Vaughn
Subscriber
A lot of it depends on where the road is. LOL!Sounds like few of the "landscape photographers" on this thread hike any significant distance from the road.
I rarely want to photograph scenes from the road, but Saint Ansel often did.
I still backpack with my small cameras -- Rolleiflex or the Gowland PocketView 4x5. Maybe even the Eastman View No.2 (5x7) on a short trip down along Redwood Creek for a few nights.
I'll drive, then wander away from the van for 4 to 8 hours with the 8x10 (60 lbs, all told, from 5 to 7 film holders)...hopefully doing more photographing than walking, but I'll walk a few miles. Zion was nice for that -- pick a side canyon and see how far one could go...often no one else around. Same sort of thing in Death Valley. My last trip there I worked about four days in the same relatively small area, rather than drive all over the place and catching pieces of places.
PS...My last big photo trip was an artist-in-residence in Zion National Park. I drove down there with six cameras. Sm Sony digital, Rolleiflex, Brooks VeriWide100, 5x7, 8x10 and 11x14. Eight formats, if one counts the 4x10 and 5x14 images. I was there for a month, so each camera came in handy for the what where when and whyever I was photographing. Riding my bicycle up and down the canyon made the 120 cameras or the 5x7 the best choices. After a long day of carrying the 8x10, the next day might be a more leisurely hike with the 5x7.
I had to hike a ways for this image -- did not even know about this fall before I started hiking up. Taken 25 years ago (1993) at the young age of 39 -- I'd love to have those legs and lungs again!
A 5x7 carbon print:
Attachments
Last edited: