I was out taking landscape photographs a few years ago and spotted an interesting tree in the middle of an open field surrounded by a fence. I set up my camera outside the fence at the side of the public road. Just as I was doing that, someone drove up in a pickup truck and started to question what I was doing. She said her father owned the property. I told her I was just taking a photo of the tree in the field. Did I mention that the property was completely empty, no house or anything that might be considered 'private'? She reluctantly drove away and left me to it, but I could tell she thought I wasn't being truthful. I wouldn't be surprised if she called the police, but I was done before anyone showed up.
Portugal
Shooting slow film for slides and Infrared requires tripod. So on my photowalks around my current residence I get constantly mistaken to be a surveyor and people start to inquire about pending improvements like I'm an official or something
Many years ago in Ulm, Germany we stopped to pick up something from a shop for a friend. In front of the shop was what appeared to be a rough looking group on motorcyclists. I wasn't sure if I should put my camera bag in the trunk which they would see me do or carry it in to the shop which they would also see. I elected to take it with me and one approached me. As it turned out a couple had just gotten married and they wanted me to take photographs of their reception on the street. I obliged and we all had some good laughs One of them gave me his address to send the pictures to, they rode off and we went on our way. I did mail him prints but never heard back.
My weirdest was the little old lady at the Goosenecks overlook in Utah who refused to believe me -- that I WASN'T Ansel Adams!
She called them 3 times because they were taking too long.
"Is that a Hasselblad?"
(ALWAYS answer: "yes")
Is there a reason you didn't just tell her 'have a nice day' and leave? You had no obligation to hang around.
You are right that legally I had no obligation, but once she called them, I DID have to stay, just to make sure they got my end of the story and not only her lie-filled version. Also, it was outside a local grocery store where I do almost all of my shopping and am known to several of the employees, and a manager with whom I have had several conversations was called out to deal with the situation. He hadn't spent 2 minutes thinking something like this might ever come up and seemed to take my lead when I explained to her that no, they can't take my camera nor my film, and since there were no signs forbidding photography (a legal requirement for kicking a photographer off a business property in CO) I couldn't be sited for trespassing unless I did not leave if they asked me to. It is rather ironic that when things like this happen it is often right under the watchful eye of the store's security cameras and people never take issue with them.
Edit to add: Sticking around is something else I learned from the audit videos. In this case it may not have been so important because I was a known local being confronted by a stranger - she didn't even know what store she was at - but they are almost always the out-of-towners being confronted by locals, and the police are vested in their community. They always stay until after the police leave, or until it looks like they never will come. It shows they aren't intimidated, affords more control over the situation, and does usually forces the police to straighten out the confronter's understanding of the law.
I've had my share of odd comments about photography and random conversations. The usual and harmless stuff, and plenty of 'Is that a Hasselblad?' comments for the RB67 or C330... The RB67 at dusk seems like an easy enough mixup, and the C330 a little less so... Still confused how my Busch-Pressman got confused for one, but I'm sure the person had their reason.
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