Search

naramata-blend

Life in a slow place that quickly steals your heart.

Tag

Landscape photography

Naramata spring – Through rose coloured glasses

Celebrating our orchards…many are disappearing, being replaced by vineyards.

Spring is my favourite time of year in Naramata, British Columbia. It’s fifty shades of pink in my photo essay.

Sour cherry trees

Magnolia…those most perfect flower

Ornamental cherry

Easter hat and Kate

Where beer begins – hop harvest on the Naramata Bench

It’s harvest time on the Naramata Bench and Square One Hops is an anomaly where it’s vines, pears and apples being harvested. The only hopyard on The Bench makes an interesting photo essay subject.

IMG_1398.jpg
The bines are cut from the trellising and a tug-of-war ensues.

IMG_1337 2.jpg
The bines grow to a Jack-and-the-beanstalk towering height before harvest.

IMG_1338.jpg
The aromas in the hopyard are a wonderful mixture of citrus, herbal, piney, spicy, garlic, onion, grassy and tobacco. Each step I take on left-behind hops and bines releases these subtle yet heady IPA scents.

IMG_1367.jpg
A season’s worth of growth is astounding.

IMG_1333.jpg
Part of the crew cutting the bases of the bines. This perennial plant will tower again next year.

IMG_1429.jpg
It’s a science to determine when the hops are at their hoppy best.

 

IMG_1419.jpg

 

IMG_1352.jpg
Smoke from area wildfires makes for some moody photographs.

IMG_1410 2.jpg

 

 

IMG_1453.jpg
Feeding the beast. The hops harvester is a beautiful thing as many small operators pick the hops off the bines by hand.

IMG_1471.jpg
Brian Tarasoff, who along with wife Kari, own and operate the two-acre Square One Hops operation in Penticton, is in his element and covered in hops.

 

IMG_1475.jpg
The hops will then be dried and most pelletized.

IMG_1477.jpg

IMG_1476.jpg
Hops pellets are preferred for use by many brewers.

IMG_1363.jpg
Perfectly ripe hops awaiting the crew and ultimately the brewmaster.

A lullaby to sleeping vines

IMG_3020.jpg
Naramata Bench vines lie sleeping under a blanket of snow

img_3038
Vineyard workers rest along with the vines

IMG_3017.jpg
Insulating snow helps protect the dormant vines

IMG_3046.jpg
Bud break is a few months away

IMG_3051.jpg
Rare sunny day in winter in the Valley

img_3054
Short days as the sun starts to set in the late afternoon over Okanagan Lake

A Calgary Highlander plays a mournful lullaby at Legend Distilling on the Naramata Bench.

“You don’t take a photograph, you make it.” Ansel Adams

unspecified-5

Storm Sunrock PANO – Epic summer storms from the Sun Rock viewpoint on North Naramata Road. Photography is a love affair with life. Burk Uzzle

 

Caillum Smith has made photographs that engage us visually but more importantly they illicit strong emotional responses and herein lies his talent, his passion and his calling. A Naramatian through and through, Caillum has been published and awarded by National Geographic, North Face, Time Magazine, Google+, the CBC, Sigma Lenses, the International Mountain Summit, Outdoor Photography Canada Magazine and the Canadian National Commission among many others.

Here is why Caillum wins awards and captures us:

unspecified-4

Okanagan Lake Autumn Sunset – Crepuscular rays erupt over Okanagan Lake. Photography is an art of observation. it has little to do with the things you see and everything to do with the way you see them. Elliott Erwitt

The how is a bit more difficult to analyze. He uses strong compositional techniques, unique perspectives and dramatic lighting but there is more to it than this.

“Finding a balance between the two (technical and artistic) is essential,” says Caillum. “Better gear won’t necessarily make your photos better but can assist in tapping into further creative potential. You can have a technically sound photograph with top notch editing but if it is lacking a strong composition and creative lighting, you are simply left with a high quality, sh*t photo. Good photos are not only visually engaging, but emotionally engaging as well. Having said that, creativity and instinct will always trump technology.”

unspecified-3

Northern Lights Naramata Bench – Once in a while the northern lights will appear over Okanagan Lake and Naramata. This was captured from Munson Mountain during the summer. Photography helps people see. Berenice Abbott

It is always amazing to me when a young person discovers a passion at an early age that will become their life’s work. Imagine all the years ahead to relish that passion and hone their skills. Most of us cast about for years and never find a career and calling all wrapped into one.

“My interest in photography first began after my grandfather gave me his film camera when I was 17, or so. I used the camera as a visual diary to document the world around me; photographing wildlife, landscapes and anything else I encountered while outdoors in my Naramata backyard. Once I left high school, my parents bought me a DSLR as a return to university bribe when I dropped out but ended up skipping final exams to go mountaineering in the Andes. A few years and international awards later, I quit my job at a winery and started Preserved Light Photography.”

unspecified-2

Naramata Bench Vineyard Okanagan Lake – Overlooking Manitou Beach from Kettle Valley Winery’s “Old Main Red” vineyard. When words become unclear, I shall focus with photographs. When images become inadequate, I shall be content with silence. Ansel Adams

“I’ll usually have a pre-visualizated concept of what I want to create but some clear signs of a killer photo are when your eyes pop out of their sockets as your jaw simultaneously plummets to the ground. I’ll often tell my workshop students, ‘The best way to create better photos is to stand in front of better subjects.'”

