I am offering actual travel experiences from me, and other travelers that have had similar encounters. I will also offer reviews, tips, and travel advises on more than fifty countries in the world. This is just getting started, so expect to learn more as I cover more countries. I want to travel to more countries because I am not ready to quit yet. I will tell you the good and bad about each country, so you can be sure of getting honest reviews from me.
Summer is usually the season for air shows and that means yet another reason and opportunity to go out shooting. I had intended to visit the Farnborough Air Show this year but unfortunately an exhaust muffler decided to divorce itself from the underside of my car and reconciling the two became my whole day instead. Undoubtedly there’ll be other air shows for me to visit this summer but for now these images here are from previous shows, including the one at Farnborough.
Obviously when you first arrive there’ll be plenty of aircraft stationed on the tarmac awaiting your awe and inspection.
Capture them with any lens or focal length you choose. Perhaps go wide to fit in their entirety but also feel free to zoom into them and fill the frame with just the cockpit or some other detail.
Don’t hesitate to find a more interesting angle. There’s no rule that says the aircraft have to be captured from the front or the side. Large machines are interesting from a variety of angles, and have plenty of geometry to stimulate your compositional juices.
Well, I guess most people really go to these shows to see the planes in the air and I’m certainly no exception.
You’ll find models old and new(er); supersonic and subsonic. Enjoy the afterburn and the speed, and mind your ears as they scream or hover through the air.
Having a zoom or long focal length obviously helps, and most of these aerial shots were captured with a 200mm F/2.8 lens and teleconverter attached (1.7x). Obviously go longer if you can.
Yes, I captured these with a DSLR and zoom lens but it doesn’t have to be a such a heavy set of gear. I’ve seen many people at these shows with superzoom bridge cameras or compact cameras (laugh all you want) and their results were pretty impressive. Lesser mortals will waste time picking out the technical imperfections of their images but good composition and timing isn’t dependent on your gear. And at least they made the effort to get out there and make images. My point is don’t be shy about your gear; it’s much more fun to go out and shoot than it is to sit at home feeling inadequate about your kit.
Back to the show and there’s plenty of spectacle from the professional display teams, and capturing their trails will give the viewer a sense of movement and direction.
Most of us hope that a summer day will be sunny and warm but don’t be too despondent if there’s an overcast sky. If anything it will provide a darker background against which to contrast the aircraft and their trails.
Often at these events, there’ll be explosions and such going off. Having a good burst rate on your camera can ensure you get the best shot but carefully choosing your timing can be effective too. Phase detection autofocus is probably the most useful for tracking the aircraft but they are usually enough distance away that even contrast detection systems should be able to keep up focus.
Don’t forget there are always plenty of people to photograph too, not just in the planes but on the ground or falling from the sky. One omission of mine here was not to include any close-up candids of pilots, although I’m not much of a portrait shooter. But you’ll do that when you go the show, right?
These were processed in Lightroom with basic adjustments to contrast and some selective dodging and burning. Mostly in aperture priority between F/4 and F/8 with the camera choosing the shutter speed (fast enough on a bright day) and between ISOs of 200 and 800.
So, anyway, please don’t waste too much time worrying or drooling over the latest lens or camera (unless it pleases you to do so!) and how it might make you a better photographer. It won’t. The only thing that will do that is practice and going out to shoot. Use these kinds of events as an opportunity, sure, but don’t just enjoy them through a viewfinder or LCD screen. Remember to have a good time too.
And if all else fails and you’re feeling tired and hungry, you can always find yourself a good dollop of cheese:
Call sign: Alpha Whiskey. Maverick it definitely ain’t!
Finally, after seven months stateside, I broke out my worn navy passport and traveled abroad once again! I needed a break, but I still can’t believe it lasted seven months.
This month was about South Africa. My friend Beth and I spent just over two weeks in the country, my third visit and her first. In addition to that, we spent a day in Amsterdam and the rest of my time was spent in the New York and Boston areas.
I love summer — I’m a summer baby and I’ve always loved summer weather, the hotter the better. But the older I get, the less I’m able to tolerate long periods of heat and humidity, so a trip to South Africa during their winter was a perfect way to take a break from the heat. It felt great to wear the closest thing I have to a uniform: jeans, boots, and my leather jacket!
Destinations Visited
New York, NY, USA
Reading, Lynn, Salisbury, Newburyport, and Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Johannesburg, Kruger National Park (and environs), Cape Town, Muizenberg, Simonstown, Cape Peninsula National Park, Stellenbosch, and Franschhoek, South Africa
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Hoboken, New Jersey, USA
Favorite Destinations
Cape Town. After three visits, I think I finally have a favorite destination in South Africa.
