Once Was Home
/0 Comments/in Mostly Photos, Scotland, Travel/by Cody
Photo: Living room of abandoned croft house, Berneray, Outer Hebrides, Scotland

Photo: Bedroom of Abandoned croft house ruin, Berneray, Outer Hebrides, Scotland

Luskentyre in Snow
/0 Comments/in Landscape, Mostly Photos, Scotland, Travel/by Cody
Photo: Dusting of snow on Luskentyre beach, Isle of Harris, Western Isles, Scotland
I was wandering the beach at low tide, waiting for the low winter sun to emerge from the clouds. I found this small little ridge in the sand covered by a light dusting of snow from the last squall to pass through, the clouds still blocking the sun towards the south. To the north I was anxiously watching the next wave of snow and wind approach. Waiting, waiting, then finally the sun emerges above the clouds. Click, Click, a couple photos. I look to my right and start to see snow flying across the dunes a couple hundred meters away. Quickly, I rotate my camera for another shot, but I was too late. The wind comes sweeping across the beach, blowing away the image right before my eyes.
Only 1 minute of time passed between these photos. A few more minutes of sun and wind before I’m engulfed by the next wave of snow and the world turns dark once again. Everything back in the backpack, head down, and follow my disappearing footprints across the beach an over the dunes.

Isle of Skye Winter
/0 Comments/in Landscape, Mostly Photos, Mountains, Scotland, Travel/by Cody
Photo: Clearing winter storm over Black Cuillins, Isle of Skye, Scotland
On the return from my new year Scottish islands trip I spent one night on the Isle of Skye. After having wonderful light at Elgol on Friday night, Saturday morning arrived with gray clouds and a light snow falling. Having a long drive ahead of me, I was tempted just to pack it in and head towards Rannoch Moor in hopes of a decent sunset. However some gut feeling, in addition to not wanting to be the first car of the day on the snowy roads, led me to wait things out at Sligachan for a few hours. I gave the weather till 9:30 am to clear, or I would hit the road. As 9:30 came and went I was about to start the car, when I noticed some slight bits of clearing clouds. Another 30 minutes later and I made these photos.

Callanish Standing Stones
/1 Comment/in Historic Places, Landscape, Mostly Photos, Night, Scotland, Travel/by Cody
Photo: Nikon SB 800 illuminates Callanish Standing stones at night, Isle of Lewis, Scotland
Stopped by one calm evening, until the rain arrived, at the Callanish Standing stones on the Isle of Lewis. Once it was dark I pulled out the SB 800 and played around with some off camera lighting. The results are nothing special, but it’s always fun for me to experiment with stuff like this. Had the weather cooperated better I could have stayed for several more hours.


Return To The Western Isles
/1 Comment/in Landscape, Mostly Photos, Scotland, Travel/by Cody
Photo: Beach near Howmore, South Uist, Scotland
Over the New Year I Journeyed north once again to the Western Isles of Scotland, one final trip before heading back to California in a few short weeks. Haunted by rain, chased by snow, at battle with the wind. These are my favorite conditions; the weather of winter in the north.
Standing on barren coastlines, only a few feet away from crashing waves. Alone on vast beaches watching the next snow flurry blow in, shooting away in that last minute of calm before the wind hits. Waiting for those brief moments of sun, before it’s hidden behind clouds again. The days I live for.
Overall the trip went quite well, with better conditions (and by that I mean worse for most normal people) than my previous trip in October. The first few days on Berneray, North Uist and South Uist were mostly misty and dull. But once reaching Harris and Lewis, the storms arrived with a fury. Like my times in Lofoten, nearly every photo shoot ended because the next wave of rain/snow came sweeping in. I’ve gotten pretty good with my timings and can push things to the last minute. Though this usually means a wet walk back to the car to dry off and repeat again at the next location. Still better than getting a sunburn on some tropical beach or eaten by bugs in a jungle.

Photo: Butt of Lewis lighthouse, Isle of Lewis, Scotland

Photo: Waves crash along shore at Elgol, Isle of Skye, Scotland

Photo: Next stop Iceland, Butt of Lewis, Isle of Lewis, Scotland
Best Photos of 2010 Part II
/0 Comments/in Landscape, Lofoten Islands, Mostly Photos, Mountains, Norway, Panoramics, Scotland, Travel, Wales/by Cody…Continuing on from my last post: Best Photos of 2010 Part I: January – June. Here are what I feel my best photo’s from the second half of the year are. The peak of this was my July-August trip to Norway’s Lofoten islands and Jotunheimen national park. Otherwise, a week in Scotland at the end of October was really the only other productive period of photography for me.

