Soeren
Member
Is memory cards as good as firestarters as film? 
I look forward to try my pack out for camping next summer.
Best regards

I look forward to try my pack out for camping next summer.
Best regards
Except when you want to make a fire with the sun at high noon... Cause that's exactly the time you need it most.... Haha
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Is memory cards as good as firestarters as film?
I look forward to try my pack out for camping next summer.
Best regards
This never seems to work for me. Must not be getting the focus right...![]()
The most important part of getting great images in the backcountry are location and the time you need to put into it, the 2nd, 3rd, etc. important parts are food, water, clothing....camera gear is dead last. I see a lot....and man I mean a LOT of horribly boring landscape imagery out there from people who pack a Lowe Pro Super-something with nothing but camera gear, go out for half a day and come back with the same cliche's as everyone else.
Actually I kind of think location is less important, for exactly this reason. A dull photo of a spectacular place is still a dull photo
Who ever said anything about a dull photo? That outcome sir is clearly dependent on the level of talent behind the camera, great photographs are not captured or obtained, they are lived.
try a Sinar P2 and all the trimmings, just carrying it from the car is a nightmare![]()
Everytime some other photographer asks me about great locations in the West, what I do is tell them to study every postcard, website, coffee
table book, and locate every official scenic turnout on the highways. Once they've identified all those perfect locations, go exactly the opposite
direction!
Everytime some other photographer asks me about great locations in the West, what I do is tell them to study every postcard, website, coffee
table book, and locate every official scenic turnout on the highways. Once they've identified all those perfect locations, go exactly the opposite
direction!
You want to take a look at the work of Angie & David Unsworth - These two regularly hike the Lake District with a Toyo 10x8 field camera
Kinda dwarfs my efforts with a 5x4 Wista.
My problem is also glass, I bought the biggest I could find,
Some of those tiny little gems also seem to be optically superior to their big klunky counterparts. For backpacking I rely on Fuji A and C lenses,
Nikkor M's, and G-Clarons. When I was a teenager back in my mid-40's I didn't mind carrying a big Sinar system with heavy lenses day after day; but now that I'm in my mid-60's, I'm glad I sold off all my heavy general-purpose plastmats and got smaller lenses. It also to day hike a
lot with an 8x10 and big wooden tripod - that way when you take a long backpack with a 4x5 and a carbon-fiber tripod it seems like you're floating. I'm just waiting till I can figure out how to seal the bellows and fill it with helium. I don't know what your hills are like in the Lake District, but on my week off here I was up to around 12,000 ft multiple times with a view camera system plus all my camping gear. One just
gets used to it.
I did a two-weeker last summer over six high passes into some very quiet country with no trails, where we saw no one else for an entire week. I was packing my 4x5 system while my friend was carrying his expensive Rollei 6x6 with Zeiss lenses. The pack weight for each of us was about equal, around 75 lbs apiece. He's one of these guys who like to set up his gear and carry it rifle-style over his shoulder, and one evening was hopping rock to rock across a stream. He slipped. Two legs of his Gitzo carbon fiber tripod broke. One Zeiss lens went into the water, while the other hit its rim and dented the filter thread. Two pine branches were duct-taped onto the Gitzo to get him a working tripod again. I jerryrigged a dent-removal tool from another stick and use a rock to hammer his lens threads into accepting filters again. But the lens in the water had to be used for "soft-focus" compositions until we got out of the mountains and got it into a dessication chamber for six weeks. I really couldn't make too much fun of him, because the previous year I managed to drop two different light meters into ice meltwater. ... so had to estimate all my exposures based on sheer experience. Remarkably, even all the chromes came out perfectly exposed.
last September I went to tonquin valley by myself 23 km from mt.edith cavell to my campsite Amethyst lake... with my stuff for camping tent,sleeping bag. food etc....plus my fuji GX617 one 90 mm lens, light meter tripod..what else I got...around 50-60 lbs pack.and I'm only 5'2" less than 120 lbs..some friends told me I'm crazy you will die out there... I said... "up there? I'm living...right now I'm dying".conversation at work...
it was raining all day hike too...and clear at night.. good thing about backcountry trip. I can set up my camera at night and leave it overnight to get a sunrise shot...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/___nabia___/10354807345/
couple video below
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICk-H5KraXg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q34R5EkmAno
[video=youtube;Qg5uq9RS4NQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qg5uq9RS4NQ[/video]
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