Stellenbosch. Fantastic wines, beautiful surroundings, and a lovely town to walk around.
Amsterdam. The second time was the charm — good weather had me swooning for this city.
Highlights
South Africa was an amazing trip. I had such a good time with my friend Beth and loved seeing how much she fell in love with South Africa! We also got along great the whole trip, which is all you can ask for when traveling with a friend.
Flying business class on KLM was amazing. This was my first time flying business class for longer than a two-hour flight, so flying super long-haul (eight hours from New York to Amsterdam, then 11 hours from Amsterdam to Johannesburg) was a treat. It was just so pleasant. The food was constant, the seats were so comfortable, the flight attendants were so nice, and the souvenir KLM houses they give business class passengers are my new obsession! I even slept a full eight hours on an overnight flight!
We saw amazing wildlife, including the Big Five, on safari. Seeing the Big Five at any time of year is somewhat rare, but we lucked out: first rhinos (I know!!), then lions, Cape buffalo, elephants, and finally a leopard. Beyond that, some of our wildlife highlights were a tiny baby rhino nursing from his mother, a lioness feasting on a kudu, the most playful elephants you can imagine, and two cheetahs, seen on foot, just 15 feet away!
I got to spend time with my dear South African friends in Johannesburg and Cape Town. Seriously, the best thing about travel blogging is having friends all over the world.
Cape Town was unbelievable. This was my third visit and the best visit by far! From hanging out in Camps Bay to enjoying steampunk java at Truth Coffee Roasters to having an unforgettable meal at the Potluck Club to making friends with a Wine Guy at the bar at the Doubletree and sharing a bottle of the most interesting wine I’ve ever tasted, Cape Town blew me away this time around.
Stellenbosch was all about the wine tasting. I couldn’t think of a better way to wind down our trip. In four days we actually did tastings at 10 wineries in Stellenbosch and Franshhoek, pairing wines with chocolate, cheese, cured meats, and even salts!
We had an unexpected layover in Amsterdam. Our connecting flight to New York was cancelled, so we were booked on the next day’s flight and had a 24-hour layover. Beth and I both love Amsterdam, so we went out to explore the city! The weather was spectacular. I took tons of photos (making up for my rainy first visit to Amsterdam), Beth bought her husband his favorite cheese, and we enjoyed a delicious Indonesian rijsttafel dinner.
I went home for the Fourth of July and got to spend time with my family. And the North Shore of Massachusetts is a fantastic place to hang out during the summer!
And at the end of the month, my mom came to visit me and my sister in New York for a few days. We got to check out some new parts of the city, including the New York Botanical Gardens, where the corpse flower was in bloom!
Challenges
A lot went wrong this month. So much that my previous months look quaint by comparison.
My debit card was stolen online. Hope you enjoyed the $38 worth of Panda Express, motherfucker. (Seriously, who buys $38 worth of food at Panda Express with a stolen credit card? If I stole someone’s credit card, I’d go straight to Barneys.) And a reminder to all of you — have multiple bank accounts and multiple debit cards when you travel. I was okay because I was able to withdraw from my other accounts; that wasn’t the case when my cards were stolen in 2011.
I left my coat and scarf in Johannesburg. Yeah. Dumb move. I was cold on safari and thankfully Beth had brought an extra fleece that I could wear. That said, both the coat and the scarf remind me of times in my life that I’d rather forget, so it’s no big deal that they’re gone. I asked the hotel to send them to a shelter, so hopefully they’re keeping someone warm now.
I got the worst sunburn EVER. You know when you use that spray-on sunscreen? You need to rub it in. I had a speckled burn on my thighs which eventually turned into a speckled tan on my thighs.
Jet lag was rough this time. It was only a six-hour difference but it was the worst jet lag I’ve had in years, in part because I forgot my melatonin and you can only get it with a prescription in South Africa. My friend Jodi sent me some unusual jet lag tips she’s discovered, which she later turned into this excellent post.
The worst Lyft ride ever. I usually take Lyft Line rides (carpooling) home from JFK because it’s $35 as opposed to $55ish, and they just pick up someone near you. Well, Beth and I hailed Lyft Lines at the same time and got paired together, which is bizarre because she lives in Brooklyn and I live 50 minutes away in Harlem. Long story short, it usually takes me 30 minutes to get home from JFK, but between the traffic and the detour it took me TWO HOURS to get home.