July: Summer twilight over Vestfjorden, Stamsund, Lofoten islands, Norway
The second appearance from the Lofoten islands on this list. While the islands are more commonly pictured as jagged mountains rising from the sea, I feel this image helps portray some other aspects of islands: the sea, the light, the silence. Only towards the end of July does the summer sun leave the sky, yet the night still remains a few weeks away. This leaves an ever lengthening period of twilight as the sun travels further below the horizon. It is during this time when the magical light of the north occurs.
This images was from a calm night, just a short walk out to the coast from the wonderful hostel at Stamsund. I’ve stood in this exact same spot a dozen times, and walked away with a dozen different photos. If I’m lucky, I’ll return again and again until I’m an old man.
Click here to view the entire photo gallery from my Lofoten Islands summer trip.
August: Memurudalen and Muru river, Jotunheimen national park, Norway
This was the view only a short walk from my tent in Norway’s Jotunheimen national park. The weather was good this day, so I stopped here hoping this view would provide something spectacular for sunset. Increasing clouds throughout the day led to a dance of shadows across the land. While the sunset I was hoping for never arrived, I feel this image is an adequate representation of the brilliance of this location. Another place that I’ll have to return to in the future.
Click here to view the rest of my images from Jotunheimen national park.
September: Black mountain, Brecon Beacons national park, Wales
I wont lie, this is more of a filler photo from an unproductive month. It was a nice autumn day out hiking the the Black Mountain, but that’s about it.

October: Callanish standing stones, Isle of Lewis, Scotland
In late October I found myself out on the Scotland’s Western Isles. I had originally intended to travel here last year, but as normal, plans changed. I got lucky when I arrived at the Callanish standing stones in the late afternoon with clear skies and calm wind, about as good of conditions as can be hoped for out there. This photo is just a simple silhouette, yet for some reason it jumps out at me.
Click here to view photos from my Western Isles trip.
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November: Pen Y Fan and Corn Du, Brecon Beacons national park, Wales
I was a bit torn as to what to add here as late November brought a deep freeze to the UK, but I thought this image of the last day of autumn (before the snow) just had some magical light. Typical Welsh weather of clouds, sun and shadows while hiking around Pen Y Fan in the central Brecon Beacons mountains.

December: Winter ice covers Llangorse lake, Brecon Beacons national park, Wales
Llangorse is the only sizeable lake in the nearby area. Despite this, the beginning of December was the first time I’ve ever been there. And that is mostly because the roads have been too bad to go anywhere else. For some reason I became slightly obsessed with getting a proper frozen lake image. On my first visit I fell through some ice and had to leave early before any decent light. With my second time I was greeted with impenetrable fog. Finally on my third visit I had some clear skies, though the light is nothing special. The surface of the lake is a bit messier than I would prefer, but at least the broken pieces of ice add some interesting shapes to the image.
Best Photos of 2010 Part I
/0 Comments/in California, Landscape, Lofoten Islands, Mostly Photos, Mountains, Night, Norway, Panoramics, Travel, Wales/by CodyI’ve put together a list of what I think are my best image from each month of 2010. That’s not to say these are all my best images of the year, as nearly all of them would have been from the Lofoten islands in January. It’s been a good look at my consistency throughout the year. There are definitely a few filler images from months where I wasn’t able to shoot much for whatever reason. I’d say, April, June, and September are the weaker images of the year, Jan and July my favorites.
As a whole, it was an okay year photographically. I think I’ve captured some of my best images ever and had a couple productive trips. But I’ve also felt a fair amount of frustration in being unable to realize a fair amount of my vision. I guess I could say it better as: more often than not, I’ve failed to return with the images I wanted. This is quite normal for landscape photography, but part of the problem is that I don’t want to be shooting landscape photography, I want to be shooting adventures and journeys surrounded by those landscapes. Hopefully I’m able to find my vision better in 2011 and take my images to the level at which I want them to be…

January: Arctic twilight on Haukland beach, Lofoten islands, Norway
This was a difficult month to pick only a single image from. The 6 days I spent on the Lofoten islands at the beginning of the month were some of the most inspiring days I’ve ever had. Jan 6th in particular, my first full day on the islands, was especially memorable and the light was simply amazing. I was completely frozen after a chilly night sleeping in a wind rocked car. When dawn arrived in mid morning, all was perfectly calm with a brilliant pink glow. It was one of those days that I wished I could have been in 100 places at once; there were so many photos to be made, yet only a painfully few 4 hours of light of the arctic winter day.
This image is from Haukland beach and the first place I stopped in the morning. It was nearly perfectly still, only the gentle waves that seemed more like a lake than ocean disturbed the silence. While several images from this location could easily be my favourite images, I think this is the best. For me the single piece of ice helps show the isolation of the frozen beach and lets the cold reach out to the viewer. I only stopped shooting at this location when I wasn’t able to feel my feet for some 30 and decided I should try and warm up a bit. My only critique is the otter tracks that pass through the image.
Lofoten islands winter: Click here to view gallery

