Tog Walk – Yellowknife

Project 365 - Photo-a-day
Yellowknife, NT - World Wide Photo Walk 1

Yellowknife, NT – World Wide Photo Walk 1

Yellowknife, NT - World Wide Photo Walk 2

Yellowknife, NT – World Wide Photo Walk 2

Yellowknife, NT - World Wide Photo Walk 3

Yellowknife, NT – World Wide Photo Walk 3

Yellowknife, NT - World Wide Photo Walk 4

Yellowknife, NT – World Wide Photo Walk 4

Yellowknife, NT - World Wide Photo Walk 5

Yellowknife, NT – World Wide Photo Walk 5

Yellowknife, NT - Ragged Ass Road 1

Yellowknife, NT – Ragged Ass Road 1

Yellowknife, NT - Ragged Ass Road 5

Yellowknife, NT – Ragged Ass Road 5

Yellowknife, NT - Ragged Ass Road 4

Yellowknife, NT – Ragged Ass Road 4

Yellowknife, NT - Ragged Ass Road 3

Yellowknife, NT – Ragged Ass Road 3

Yellowknife, NT - Ragged Ass Road 2

Yellowknife, NT – Ragged Ass Road 2

Yellowknife, NT - Diamond Mine Relics 1

Yellowknife, NT – Diamond Mine Relics 1

Yellowknife, NT - Diamond Mine Relics 2

Yellowknife, NT – Diamond Mine Relics 2

Yellowknife, NT - Walkabout 1

Yellowknife, NT – Walkabout 1

Yellowknife, NT - Walkabout 2

Yellowknife, NT – Walkabout 2

This year’s Kelby World Wide Photo Walk occurred on Saturday, 6 October 2018. Were you out for the photo walk?

The walk in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories was led by photographer and teacher, Brent Currie. It began at 1:00 p.m. at the Rotary Centennial Park, took our group along ‘Ragged Ass Road,’ made famous by way of Tom Cochrane’s tune of the same name. There was good discussion about photography, several discoveries about what is possible when using a camera, sharing of ideas in question and answer, encouragement to try the same/similar shots and a momentum of photographer camaraderie built through the few hours we spent together. The walk ended with an opportunity to quaff ale or sip wine at the NWT Brewing Company. It was a time to talk through and about photos, consider the need for gear and explore/share in people’s work and endeavors. A good, good crew.

In terms of locale, this second photo walk in Yellowknife was an opportunity to explore Old Town Yellowknife with the group and then, later, on my own.

Yellowknife is a city on the Great Slave Lake, the tenth largest lake in the world with a maximum depth of 614m. It is also a city set on the Canadian shield, on rock that has been smoothed by glaciers (last ice age). The landscape is an intriguing setting for me, a flat-lander. I went to the Bush Pilot’s monument and worked through two photo-stitches from the monument terrain leading out across the lake to Joliffe Island; the image holds most buildings on either side of McDonald Drive – businesses with names like Yellowknife Courier Service, Dancing Moose Café, Aurora Geosciences Ltd., Old Town Glassworks, Bayside Bed and Breakfast, Yellowknife Garage, Old Town Warehouse, Aurora & Inukshuk Olive Company and Yvonne Quick Heritage Wharf. The Yellowknife bay holds the curiosity of houseboats, all are colourful, each is a residence that allows its owner to avoid land taxes.

These images are the first I have edited – have a look.

Quote to Consider / Inspire – “To me, photography is an art of observation. It’s about finding something interesting in an ordinary place …. I’ve found it has little to do with the things you see and everything to do with the way you see them.” – Elliott Erwitt

Listening to – U2’s take on an Aussie Folk song, ‘Van Dieman’s Land’ and ‘The Miracle (of Joey Ramone).’

