Tag Archives: Ireland

More Monochrome Conversions

Heaven knows I have plenty to do around my home (cleaning, primarily, and trying to study Visual Basic….without much success).  What I generally end up doing on a weekend is work with my photos on the computer and then post them in my blogs because I am trying to make up for the dearth of posts during the work week.

I was converting some of my Brazoria National Wildlife Refuge photos into black & white when I realized that I had not done this at all to any of the photos I’d taken during my trips to London and Ireland back in 2011.  So, this morning has been spent with conversions and edit tweaking here and there.  Below are the results.  Some photos lend themselves quite well to monochromatic conversions, and others are best left alone.   I have noticed that the black & white photos have a better definition of light, dark, shadow, and texture.  I think sometimes the nature of color keeps the eye from noticing these other details.

What do you think?

The Thames and Parliament as viewed from the London Eye

_MG_6746

6746_Almost to the top-Edit

The view from Jubilee Bridge in London

6794_View From Jubilee Bridge

6794_View From Jubilee Bridge-Edit

Connemara “ponies”

9830_Connemara Ponies

9830_Connemara Ponies-Edit

Dunluce Castle, Northern Ireland

7242_Dunluce Castle_REV_8-17-11_tonemapped

7242_Dunluce Castle_REV_8-17-11_tonemapped-Edit

Poulnabrone Dolmen, The Burren

1313_Poulnabrone Dolman

1313_Proulnabrone Dolman-Edit

Proleek Dolmen, Northern Ireland – this portal tomb is located on a golf course behind a lovely resort.

7622_Proleek Dolmen

7622_Proleek Dolmen-Edit-2

Calla Lily

7357_Calla Lily

7357_Calla Lily-Edit

Rulers of The Rockpile

7540-2_Rulers of The Rock Pile

7540-2_Rulers of The Rock Pile-Edit

Ladies View, a stop en route to the Gap of Dunloe

7150_Ladies View Panorama

7150_Ladies View Panorama-Edit

Connemara Mountain scene

7354_Connemaras Panorama

7354_Connemaras Panorama-Edit

Giant’s Causeway, Northern Ireland

8711_Giants Causeway_Hi Sat

8711_Giants Causeway_Hi Sat-Edit

A different time of day and view of Dunluce Castle, Northern Ireland

8911_Dunluce Castle_tonemapped

8911_Dunluce Castle-Edit

Celtic cross headstone detail

9559_Celtic Cross

9559_Celtic Cross-Edit

Proleek Dolmen

7577_Proleek Dolmen

7577_Proleek Dolmen-Edit-2

Becky and the Proleek Dolmen (that top stone is estimated at 11 tonnes).

7593_Becky & Proleek Dolman

7593_Becky & Proleek Dolman-Edit

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Filed under Black & White, Ireland, London, Photography, Travel

What I Did On My President’s Day Vacation

I just finished reading the latest post to Rob Slaven Photography on what he did over the President’s Day holiday.  He was out taking photos.

I too had the Monday off.  I spent it before my laptop, working on photos already taken; I uploaded all sorts of photos to my Google+ site, my Facebook Page, and my Flickr site.  I also wrote and published a couple of blog posts, as well.  I always feel prolific during my days off because my weekdays are so hectic and stressful.  All I want to do when I get home in the evening is eat dinner, watch the nightly national news, then go to bed and zonk out by 8PM (hey, I get up at 4AM each morning, so to pack in enough hours of sleep, I go to bed pretty early – it has to be something really special to keep me up past 8PM).  That doesn’t leave much room for working on photos or posting them to any site or blog.

Here’s a sampling of photos I uploaded to my various sites.

0052-2_Bleeding Hearts

2668_Salmon and Water

2718_Salmon Run

2923_Glowing

2820_TeaRose

3581_WindTurbines

8930_Falls Creek

7027_Sun & Clouds on Mourne Mountains_tonemapped

8653_Dunluce Castle 5-29-11_tonemappedREV

7242_Dunluce Castle_REV_8-17-11_tonemapped

Enough fun for the time being.  Time to log in to my office computer for a little bit of work.  After that, I need to figure out what outfit to wear tomorrow, get my breakfast and lunch ready, and in general get back to the workaday world mindset.  Sigh.

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14 Days in Ireland – Day 4: Slieve Donard Overlook (again), Tea with Violet, Cushendall, Cushendun, Torr Head, and Dunluce Castle

After my breakfast of soda bread French toast that 4th day of the photo tour, I loaded myself and my stuff into the van and we set out for one last photo op at Slieve Donard Overlook.  But first….The Secret Garden.  The previous night, as the van turned onto the road from the b&b’s driveway, we noticed off to the side an arched entrance looking into a beautifully-manicured garden we immediately dubbed The Secret Garden.  John promised to stop here the next morning as we started what would be a very full day’s journey to Ballycastle.  Because this garden was private property, we couldn’t very well just traipse on in, happily snapping away.  The best we could manage were shots like the one above, affording glimpses into this fairy tale garden.  Afterwards, we returned to Slieve Donard Overlook for one last view of the Mourne Mountains.  It was raining.  In Ireland.  How unusual.

We didn’t mind the rain much because, as every photographer knows: rain clouds = interesting scenes, like the dappling of sun and cloud shadow in the photo above.

We also returned to this place to help pass time until Tea Time with Violet.  Remember, in my last post, I mentioned that while enjoying a second night’s dinner at the Percy French (I still can’t remember what I ate that night), John’s friend and special guest Violet invited us all to her home for a proper Irish Tea.