I got sick and puked out the side of my safari vehicle. Because I am a classy lady.
I had a few bad street harassment incidents this month. There’s one part of my neighborhood that I feel the absolute safest in, and I never get catcalls there, but men yelled at me constantly in that neighborhood one day. I wasn’t flashing people or anything — I think it was because I was wearing an above-the-knee dress and forgot my sunglasses so my eyes were showing. NOTE: That is NOT blaming myself, because the only people that deserve blame are the street harassers. All women deserve the right to walk down the street without being harassed.
And I actually caught another street harasser while in the middle of a snap this month! My Snapchat followers loved that, particularly since it ended with me telling him to fuck off.
And finally…I can’t believe I’m telling you this…I dropped my phone in the toilet. For the first time ever. BUT the toilet had just been cleaned AND my phone was fine because of my LifeProof case! PHEW! That case saved me from having to buy a new phone. Worth every penny and then some.
This month CNBC did a lovely little video feature on me! You can find it here on Facebook.
Most Popular Photo on Instagram
Hello, Amsterdam! I love your houses so much! This is one of my favorite shots from our brief layover.
For real-time updates from my travels, you can follow me on Instagram and Snapchat — I’m adventurouskate on both!
What I Read This Month
The Dirty Life: On Farming, Food, and Love by Kristin Kimball — One of my guilty pleasures is reading memoirs from city girls turned country girls, and this is exactly what this book is. Kristin is a Manhattan freelance writer who suddenly falls in love with a farmer and starts a new farm with him in upstate New York.
As much as I love reading about farming, this memoir had a lot missing. While she wrote about a year’s worth of events and the technicalities of farming, she wrote so little about her thoughts and feelings that I found myself wondering why she even liked her husband in the first place. Yes, he was handsome and a great cook and he did thoughtful things for her, but other than that, I feel like he was didn’t even have a personality. Nor did she. I enjoyed the book, but I found the emotional distance borderline bizarre, especially for a memoir.
The Girls by Emma Cline — This was my book club’s pick for the month (and to be fair, I voted for it), but it took me a long time to get through it because I couldn’t stop rolling my eyes. A teenage girl joins a cult of mostly women led by a messianic leader in 1969, and later the cult is involved in a murder. It’s a fictionalized version of Charles Manson and the Family, which is what interested me in the book.
This book is enormously popular right now, and I get it, but the author’s descriptions went way overboard. I felt like I was drowning in a sea of similes (yes, I get the irony of this statement). It was just too much. And I kept waiting for the plot to start and as soon as it became mildly interesting, it abruptly ended. Talk about a disappointment.
Grace by Natasha Deón — A dark, haunting, beautiful novel. A former slave is on the run from bounty hunters while in labor. Shortly after giving birth, she’s shot dead — but her spirit decides not to leave her daughter. The book takes place in two parts: Naomi’s life that led up to her death, and her daughter Josey’s life from the beginning, both stories told by Naomi’s ghost.
This novel is beautifully told — I got it after reading its laudatory New York Times review. For literary reasons alone, you should read it, and because it was originally a screenplay, it has a cinematic quality to it. But beyond that, I think it’s important to read books by women of color, who are too often overlooked in the publishing industry, and it’s also important to read books about slavery, as it’s the root cause of blacks being treated as second-class citizens in America today. It does not matter that you personally did not own slaves — the effects of slavery have been passed down through generation after generation, and the more you read, the more you will understand.
What I Watched This Month
Orange is the New Black — wow. Season Four made up for the weak previous season — and ultimately ended devastatingly. The show has significantly changed direction since Season One and I don’t think anyone would consider it a comedy or even a dramedy anymore.
It’s tough. Season Three was about the prison going from nonprofit to for-profit, and all the negative changes that ensued, but Season Four pushes the horrors to new levels. Without giving anything away, this season highlights many of the problems with our prison system, and on top of that, the storytelling is fantastic. Well worth a watch.
What I Listened To This Month
Sorry, I’m still listening to Hamilton! No new music to share this month. I had “History Has Its Eyes On You” stuck in my head for most of the month.
I’m going to Colombia! This trip is seriously overdue. It’s been just over a year since I’ve visited a new country (!) and I haven’t done a solo trip or been somewhere adventurous in quite some time. Plus, I haven’t been to South America since 2008, pre-blog!
I was actually hoping to visit the Caucasus this month — Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Armenia, in that order — but as the costs, time required, and Azerbaijan visa complications added up, I didn’t feel good about the trip. I ultimately decided to go with a shorter, cheaper trip closer to home.
