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April 29, 2012

Namibia Workshop 2013

Bookings for the 2013 Namibia workshop are now open. There is a slight, but very nice change from the last two years. We’re adding the spectacular Fish River Canyon lodge to the list of destinations, lengthening the workshop by 1 more night to 8 nights.

The workshop will kick off with 3 nights in the Namib Rand on the 16th of March. After that we’ll head South to the Fish River Canyon for 2 nights and then finish off with 3 nights at Sossusvlei.

 

Dates: 16-24 March 2013

Cost: R24950.00 pp sharing

Single Supplement: R3200.00

 

To book or enquire about more info, simply send me a mail at hougaard@hougaardmalan.com or call me on 0762792202

 

Close outside the Sossusvlei Lodge

Fish River Canyon

The Namib Rand

Deadvlei

Filed under: News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — Hougaard Malan @ 8:42 pm

April 18, 2012

Water in Deadvlei

Most visitors to Deadvlei have probably noticed that there’s the odd set of footprints going around the pan. If you’ve walked around the place barefoot for two hours then you’ll know how hard that surface is, so where do the footprints come from? Deadvlei needs a substantial amount of water for that surface to turn to clay so that someone will leave noticeable prints. It is a pretty common occurrence to have water in Sossusvlei in the rainy season because it gets flooded by the Tsaucheb river, which gets fed from a major mountain range catchment area. Deadvlei however, is deadvlei because it was cut off from Sossus by a dune hundreds of years ago and that made the trees die. So for any water to end up in Deadvlei, it has to fall directly above it. If you consider how many tourists go there a year and how few footprints there are, then you’ll realise how little people have seen this natural spectacle, let alone photographed it.

Images and story by Dom Wills – Check out his Deviantart page to see more.

 

“After an early evening of looking at some stars at the campsite at Sesriem, I was a bit shocked to be awoken a few hours later by thunder and rain. Being in the Namib Desert, I thought it would be temporary storm and move on. I was wrong. It rained solidly for 2 days.

I took periodic trips to Deadvlei to see how much, if any, water was landing on the pan. On the second morning, I was one of the first to the 4×2 parking lot and the road to deadvlei was flooded. Other cars had parked and were waiting for guides to help them get through. I knew that the river was going to come down in flood at any time, so I lowered tyre pressures and pressed on.

I though there would be the odd puddle at deadvlei at the most, but as I walked over the dune, I was delighted to see there was loads of water pooled up in large puddles all over the vlei. Given the river flooding situation, I gave myself an hour before heading back. What a glorious solo hour in this iconic landscape.

When I got back to the 4×2 parking lot, the rangers had blocked access to the vlei – suppose timing is everything and sometimes early mornings do pay off.”

The Day Before. Dramatic sandlip kicked up by the impending storm...

 

Wind being blown across the pan the day before

At this point one starts getting to the nice trees in the pan

Dom said that instead of running around and trying to get a shot of all the trees, he focused on getting one or two good shots.

My favorite shot from his series

Filed under: Featured — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — Hougaard Malan @ 9:33 am

April 9, 2012

After the Rain: Preview of Namibia 2012

Going into Namibia this year, I knew not to expect a repeat of last year’s amazing rain and skies. It was a freak year in which most of the country got three to four times its annual rainfall. Each day ended with near black thunderstorm skies turning to flaming reds and giving way to endless displays of lightning. The photographic opportunities were indescribable and over a total of about 3 weeks spent there on two trips I got some of my best work yet. I knew I had been spoiled and that I needed to tone down my expectations, but some small hope in me obviously wished for those dark skies again.

Spitzkoppe under a stormy afternoon sky

My first destination was the famous Spitzkoppe mountains, a spine of granite mountain peaks protruding from a plateau like a set of jagged teeth. It’s one of the most iconic landscapes in Namibia and I had 6 nights to try and do it some photographic justice. The weather forecast looked good: rain showers most afternoons. After arriving and setting up camp I spent the most of the first day just exploring the location for potential compositions. Photos of Spitzkoppe are very common in all tourism related media of Namibia and I thought I had seen most angles of the place. Upon some exploration I was surprised at the vast amount of possible foregrounds and compositions dotted around the main mountains. Iconic arch apart, there were so many rock pools, rock patterns, grass fields, trees, boulders etc. that I was very confused about where to start.

Interesting play of light and shadow created as the last sunlight fades from the lower part of the arch

I decided to kick off with the iconic arch shots, and then move on to something more unique. After 4 days I had gotten a satisfying amount of material of the location and while I never got a proper storm at sunset, I certainly couldn’t complain about the light I had. For a first visit to the place I was very happy and I decided to head to the coast for a well-deserved break from climbing up and down granite ‘hills’. I had four days to kill before the C4 workshop kicked off in the Rand and I thought I’d make a decision on where to go over a cold drink and the sound of the waves in Henties Bay. While there I made the decision that while I don’t really want typical photos of Sossus- and Deadvlei, for business reasons it was a necessity in my portfolio.

