It is so peaceful out there.
 If you haven't been, go this summer, it will fill you with delight for hours.
There is such a cool bird hideout there with a little swallow's nest in it.
You can just sit in there eating something nice like a tangelo and watch all the birds.
Fantastic.

           My current obsession is grasses and tree foliage.

                                    Cabbage tree seed heads.

Flax new seedheads


                                   Love these reed colours

        Whispering grass

                                Soft evening light

     More reeds
     Swan manipulated
        Swan raw


     More reeds
                          I t's the texture

       This is my favourite landscape and cabbage tree shot

                      Spider and reed shot


 The middle of the day is the worst.  The light is too flat.

                                               Look at theis gorgeous Toitoi in the setting sun.


 Like a comb
On the boardwalk, this boardwalk goes for quite a long way .
A few joggers  use it after work 
Back lit flaxes are great as are all types of grasses that are overlooked by most people.

Creative Quotes of the day



 Unknown quotes 
 
All photographs and  images on this blog are for sale.
Email me at jkeen@clear.net.nz with your enquiry. 
Phone 07 3463435 
All photographs are copyrighted by Janet Keen and may not be used  for any purpose without written permission 

 

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Landscape photography workshop with Craig Robertson

                                                   NANOWRIMO
This post represents my commitment to write a blogpost every day for the month of November in support of National Novel Writing Month.

                                                  Landscape Photography
Tonight I went out with a group of people from the Rotorua Camera Club with professional photographer/tutor Craig Robertson.

We as a group spent last weekend together on a Landscape Workshop and it was amazing because I learned so much, especially about how to use lightroom and how to rank shots and store them.

Craig was very generous with his information and he had a great teaching style.
His images are really stunning for their simplity and grace.
It is special to have a photographer of his standard living in Rotorua. 

We went to  the Lake Okareka boardwalk
What a lovely evening, what a stunning place to take photographs.
 It's a place that really lifts your spirits and there are plenty of paradice ducks to spy on from the bird hide.
These are some of my favourite photographs.
I will post some more tomorrow.
                                                    
                                            Grasses I have met at Lake Okareka

                     




Creative Quotes of the day
See how nature - trees, flowers, grass - grows in silence; see the stars, the moon and the sun, how they move in silence...we need silence to be able to touch souls.
Mother Teresa 


Sitting quietly, doing nothing, spring comes, and the grass grows by itself




All photographs and  images on this blog are for sale.
Email me at jkeen@clear.net.nz with your enquiry. 
Phone 07 3463435 
All photographs are copyrighted by Janet Keen and may not be used  for any purpose without written permission