Walks Near the Sea
A Haligonian Portfolio
(This portfolio is also viewable in color.)
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada is home, where I have lived for 23 years with my
family and fellow Nummists. At the time I write this
(October 2007), I have been photographing the area avidly for the past 4 years.
Halifax is the largest and oldest urban centre in Atlantic Canada, yet it is also nestled amid parklands,
wilderness and active fishing villages. You can readily photograph nature, heritage and industry in the same
outing, and sometimes in the same scene. This beautiful and diverse region seems to welcome any wanderer
and any kind of photographic vision.
After gathering some 28,000 photos on walks in the Halifax Regional Municipality, I have decided to post some
of them online. This selection emphasizes subjects that I encountered rather than ones I planned.
Below, then, are 42 photos, representing some of my favourite serendipitous subjects in Halifax and nearby. Most
of these images, incidentally, are telephoto shots. (The opposite was true when I selected photos for my
Parisian Portfolio. Perhaps in more familiar territory
one tends to see in telephoto.) With one exception, they are available light shots (i.e. no flash), and most
are also handheld shots (i.e. no tripod). The following cameras, lenses, filter and film featured in the
making of this portfolio:
- Nikon D50 digital SLR body
- Nikkor AF 70-210 f/4 telephoto zoom lens
- Tokina AT-X M100AF 100 f/2.8 macro lens
- Nikon Type I circular polarizing filter
- HP Photosmart 945 digital compact
- Fujica GL690 Professional medium format film rangefinder body
- Kodak E100VS slide film
- Fujica 100 f/3.5 Auto Electro normal lens
Here is home:
Ships & Harbours
STRATEGY: Large (and often moving) subjects, combined with great, open distances, provide
many opportunities to play with perspective. Telephoto lenses can produce interesting compression effects
here.
Tough Ol' Tug
On the Halifax Waterfront, this tugboat rests from its labours.
Three Corners
These footings support an 18 floor office building (Purdy's Wharf Tower 1).
Atlantic Economy
A container ship passes the fishing village of Portuguese Cove.
Keith's on the Silva
An empty barrel of Alexander Keith's Indian Pale Ale sits aboard the Tall Ship Silva, berthed on the
Halifax Waterfront.
The Victory Departing
The cruise ship Carnival Victory passes the end of Halterm Terminal. Cormorants flock in the foreground.
The Unicyclists
These unicyclists are scouting out Nova Scotia (here, the Halifax Waterfront) for the upcoming June 2008
Ride the Lobster tour. The cruise ship Norwegian Dawn passes in the
background.
The Freakshow Passing
The speedboat Freakshow passes Georges Island.
K181
As evening approaches on the Halifax Waterfront, HMCS Sackville (K181), the last surviving WWII corvette,
catches reflections of light.
Depth Markings
On the Sackville's other side, depth markings cover the prow.
Stumps & Undergrowth
STRATEGY: Look down (or kneel or even lie down) and rotate your perspective. Many subjects
of this kind have no front or back, so diverse compositions are feasible.
Primordial Cookie
Hypnotic lichen formations cover the boulders in Terrence Bay Wilderness Area.
Pitcher Plants of the Apocalypse
Also in Terrence Bay Wilderness Area, pitcher plants feast on the fecund population of mosquitos.
Roadside Rose
Near Peggy's Cove, this rose grows on the shoulder of Route 333.
Bluebead Revolution
Three years after the tree fellings caused by Hurricane Juan, bluebeads penetrate the layer of deadwood
on the floor of Point Pleasant Park.
Life in the Hollow
A microcosmic ecosystem takes shelter in this stump, in Point Pleasant Park.
Long, Gnarled Roots
Trees like this one, in Point Pleasant Park, are so deeply coiled into the earth as to be almost unshakeable.
They dominate the view both up and down.
Entangled Lives
Another stump in Point Pleasant Park holds wiry lichen, sticky pinecones and flakes of snow.
End of Winter
A crocus blooms beside one of last fall's maple leaves.
Layered Lady Slippers
These endangered flowers congregate in an undisclosed location.
Goldenrod on Rye
Back in Point Pleasant Park, non-endangered wildflowers and grasses are flourishing on the open slopes.
The Hole
This stump, also in Point Pleasant Park, is really something special. One wants to kneel beside it, feel its
woodiness, gaze into the oddness of its hole... Can you spot any animal shapes in the bark?
Little Fern
Yet another Point Pleasant Park stump yields its rich, red pulp to the circle of life. A beneficiary, this
young fern basks in the sun.
Wildlife
STRATEGY: Approach slowly and stop to take photos often. Use faster shutter speeds than you
would otherwise expect to need.
Slick Frog
A wet frog glistens in the sun on the edge of this private pond.
Parker the Ordinance Squirrel
This anxious individual seems aware that we are diminutive creatures facing staggering odds. Perhaps he would
also say, "Keep our parks and cities clean!" He dwells in Point Pleasant Park.
Cruising Mallard
This duck enjoys the sun and water in the Halifax Public Gardens.
Canada Geese in Retreat
Near Peggy's Cove, this flock of Canada geese waddles away from the man with the lens. Due to previous
experience, the man decides not to pursue across marshland.
Caterpillar's Hour 2
Eventually, this caterpillar made it to the upper branches of the tree.
Smoker Pigeon
No pigeons were harmed in the taking of this picture. This bird did manage to get up and fly.
Tilted Cormorant
This cormarant fishes off Purdy's Wharf. So do some people; believe it or not.
Dragonfly Love
These dragonflies are spending mating season on the banks of Quarry Pond in Point Pleasant Park.
Seagull on Mooring
A seagull takes the high ground on the end of Purdy's Wharf.
Flower Gardens
STRATEGY: Get close and find smooth, contrasting backgrounds. A polarizer is important for
reducing glare on petals.
Sleeping Daffodils 1
These daffodils are closed and bowed, yet they will bloom before long.
Daffodil in Distress 1
A daffodil stands in the midst of rose thorns.
Daffodil in Distress 2
Another daffodil buries its petals against the stem of an unfeeling tulip.
Venerable Tulip 4
This tulip, in the shadier part of its garden, has lasted longer than most. Others have already wilted.
Watchful Rosa Ragusa
Like squinting eyes, these rosa ragusa flowers curl back on themselves.
Daylilies against Shade
These daylilies catch the sunlight and reflect it so brilliantly that everything else seems dark.
Pollinating Sunflower
On an overcast autumn day, this sunflower still stands tall. However, there are no takers for its pollen.
Swirling Cosmos
Against the backdrop of lily leaves, this cosmos seems to spin.
Three Black-eyed Susans
Three black-eyed susans (plus another seen faintly in the background) line up in this curbside garden.
Red-Green Rose
This rose bush encoils an arch in the Halifax Public Gardens.
Yellow Lily
Also in the Halifax Public Gardens, lilies are one of many species in the flowerbeds.
Wasp on Zinnia
This last image is actually not from the Halifax Regional Municipality but rather from neighbouring King's
County. (Perhaps King's County will be the subject of another portfolio.) This flower belongs to the gardens
of The Prescott House Museum, in Starrs Point.
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