My plan is to fly into Cartagena and fly out of Bógota 2.5 weeks later. In between I hope to visit Santa Marta and/or Taganga, Tayrona National Park, Medellín, and Salento, plus day trips to places like Minca and Guatapé. A fairly basic Colombia itinerary, but one that will take me to the most popular spots and let me create the most useful blog posts for you.
Almost all of my travel blogger friends who have been to Colombia consider it one of their favorite countries. Let’s just say I have very high expectations! I’m a bit nervous about how rainy it will be on the Caribbean coast, but while it’s not the driest time of year, July and August are a slight reprieve from the rainier months. We shall see. My biggest priority, as you guys know, is getting good photos!
Any suggestions for Colombia? Let me know! Where did you go this month?
from Adventurous Kate http://www.adventurouskate.com/ak-monthly-recap-july-2016/
For the past few weeks the United Kingdom has been undergoing a period of turbulent, momentous and mesmerising political events. Rest assured I have no intention of discussing politics here; this site is not for that. But there are decades when nothing much happens for weeks on end and then suddenly a week when a decade’s worth of events thunders down in a blurry, breakneck deluge. Instead of trying to keep up with the speed of our evolving future I felt like taking a moment to revisit the past and seek contemplation and reflection in the company of some of the architects of our history (you can tell I’m a simple guy).
Mahatma Gandhi
Parliament Square in London is a congregation of statues, monuments to statesmen who have shaped human or national history in some way or another.
Nelson Mandela
Capturing them a couple of weeks ago provided me with some perspective and some time to relax and breathe. Far more than can be said for the poor journalists stationed around the place trying to keep up with the furious pace of events.
Sir Winston Churchill
Now these were mostly shot with a DSLR, for no particular reason except that it was gathering a little dust and I felt like a change. As much as I enjoy (and prefer) my m4/3 gear, I have no qualms about committing infidelity to the format and I’ll use whatever imaging device is in my hands to get my images.
President Abraham Lincoln. (Not quite on a par with the memorial in Washington but we made an effort)
I can tell you that I quickly remembered why I don’t use the DSLR very often. The flip-out touchscreen on my m4/3 camera enables me to remain standing while using the camera to compose in all sorts of angles and positions and touch to shoot. Having to use the DSLR’s viewfinder, however, required me to make all sorts of contortions lying on the ground, standing on people’s heads or hanging from cranes to get my shots. Well, OK, it wasn’t really that bad but I had grown out of using the viewfinder. Touchscreens are my preference. Perhaps that means I’m not a ‘proper’ photographer but I don’t care.
Lord Palmerston.
Obviously the DSLR kit is much heavier than the m4/3 stuff and as fit as I am it was often a struggle to drag it all behind me in the trailer. Well, ok, it wasn’t really that bad but I had become used to a lighter kit.
Sir Robert Peel.
Now before the DSLR faithful start verbally lynching me let me say that I am not complaining. I still like my DSLR; that’s why I’ve kept it. I also like both the lenses I used with it to make these shots, namely the 35mm F/2 and the 50mm F/1.8.
Richard The Lionheart, outside Westminster Palace.
Furthermore, the phase detection autofocus and slightly greater dynamic range on the DSLR were potentially a luxury I had missed on my m4/3 kit.
A couple of days before this shoot, I had also visited Hughenden Manor, the home of former Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli. For these images I did use my m4/3 kit.
Benjamin Disraeli’s library.
Again, looking for some quiet reflection and contemplation, this place is as serene and as welcoming as you’ll find.
And his desk. Pretty sure the radiator wasn’t there in his time.
Of course, there’s so much else going on in town that I couldn’t resist a little indulgence on the other side of the river.
Westminster Bridge. Exposed for the highlights and brightened in post.
The South Bank is always busy with street entertainers and bubble guys, and thus always full of opportunity.
Swallowing an entire balloon is one way to get noticed.
This shot below was made a few months earlier with my m4/3 kit. I have included it here because the subject matter is similar and demonstrates one can get the shot regardless of the type of camera/format one uses. And I like bubbles.
It’s not just the entertainers that can be entertaining, of course. Passers-by and people who appreciate bubbles as much as I do deserve recognition too.
Thank you phase-detection!
Well, I’m not sure I found any earth-shattering insights on this particular quest but it was nice to reflect and I had a good time taking photos as always. The sun might set on our glorious little island but I believe a brighter dawn always lies ahead.