Sunday – Hours North

Project 365 - Photo-a-day
Indian Cabins, Alberta 1

Indian Cabins, Alberta 1

Indian Cabins, Alberta 2

Indian Cabins, Alberta 2

Alexandra Falls, Twin Lakes Territorial Park, NWT 1

Alexandra Falls, Twin Lakes Territorial Park, NWT 1

Alexandra Falls, Twin Lakes Territorial Park, NWT 2

Alexandra Falls, Twin Lakes Territorial Park, NWT 2

Alexandra Falls, Twin Lakes Territorial Park, NWT 3

Alexandra Falls, Twin Lakes Territorial Park, NWT 3

A Sunday afternoon out, hours north from High Level finds me at Indian Cabins, my first visit to a Dene burial site where the deceased are laid to rest in a grave and provided a burial house for shelter through each season, a sacred practice common to Indigenous peoples in Alberta’s north. Further on, up the road the Alexandra Falls in the Twin Falls Territorial Park (Northwest Territories) provides opportunity to practice filter use for blurring water falling over these falls.

Quote to Consider / Inspire – ‘Each of us is an artist of our days; the greater our integrity and awareness, the more original and creative our time will become.’ – John O’Donohue, ‘To Bless the Space Between Us.’

Listening to – U2’s ‘Running to Stand Still,’ ‘In God’s Country’ and ‘Where the Streets Have No Name.’

Autumn Moments

Project 365 - Photo-a-day
Dunvegan - Teepee Frame

Dunvegan – Teepee Frame

Fall Harvest - Grimshaw, Alberta

Fall Harvest – Grimshaw, Alberta

Forest Panorama - Hutch Lake, Alberta

Forest Panorama – Hutch Lake, Alberta

Vintage Grain Truck - Near Manning, Alberta

Vintage Grain Truck – Near Manning, Alberta

A Teepee frame on the valley floor at Dunvegan, near the Factor’s house, the Peace River and the Dunvegan bridge; a late evening sunset during harvest, a family operation … almost done; a forest trail panorama – looking for greens on an overcast Sunday afternoon in late September; and, a vintage grain truck – up for sale, on the side of the road. All are opportunity to find fall colour and to become a stealer of moments.

Reminded well of Dar Williams’ album ‘The Beauty of the Rain,’ and of one particular song – ‘Fishing in the Morning.’ The first lines run … ‘Let’s go fishing in the morning, just like we’ve always gone. You can come inside and wake me up, we’ll pack and leave by dawn.’ It’s a song about taking concrete steps in Life and Lives towards hopes, dreams and goals. It’s a song about appreciating time on Earth.

Quote to Consider / Inspire: “Photographic technique is no secret and – provided the interest is there – easily assimilated. But inspiration comes from the sould and when the Muse isn’t around even the best exposure meter is very little help. In their biographies, artists like Michelangelo, da Vinci and Bach said that their most valuable technique was their ability to inspire themselves. This is true of all artists; the moment there is something to say, there becomes a way to say it.” – Ralph Gibson, from his book ‘Déjà vu’ [cited in Creative Camera December 1972, p. 401]

Listening to: Dar Williams’ song ‘The Beauty of the Rain,’ a song fretted / learned with my FP-325SRC reading tablature shared in Acoustic Guitar magazine (now played with my L’Arrivee L-03).

On Watt Mountain – Taking Five

Project 365 - Photo-a-day
Watt Mountain - Cut Line

Watt Mountain – Cut Line

An overcast, autumn September day – we, my wife and I, drive up Watt Mountain behind Hutch Lake. I get out of the truck while she is content to read in the cab. Down a cut-line and then a couple of paces into trees I find this image (among several) – colours found, the fall of each tree, the textures and the wisps of moss remind of Cathedral Grove and my parents’ home in Qualicum Beach, British Columbia.

Quote to Inspire / Consider – ‘Photography is a way of feeling, of touching, of loving. What you have caught on film is captured forever …. It remembers little things, long after you have forgotten everything.’ – Aaron Siskind

Listening to – Brubeck’s ‘Take Five,’ a tune my father played both on his Heintzman grand piano in vertical form and on his Marantz stereo with Dual turntable … good memories, grateful.