Archive: ‘Travel’



Journey to Nagaland

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

The events in this post actually happened some days ago but the Internet here in North East India is so scarce that it offers a refreshing outlook on the way we, or should I say I, lead my life – obviously it’s a bit of a downer when trying to write 366 blog posts in 366 days but there you have it, can’t win them all.

So I’m currently traveling to some of the least visited regions of India, where I hope to meet and spend some quality time with some of the tribes who, up until about 50 years ago, were literally hunting and beheading those from rival tribes. The scenery here is truly breathtaking and there is little in the way of concrete or brick structures, meaning the roads, those that are open, are more dirt tracks and transportation is slow and via 4×4 if you’re lucky.

The weather is so much colder than in South India with mist and clouds covering the surrounding hills that should make for some excellent photography, too say I’m looking forward to this journey is an understatement, I’ve wanted to come to these areas for sometime now and to almost be there is a real thrill. ‘m going to try to get some more posts up regarding this trip so you can enjoy the trip too, in the meantime here’s an image of those hills I was talking about.

 

That was day 18 of 366, come back tomorrow  for more

Personal Experiences. Burma 2008

Sunday, January 15th, 2012

So it´s like this,  while I was planning this post a day concept I realised I´d need content. I started with the week long series of posts (the first of which, the composition series, was a real success). I´m also going to be adding more mobile image, as I did earlier this week. Racking my brains for more I thought perhaps you would be interested to hear some of my past experiences, so every month I´ll be writing a reasonably in depth report on some of the great experiences that photography has given me. Firstly lets wind all the way back to February 2008 when I was traveling through Burma. I apolagise to those who have heard this story before.

I´ve always been interested in visiting far flung places and for some reason Burma appealed, I did plenty of research before I left and had things more or less planned out before I set off on my own. I was aware of the government situation and therefore and I only traveled by private bus and stayed in private (ie non-government hotels) in an attempt to reduce the amount of money getting into the hands of the military government.

During my time there I met incredible local people who, despite being impoverished, would stop me in the street and invite me to a restaurant for food and then refuse to let me pay even my half of the bill, extremely generous – this seems to be a running theme in my travels the less the people have the more generous they are.

A couple of weeks into the trip whilst in Mandlay, which is towards the noth of the country, a massive cyclone hit southern Burma. I knew nothing about it, power cuts were common so the fact that the telephones and internet were also out came as no real surprise. A couple of days later I hear of the ´big storm´ that had taken down the telephone cables in the capital and it could be a week before its up and running again.

News slowly started coming out as to how serious things really were, following the BBC world service as many Burmese do to hear acurate news instead of the cencored the stuff the get fed from the government, I learnt about the true horrors, hundreds dead and the number kept increasing every broadcast,thousands dead, tens of thousands, possibly a hundred thousand people dead, when were the numbers going to stop ?

According to Wikipedia the official number is 138, 000 people (although this is disputed and was probably higher), one of the most deadliest cyclones of all time. Obvioiusly In the outside world this was big news, Cyclone Nargis as it had been named had hit hard, however the military government tried thier hardest to put their spin on things making things sound less dramatic than it really was and stating how they were doing a good job and didn´t need any outside assistance. The truth is they weren´t, far from it.

Fortunatly for me I was far away continuing my adventure, however my family back home were getting incresing concerned the BBC, Sky and ITV all ran features on the missing British photographer, I have a copy of these broadcasts and they are chilling to watch. I was assumed dead, one of the 138 000. There was nothing they could do but watch the news coverage, see the numbers going up and up and watching the same images of dead bodies floating down rivers all bloated up in the heat of the day. I can´t imagine how they must have felt. Finally a week after the cyclone hit I was able to make contact. With the military roaming around in full force and the borders closed to foreigners I left the country pretty soon after.

I was welcomed back at Heathrow airport by my entire family, the press wanted to be there but I managed to give them the slip.

For me the sadest thing is when I returned to the UK and tried to publish these images no one was interested, despite attempts by one of the largest news agencies to get these images out into the public eye, over a week had passed and it was no longer considered news, I kept hearing the same response, no one really cares about what happens in Burma, so to this day none of these images have been published outside of my website. A sadening fact is that more people died from cyclone Nargis than did in the 2001 tsunami.

