10-31-2016: Monochrome Monday

This is a first edit of a photo pulled from deep in the archives, shot with my first dSLR camera and lens combo while on a cruise, January 2012.  I’m really liking how this has turned out 🙂

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If you’d like to have this on your wall, click here 🙂

 

2016-10-24: Monochrome Monday

Some elephant love on a Monday morning.  This is from my recent trip to Amboseli; what a wonderful place to spend time amongst the ellies.  You can find this available for purchase here.

Have a great week everyone!

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2016-10-22: WPC H2O

I could have shared any number of photos taken along the river near my old home, with lovely sunrises and mountains… but this spoke to me more.  I recently took a bird watching trip along the Kazinga channel in Uganda, and this village was at the turn around point for the tour.  For a photo challenge topic of water, a photo shot from the water, of a village that completely relies on the water, seemed fitting.

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Hopefully these fishing boats were safely moored for the night, as the storm that rolled in about an hour after I shot this brought with it some intense wind.

WPC: H2O

2016-10-20: WPC Edge & Nostalgia

Here’s a blog post that hits two of the WPC photo challenge topics at once.  When I read the description for the edge challenge, I knew that some of the shots I took while flying between camps in Kenya would be a great choice to share.  But being on those planes ties so well into the topic of nostalgia for me.  Being in a small plane (especially up front) takes me right back to being a kid, heading up with my Dad in a two or four seater plane, and flying around either sightseeing, or heading to my Grandparent’s cottage.  Great memories and such fun times 🙂

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During my transfer from Nairobi to the Selenkay Conservancy adjacent to Amboseli, I was lucky enough to be the only passenger on the caravan plane, and the pilot was nice enough to invite me to sit up front with him. As you can see, there is a reason that bush pilots buzz the runway nice and low before banking and coming back around the land. Hitting a zebra would not be good!

 

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The camera was level, honest!  Taken during a steep bank after buzzing the runway at Selenkay Conservancy.
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Air transfer between Nairobi and the Masai Mara.  I wasn’t lucky enough to get a seat up front on this one, but the views were still awesome.

WPC: Nostalgia

WPC: Edge

2016-10-17: WPC Quest

If I had a scorecard for successful trekking experiences in Uganda, it would look something like this:

Gorillas treks 2/2

Chimpanzee treks 1/2

Now by successful, I am only meaning that I saw the animal that I intended to when setting out for the trek.  We could define successful in lots of ways though: if success meant coming back safe and having fun, I’d be 2/2 on both of them.

One trek felt like a quest more than the others, and that was the chimpanzee trek through the Kyambura Gorge in Uganda.  You see, with gorilla trekking, trackers go out long before guests to try and find the animals in advance, so you don’t spend loads of time wandering, and the success rate of seeing the gorillas is quite high.  There are no trackers that go out ahead of time for chimpanzee treks, and in Kyambura Gorge, the success rate for seeing chimps is somewhere between 50-60%.

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The river at the bottom of Kyambura Gorge.
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Lots of spooky looking trees, a few monkeys, but not a chimpanzee to be found that morning.
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I don’t recall the name of this tree, but the chimpanzees bang on the bases as a form of communication.
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The path looked quite innocent at the start!

Several times I had contemplated giving the gorge trek a miss, as I was worried about the physicality of it, but decided to give it a go anyways.  The gorge itself is around 150m deep, has a river running through it (with hippos) and the pathways along are often steep, muddy and slippery.  On more than one occasion, rather than fall over, I sat down at the top of a hill and slid down the muddy path on my butt!

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Sometimes, we walked in the footsteps of elephants!

After the initial decent into the gorge, we crossed a very nice, sturdy bridge over the river to look for the chimps along the other side. And as we walked along the paths, up and down hills, through streams and over fallen trees, we passed several more bridges.  But when our guide declared it was time to return since the chimps weren’t in the area, we were a good two kilometres from the nearest bridge, and so instead, we had to cross the river by crawling along a fallen tree!

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The tree I crawled across was pretty much like this one.  Little did I know what was in store for me when I took this photo!

Crossing on the tree wasn’t actually that bad, it was wide and sturdy, and while the bark bruised my knees terribly, I wasn’t scared I was going to slip and fall. But then I reached the other side and learned that to get off the fallen tree, I would have to stand up, bear hug a big branch, and take a step of faith to another tree lower down that was further away than my legs could easily reach… and then finally jump to the riverbank below.  I wish I had photos of all that but even my GoPro was safely packed away in my bag.  I was terrified taking the leap of faith at the end of the tree, but very thankful for the other people in the group that helped me out and walked me through what I needed to do.

I saw chimpanzees the next day at Kibale Forest, but the Kyambura Gorge walk sticks out for me just as much.  As one of my new friends said “You’ll always have a story to tell because of this!”

WPC: Quest

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