The life of a successful professional photography is not all sunsets and adventures in the wild though. Caillum says the most challenging part about being a professional photographer is finding that balance between business tasks and personal projects. “There are times where I’ll go several months without capturing a personal photo, having depleted all energy, and hours of the day, working for clients. However, I really enjoy the challenge of being given, or coming up with, an idea for a client and turning it into a creative reality. Nothing more rewarding than when your art makes even the smallest ripple with others.”

With photos like this one Caillum is making waves:

unspecified-1

Naramata Aerial Photo Old Main – Aerial panorama of the Naramata Bench orchards and vineyards near Old Main Road. Photography is the only language that can be understood anywhere in the world. Bruno Barbey

When I asked him about a typical day he says there is no such thing.  “I only sleep four to six hours a night (if that) and have driven over 20,000 kms in the last three months alone. The thing that would surprise most people is that I’m not out adventuring and creating epic landscape photos as often as it may seem. There are many days that slip into 15+ hour digital succubus’; making blog posts, emailing clients, editing photos and what not. I’ll often grab my sleeping bag, venture into the mountains, set up a time-lapse video and have a nap beneath the stars whenever I feel my sanity slipping.”

As for the future…”That is what is so exciting about this lifestyle, I can never be truly certain what it holds. As for this winter, most of my time will be spent working with Apex Mountain & Discover Naramata’s digital marketing & media.

“I always chuckle when someone asks, ‘Aren’t you worried about wrecking your camera?’. Probably because it happens so often. If my camera isn’t dangling from a string while climbing a mountaintop, getting blasted by snow while skiing, soaking beneath a waterfall or enduring -40 temperatures filming time-lapse video of the northern lights, it isn’t doing its job!”

unspecified

Aerial Photo South Okanagan – Early morning flight over North Naramata Road and the South Okanagan Valley. There are no rules for good photographs, there are only good photographs. Ansel Adams

When I asked Caillum for five tips for us wannabes he says,

  1. Gear doesn’t make great photos, creativity does.
  2. There is no magic formula for camera settings.
  3. Most online forums are a terrible place for constructive criticism.
  4. Find your style and stick to it.
  5. Buy a tripod

unspecified-6

Summer Solstice Little Tunnel KVR – For two weeks surrounding Summer Solstice, the sun will set through the KVR’s Little Tunnel. In photography there is a reality so subtle that it becomes more real than reality. Alfred Stieglitz.

 

I spent two hours with Caillum on a workshop last week and learned a ton which I will post about soon. The biggest thing I came away with was sharing the excitement of the possibilities that photography provides to connect to people in a meaningful way. We also talked about the Okanagan and the stunning canvas it presents for his professional and my amateur but enthusiastic eyes.

IMG_2468.JPG
I took this photo of Caillum during our workshop.

You know you’ve made it as a photographer when your husky Astra has her own Instagram account with hundreds of followers…Huskyadventuredog… Seriously, Caillum has that indefinable instinct for making photographs that move us. I need no words to make my case.

 

 

 

Leaf off already

IMG_2360.JPG
Orchard

 

Still banging on about the fall colours. Can’t help myself this year. A few more photos from a walk today in the Village.

IMG_2352.JPG
Shut the front door! Guessing they painted the door of this Village home in the fall.

IMG_2341.JPG
Heritage Inn and flaming friend.

IMG_2359.JPG
Manitou Park looking lonely but pretty.

IMG_2344.JPG
Naramata’s only sidewalk.

IMG_2301.JPG
Lion’s Head Japanese Maple.

The long gleaming farewell

img_1821

IMG_2177.JPG
Old vines with the Naramata Bench in the background

We are into borrowed time now in our gilded season. The low, slanting light that is wonderful for photography and that fleeting feeling, knowing the blue skies and gold light will too quickly fade to our long season of gray are getting me outside every chance I get.

IMG_2169.JPG

The light: thick, plush, gold is not something we are imagining. The position of the sun in the sky is changing. That, in turn, alters how we perceive colour and light. In the height of summer, the sun is as far overhead as it gets. But the sun drops and drops after the summer solstice in June — and the change speeds up at the midpoint toward winter, which is the light I’m capturing in these photos.

img_1829
This special golden light is also great for photographing people bathing everyone in a warm glow.

The farther from the equator, the more obliquely the sun’s light strikes Earth — that’s the longer, slanted light we are bathed in now, instead of the full-on beams we bask in at high summer.

IMG_1823.JPG
Such a great name for the winery where these shots were taken…Blue Mountain… yup.

Winter is coming but not first without this gleaming farewell.This year’s fall colour has been supreme. No hard frosts or strong winds to crash the party early so nature can do its thing and linger in all its golden glory.

IMG_2202.JPG
The view from Blue Rock on North Naramata Road yesterday.

img_2198
Still nice enough for a sail on Okanagan Lake.

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