That was post number 15 of 366, come back tomorrow for more, I promise I´ll have something a little happier to share.

 

What´s in a travel photographers backpack?

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

Travel photographers face a rather unique phenomenon that probably doesn’t occur to anyone else in the world, well it probably does…but….. It goes something like this. What ever and however they pack they will always always always wish they had packed more and yet on the same trip they will also wish they had packed less. Not being familiar with a destination or the events that may occur can lead to not bringing the right equipment for the job, you´ll want to make sure you have a full range of lenses and plenty of batteries for example.

On the other side of the coin. Weight. Many destinations of a travelling photographer do not suit modern roller trolleys and therefore the only alternative is to carry everything on your back, do you really need to bring that heavy telephoto lens? While my personal kit varies from trip to trip this is what I am currently carrying. I´m not going to go into real detail  about the specifications of each item rather list what I carry and state why.

5D MK II

I used to carry 2 Canon 1d MKII series cameras but the weight was just too much, why 2? for the simple reason that if one were to fail I´d have a backup, also I had a 1ds II with it´s stunning picture quality as my standard camera and a 1d II as the backup which gave me incredible speed when shooting (something like 8 frames per second) so at fast moving events I´d use that as my standard camera. On a few rare occasions I also carried both cameras with different lenses attaches which gave me a full variety of options. Now the 5 D MKII does every thing I want and more, yes it is true that I am with out a back up, but it´s a risk I´m taking in an attempt to save my back for a few more years.

Canon EF 24-70L f2.8

A great lens that helps me shoot almost 90% of my images. You´ll usually find me at 24mm but I have the option to zoom all the way to 70mm when required.

Canon EF 70-200 f2.8

This big white lens is built like a brick and weighs about as much too. for the last couple of years I haven´t been without as having that extra zoom has helped me out of difficult shooting situations. However I haven´t used it that much recently and I am now starting to wander if it deserves to have a permanent place in my kit bag.

2 x Canon Speedlights

Useful, natural light can be very unpredictable and often harsh near the equator. With 2 flashes I open up a huge range of lighting options. Add on some coloured gels and BAM.

Laptop

with various software – more on that another day. Essential for backing up, editing, processing, blog writing and so much more

5 x External HDDs

Earlier on this trip I had a bit of a nightmare situation and to be honest I am still not entirely happy with my current setup and should probably add another drive to my backpack but 6 HDD´s seems excessive to me. Currently my drives are organised as follows. 2 copies of my images and videos from my current trip, the other 3 drives have just one copy of older work. Don´t worry my older work is also backed up in 2 different locations.

Zoom H1 Sound recorder

I haven´t used it as much as I probably should have but this thing weighs about as much as a feather so I really don´t regret carrying it and on the occasions I have use it it has worked flawlessly giving me excellent sound quality.

USB card reader

I love this thing. It cost me just a couple of quid, weighs next to nothing, is small and needs no cables. What more could you want from a card reader.

Velbon Tripod

You can´t live without one if shooting video and allows me to shoot images with slow shutter speeds. Why Velbon? no idea. I´ve had it a long time and it does the job. On top of all this I have a mountain of various cables, flash gels, flash leads, cleaning kit, CDs, memory cards, batteries and other useful bits and bobs.

That was post number 10 of 366, check back tomorrow for more

56 Hours on a train

Monday, January 9th, 2012

Those who follow me on either Twitter or Facebook  may have read my update regarding a rather long train journey I completed just the other day, a rather long train journey from Mumbai in the West of India to Assam in the far far North East, the reasons for me being here will become apparent soon.

So what to do during the 56 hours? Apart from so much reading that my eyes started blur and drinking so much chai that I was almost crying dregs and then of course there was photography. For security reasons I was not wanting to unpack my DSLR (I felt safer with it hidden away under lock and key rather than waving it around in peoples faces), I chose the next best thing – my mobile. Below are a handful of shots I took during the 3 day venture.

 

  

 

That was day 9 of 366, come back tomorrow for more.