February: Night on the Devil’s Racetrack, Death Valley national park, California
Another difficult month to choose from, mostly due to a fairly productive trip to Death Valley towards the end of the month. After having spent the autumn and early winter in Scandinavia and the UK, I was in need for a bit of a change in scenery. So I headed out to explore some parts of Death Valley national park that I’ve never been to before.
This image is from the Devil’s Racetrack, more commonly know as the location with the moving rocks. Unfortunately, the above average winter rains had flooded the southern part of the lake where the rocks are, leaving it impassible due to the danger of leaving permanent damage to the fragile area. Fortunately the northern half of the playa was dry and walkable. A bit bored, with my planned shooting location off limits, I thought I’d just go lay down in the middle of the lake. It was quite amazing really, all alone in the middle of nowhere, full moon overhead, cold night temperatures of winter desert, some AM talk station coming out of the radio. I stayed out there shooting late into the night.
March: Abandoned dock, Salton Sea, California
My last journey to the Salton Sea was in 2005, or was it 2004? Can’t remember at the moment. Anyhow, in March, before temperatures became unbearably hot for me, I headed down. I had been to this location on my last trip, so as I arrived in the dark of early morning I thought I knew where I would be. How I was wrong. The sea level was now far lower and the shore nowhere near as I remembered. Anyhow, as I explored a bit, I found this cool old dock just as the first light of the sun was arriving.

April: Charred tree, Mid Hills Campground, Mojave national preserve, California
In 2005, lightning strikes started the Hackberry fire which swept thought the high desert area of the Mojave national preserve. On the first night of a 4WD trip of the Old Mojave Road, we camped at the Mid Hills campground which was partially burned. I’d never been to this area, nor heard about the fire, so It was quite interesting to see a charred desert landscape.

May: View from tent towards east face of Mt. Whitney, Sierra Nevada Mountains, California
Nearly five years to the day of my last trip up Mt. Whitney, I found myself looking at the mountain again. It was sort of a last minute trip, but everything worked out and I made a successful climb of the mountain. This is the view from my camp at Iceberg lake towards the east face and Mountaineers route of Mt. Whitney.
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June: Stormy weather over Black Mountain, Brecon Beacons national park, Wales
Black Mountain is the westernmost range of Brecon Beacons national park. Just an image from a less-than-sunny day wandering among the mountains.
Pottenstein Germany Light Festival January 6th
/2 Comments/in Cities, Festivals, Germany, Mostly Photos, Night, Panoramics, Travel/by CodyPhoto: Fires of the Ewige Anbetung light festival above Pottenstein, Franconia, Germany. Jan 6, 2009
As the light of a cold January day fades into night a thousand fires are lit, illuminating the hillsides surrounding the town of Pottenstein. The fires are part of the Catholic celebration of the Ewige Anbetung (Eternal Adoration) which occurs in Pottenstein on the 6th of January every year. The light and fire festival attracts thousands of visitors who line the hillsides and fill the streets, braving the cold and watching a display that can only described as spectacular. To see the Lichterfest in person would be a memorable moment of any winter holiday in Germany.

Photo: Burg Pottenstein and fires of Ewige Anbetung Lichterfest, Pottenstein, Franconia, Germany. Jan 6, 2009
When:
Thursday, January 6th 2011
The festival begins around 5pm as the sky gets dark. Be sure to arrive early to find parking. The fires will burn for a couple hours into the night.
Where:
Pottenstein is located in wonderful countryside of the Franconian Switzerland (Fränkische Schweiz) region of Upper Franconia (Oberfranken), Northern Bavaria. By car, Pottenstein is approximately 1 hour north of Nuremberg or 30 minutes south of Bayreuth; 10 km west from the A9 autobahn. Postcode 91278.
There are also several other light festivals of the Ewige Anbetung celebrated elsewhere in the Fränkische Schweiz region in the weeks preceding the festival in Pottenstein. CLICK HERE for more information and dates (in German)




Llangorse Lake Take Two
/0 Comments/in Landscape, Mostly Photos, Panoramics, Wales/by Cody
Photo: Winter ice on Llangorse lake, Brecon Beacons national park, Wales. December 2010
With clear weather forecasted for today, I looked out the window at 5am to see a nice starry sky. A little bit more sleep and then it was time to head back to Llangorse lake for another attempt at sunrise. Arriving at the lake in the pre-dawn darkness, the skies were clear, no fog today! Gradually as the sun rose some clouds arrived in the east blocking most of the first light that should have lit up Pen Y Fan off in the distance. Oh well, guess another trip will be scheduled for sometime in the next week.


New on the Blog
- New eBook | Lofoten Islands – Northern Light December 8, 2022
- Padjelantaleden eBook update December 5, 2022
- Ebook update – West Lofoten Hikes 4th Edition May 21, 2022