From Slieve Donard Overlook onward, we stopped at an arched stone bridge (none of my photos turned out very well of this place) and then at a little car park out in the country where hikers were following a narrow trail hugging a tall hill (or maybe it was a small mountain?).  Can you spot the teeny tiny hikers along the trail in this photo?

I turned around to look across the road from the car park and focused the camera on this picturesque stone cottage with the bright red door.

The caravan stopped for a couple more photo ops before the rains began to fall heavily, forcing us inside the vehicle where the windows fogged up because the heater/defrost wasn’t working properly.  John called Violet to check on the status of her Tea, and down the road we went toward Rathfriland.

I honestly don’t know what I was expecting regarding houses in Ireland.  I guess I imagined that every home was made of stone, had a thatched roof, and was on the small-ish side.   Houses in Ireland – at least, the ones I saw – are all quite large – just as large as the houses in a Houston subdivision.

Violet was all set up and ready for us.  She had quite a spread: cake and  cookies and scones, all prettily laid out on a lovely white tablecloth.  Of course, we all sampled everything on the table and washed the sweet fare down with coffee and tea (we unanimously agreed that the cream-filled sponge cake was the best).  I liked that cake so much that I purchsed an Irish cookbook from Amazon upon my return to Texas (ok, the sponge cake was not the only reason I bought that cookbook, but for a person who doesn’t cook much anymore,  it was the first time I actually thought about trying to cook some Irish dishes myself).

Oh my, the sugar overload.  For the remainder of the day, none of us were very hungry and we all battled the sleepies.  I don’t know how John managed to drive the distance.  Did I mention that it was quite a long day crammed full of photo ops?

From Violet’s house onward to the twin coastal towns of Cushendall and Cushendun.  In the rain.  Well, it was sunny most of the way until we entered the outskirts of Cushendall.

We passed through Cushendall to stop in Cushendun and I was the only person to brave the rain and get a few snaps of a picturesque little harbor with an arched stone bridge (note the rain hitting the water).

Thank goodness for my Vortex Media Storm Jacket camera rain cover.  I don’t know what I would have done without it.  The cover ultimately got saturated at some point during a particular rainy day on the Dingle Peninsula (a later post from now), but for the most part, that bright yellow coated nylon worked extremely well to keep the water off and out of my precious SLR.

Departing Cushendun, our white caravan traveled the Torr Head Road for various photo stops along the Antrim Coast.  I’ve written this before and I’ll write it again:  everywhere I looked on this trip held scenes of incredible beauty.  The Torr Head Road (that’s what they call it, although it may officially be called something else) is a curvy road parallel to the coastline.  Scenes of gorse and deep green countryside and sheep and picturesque homes and sun and clouds filled the camera viewfinder.

Torr Head (“Tall Rock”) is so named because of the soil erosion which uncovered the metamorphosed stone beneath.  This prominent rock marks the closest distance between Ireland and Scotland (12 miles).  There’s a new coastguard station right at the top of the hill, and the old coastguard station (built of stone, naturally) is left in rather picturesque ruins next to a new car park.

  Looking out to that promontory, which is Torr Head

 A closer view of Torr Head

  Torr Head and Scotland beyond

  White, green, and blue

  The view from the Torr Head car park

Along the narrow way from the main road to the carpark are thick hedges filled with gorgeous wild fuschias.  I haven’t seen fuschias since my Seattle days, and even then, the fuschias I saw were in hanging baskets and not actually growing out in the wild.  These lovely flowers are not native to Ireland, but grow prolifically throughout the coastal areas because of the conducive weather.

 Not the greatest photo in the world, but I didn’t have my macro lens with me for this trip.  The best I could do was a closeup using the 24-105, and that doesn’t always work out very well.

After about 45 minutes at this stop, we resumed our journey toward a sunset shoot at Dunluce Castle.  We did stop for dinner at the Hunter Bar, where I ordered my first curry in the UK (remember, Northern Ireland is considered part of the UK).  Delish!  Even John agreed, and I’m pretty sure he’s eaten alot of curries during his photo tours.

We checked into our night’s accommodations Brown’s Country House before driving on to the castle.  I don’t even know where to begin with that magical place.  It’s a major tourist attraction, but because of the hour at which we arrived, everything was closed and the tourists were gone.  We had the whole place to ourselves.  Naturally, we couldn’t actually walk inside castle at that time of night, but the photo opportunities were everywhere.  The golden sun was setting and in the distance, a storm squall of blue-pink clouds brewed.  The castle was moody, the seascape dramatic…..and it was cold, windy, and wet.  Totally stunning.

When we finished up an hour later, we returned to our night’s lodging.  Brown’s Country House is a nice enough place, with a few caveats.  I wrote up a review in TripAdvisor.  The heat was on (a plus in their favor).  My electric hot pot didn’t work and it was too late at night to go downstairs and try to get a replacement (a minus) so I couldn’t fix the tea I had so come to enjoy and rely upon.  The toilet made a HUGE horrendous noise like it was dying or something, so I tried not to flush it too many times during the evening.  And my room didn’t have a desk. Instead, it had sort of a “ledge” right over the heat radiator that was large enough to accommodate a small laptop and mouse (only just) and my portable HD if I arranged everything just so.  And there were no chairs – only a stool.  Sigh.  One must make do with what one has, right?

Breakfast the following morning, and humorous converation with the loquacious lodge owners/operators helped considerably (good food always helps my mood).

Next:  Day 5: Giant’s Causeway, Carrick-a-rede rope bridge, scenery shots, Bushmills, Dunluce Castle again, White Rocks, Strabane, and on to Donegal

©2011 Rebecca Latson Photography, all rights reserved.  Please do not use my photos for any purposes without my explicit permission.

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Filed under 14 Days in Ireland, Day 4, Ireland and London Trip 2011