My interview a Malaysian national newspaper

Sunday, October 23rd, 2011

Another quick update.

Due to a couple of random meetings when I was on assignment earlier this year in Malaysia I ended up being interviewed by the Guang Ming Daily, a Malaysian national newspaper written in Chinese, the interview was conducted through an interpreter and lasted about an hour, I spoke about my life and my thoughts on both travel and photography and handed over a few images but I had absolutely no idea the printed article was going to be so long, It appears to be 3 full pages.

I’ve yet to see a printed copy but there should be one waiting for me in Penang. Now the truth is I’m really not 100% sure what the article says nor how accurate it is, but I’ve been assured it paints me in a positive light.

Mumbai fishermen

Friday, October 14th, 2011

Until the mid 90´s Mumbai was known as Bombay. The word Mumbai comes from the Hindu godess Mumba who was the patron of fishermen. A little known fact
(outside of India, at least)  for you there. With this in mind I headed towards the fishing port early one morning in Southern Mumbai to see what was going on.

Mumbai fishermen - f/6.3, 1/1000 sec, at 35mm, 320 ISO. Copyright Tom Bourdon | Documentary Travel Photography.

I was met, as is often the case in Asia, with open arms and big grins. However I soon become stuck. I became totally fixated on the way the fishermen pass the fish from the boats to the shore, the tide was low and the boats were several meters below port wall where lorries waited to transport the fish around the country. So how to get several tonnes of fish from the boat to land? the answer was to throw them, no machines, pulleys, winches or the like this was good old fashioned muscle.

Mumbai fishermen - f/6.3, 1/1000 sec, at 35mm, 320 ISO. Copyright Tom Bourdon | Documentary Travel Photography.

I became so impressed by this I rather forgot my surroundings and concentrated so much on getting the shot I wanted, which is something like the one above although I have a couple of hundred similar attempts. As soon as I became aware of what I was doing I decided to look else where to complete the story of the Mumbai fishermen, in hindsight this is something I should have done much earlier in the morning.

Mumbai fishermen - f/6.3, 1/1000 sec, at 35mm, 320 ISO. Copyright Tom Bourdon | Documentary Travel Photography.

So the moral is if you´re trying to shoot a story don´t obsess over just one or 2 images, cover the story, cover the story, cover the story. Ok lesson learnt.

Mumbai fishermen - f/6.3, 1/1000 sec, at 35mm, 320 ISO. Copyright Tom Bourdon | Documentary Travel Photography.

At the moment I´m having quite an adventure in India with my parents who have arrived from England earlier in the week, as I write this post from Udaipur, Rajasthan, they are waiting upstairs on the terrace to have dinner with me, so I´ll leave this post there and I´ll update you all soon with some more photos.

Postcard from Goa

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

There´s just enough time to send a postcard from Goa, I´ve been here for a few days now and am about to head back to the madness that is Mumbai. Goa has been fantastic, we arrived very early on in the season and the beaches were empty and allowed me plenty of space to shoot, it´s also been quite relaxing too :)

Rickshaw pullers

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

It´s been a while since I last had a chance to update my blog, but here we are this time coming from India, that´s right I´m back in India and what an incredible place this is, despite my numerous trips here it still fascinates me in so many ways. I flew into Calcutta during the monsoon season, with the humidity hovering around the 90% mark, I was hoping to do a story on the rickshaw pullers that opperate here. These folks have facinated me since day one, they lead an incredibly tough life, making their living by litterally pulling people around the city in wooden carts, as far as I´m aware it´s the only place in the world that still opperate such a brutal form of transport. The government are under heavy pressure threatening to end their livelihoods, the harsh reality is that if that were to happen it would mearly force these hard working men in to extreme poverty, with no means of making a living – it really doesn´t seem fair for me to made a judgement call.

I was somewhat surprised by the lack of rain when I arrived I was expecting rain all day every day with flooded roads, but it seemed limited to the occasion shower, I really hope this doesn´t cause problems with the local farmers later in the year. Never the less I continued with my planned shoot and headed to the streets, here´s a handful of shots I took, without the monsson rains they´re not as dramatic as I´d hoped, but there are somethings that are just out of my hands.

 

Lets stay in touch

Saturday, August 27th, 2011

If there´s one things that I´m really bad at, and the truth is that there´s obviously more than one, then it´s staying in touch with people.

Fortunately the wanders of the world wide web have provided me with some pretty handy tools to help, and there´s quite a range and you´ll find me using the most popular, from the 140 character limited Twitter to Facebook and the recently launched Google Plus.

Due to the various clauses in the small print in the terms and conditions on each of these sites I tend not to upload much of my best work (for that you´ll need to come back here :) ) but you will find some behind the scenes shots of my travels as well as regular updates of what I´m doing wherer I´m going and what I´m thinking.

So click on your social media logo of choice and I promise to keep in touch, as best I can :)

A follow up post on data recovery

Saturday, August 20th, 2011

Following on from my post earlier in the week on backups and data recovery I thought I´d take the opportunity to discuss some of the suggestions left in the comments section, if you haven´t yet read the post hope over there now and catch up, everyone else read on.

f/7.1, 1/800 sec, at 93mm, 250 ISO. Copyright Tom Bourdon | Documentary Travel Photography.

As I see it there are 3 possible options each, as I said before, with it´s pitfalls

  • The most common suggestion, and in my mind obvious, was to have a third drive whilst I like this idea, managing 3 drives can become awkward, it gets tricky making sure everything is copied over in the right direction. My current 2 disk set up requires me to just copy from disk one to disk 2 and I often leave it running over night as it can take some time. Adding a third disk to the equation means my backups will take twice as long. However, as is suggested disk 3 could be backed up on a weekly basis, this would ease things some what in terms of time and if disks 1 and disks 2 fail again I´ll only ever loose a maximum 1 weeks work – still not great, but it´s something. Another issue is it would mean carrying another disk, I´m already carrying 5 so adding another one to the equation doesn´t fill me, or my back, with joy.
  • Online backups. I´d love, love, love this to be a serious option the ability to ensure all my files are backed up and available anywhere in the world and not have to carry so many drives would be a huge relief. Unfortunately as Craig Ferguson states the costs involved are massive and internet connections. However in my research I have found 2 interesting sites that offer a fair amount of free online storage, as far as I can see they both do pretty much the same thing. Dropbox offers 2 gigabytes free apon sign up and SugarSync  offers 5 gigabytes, as far as I can tell this is the major difference although Dropbox does appear to be simpler to use (I have to come clean at this point and say that by clicking the links above and signing up for a free account you will be giving me a few extra megabytes of storage, it´s their way of saying thanks for the referral, but once your signed up you can refer to your friends too and gain upto a couple of extra Gigabytes) While this is no where near enough space for my raw files it is enough space for my Lightroom catalogue and a few other important docs. The uploads are automatic, so you just set it up and forget about it, trust me it gives a fair amount of satisfaction to know that these files are safely stored in the ether, I can even have a copy synced to my mobile or any other machine.
  • An option that no one suggested perhaps because the technology is not quite there yet (or should I say the prices are way too high for me to consider) is to replace my 2 hard disk drives (HDDs) with 2 solid state drives (SSD), these unlike conventional HDD has no moving parts which is where regular HDDs normally have problems, most HDD faults occur due to mechanical failure, the knocks and bumps that a drive takes during months of travel is almost unavoidable and will ultimately lead to a dead disk. So a drive with no moving parts would be able to take alot more of the abuse that a regular HDD can withstand, the prices? well? we´re talking in the thousands for a 1TB drive, assuming I still keep a mirror image backup… well that´s a lot of money. But prices will fall and I´m pretty sure I will be backing up my files on these within a few years.

Shun-Luoi Fong makes a very good point about giving one of your backups to a travel partner to carry so if the worst does happen and your luggage goes missing you don´t loose both copies. In my case I give one disk to Paloma to carry in exchange for a pair of shoes – seems like a fair deal to me.

f/4.5, 1/1250 sec, at 24mm, 250 ISO. Copyright Tom Bourdon | Documentary Travel Photography.

While the images in these last 2 posts may seem a little random – they are not, these are some of the images that were lost that I didn´t get a chance to share.