Cliche Deadvlei

I spent three days at Sesriem, but I still don’t have any stories of revelation or inspiration about the place. I had one good sunset and one good sunrise so I got the shots I wanted. I already knew all the typical wide angle compositions at Deadvlei so it was simply a matter of moving the tripod around and getting the shots. The one morning we arrived to find a British group of about 15 photographers already shooting. ‘We’ were another 4, and as the sun climbed I think about another 10 arrived. There were more tripods than trees and it was impossible to get a shot without someone in it. Luckily the skies were cloudless so I had a nap on the side of the pan while the masses bustled about in each other’s compositions. It’s a place that still fails to touch me, or maybe I fail to connect with it??

The mist cleared for a few minutes, allowing soft light through slatted ceilings

 

The next 7 days followed with the C4 workshop of which 4 days were on the farm Excelsior in the Namib Rand and 3 days were at Sossusvlei. The weather was good and we had very flexible hours at Sossusvlei which allowed our clients to get some great photos. The strenuous hours and long walks were a bit of a shock to some of the clients, but they quickly adapted to the desert! We had a good rest on the last morning and spent the last night well into darkness shooting stars in deadvlei. The group tried a few static milky way shots with light painted trees and ended things with a 32 minute star trail exposure that came out brilliant. I ached to get the night sky photos myself, but I’ll return at a later stage to attempt something unique.

Ghost rain lights up in flaming sunset light

After the workshop, I and a client traveled on to the ghost town of Kolmanskop, a location that was a complete block to me last year. It was a bucket list location for Jill and I think her ambition to get great shots influenced me to give it another proper try after failing so miserably last year. I studied a few images of Kolmanskop in the run-up to my trip and learnt quite a few things from them. Armed with this new knowledge, me and Jill were psyched to shoot the iconic ghost town. On both mornings conditions were very misty which not only cast beautiful soft light into the buildings, but kept things pleasantly cool. Without really noticing it, we shot nonstop for 5 hours on the first morning and the second morning went similar. After those two days we were both very satisfied with our results and it was time to carry on to Fish River Canyon.

Rain falls over the Nubib mountains beyond the plains of Dina

The Fish River Lodge is definitely my favorite lodge in Namibia. Everything from the location to the service to the architecture is astounding and I often end up just relaxing more than shooting. As with the rest of the trip, the weather wasn’t amazing, but it certainly wasn’t bad. I got some new photos to go home with. The potential of the place is however much greater than I’ve ever seen in any photo, but you need a pretty rare synchronization of weather elements to get killer light over the canyon at the right time.

15 degree winter weather at Luderitz was a welcome relief from 40+ degree days at Sossusvlei

It was a successful three weeks, but I’d be lying if I said it was as special as last year. Most places were definitely easier to shoot after having been there before, but then they were also less exciting. I can’t wait to get back next year and experience the place again. The magic of Namibia never fails to refresh the mind and satisfy one’s craving for excellent photography. Even when I say that it wasn’t as special, you can see from the photos that it was still an absolute feast of top class photographic opportunities…and this is about 1/5th of the work I’ve deemed worthy of being processed to go into my portfolio.

Excelsior's chocolate mountain below a dramatic afternoon sky

2013 workshops

Bookings will open in the coming weeks and there will be a slight variation on last year. The one workshop will be 4 days Namib Rand, 2 days Fish River Canyon, 2 days Sossusvlei and on the other date Fish River Canyon will be substituted for Kolmanskop/Luderitz. Both will be in March next year and the price will be roughly R20000-R25000 ($3000-$4000) with about 15 places available between the two. Watch this space!

 

Beautiful side lighting from a window brings out the ripples in the sand

Photograph Namibia Guides

 

These have both been removed from my blog. I am in the process of turning them into e-books which will be much more content rich and precise and available for purchase at a small price.

 

Afternoon sunlight on the Fish River Canyon

 

 

 

October 12, 2011

HDR Luminosity Mythbusters

Many people are under the impression that if you invert the basic lights selection it gives you the basic darks selection. They use this as a shortcut instead of inverting the image to get the basic darks selection. Let me disprove this theory with two very simple examples :)

In the 1st image is the selection path you get from inverting the basic lights selection. The 2nd image shows the selection path you get if you created basic darks using an inverted layer, as you should. Do they look the same?

Inverse of basic lights

Basic Darks

 

If I make a layer of each of those selections and get rid of the original image so that it consists of only the pixels in either selection, you get the two results below. The first one is again the inverse of basic lights and you can see that it contains more midtones. The 2nd image is of conventionally obtained basic darks and clearly has less midtones.

Inverse of basic lights

 

Basic Darks

 

Myth Busted???

July 26, 2011

New Site and Blog coming soon…

I think I owe all of my subscribers an apology for an absence of updates on my blog. The year got off to a very hectic start of travels, shooting and workshops, but things have calmed down now. I was of course shooting in that time and I have a ton of new images that will be released along with a completely redone website and blog on the 1st of October this year. The major problem I have with my current blog is the archiving and path system is difficult to navigate…this will be fixed.

I’m also working on a series of new articles for my blog that will help subscribers with all aspects of landscape photography. These will be accompanied by smaller ‘weekly tip’ articles with useful photoshop tricks and downloadable actions. The new blog and site is sure to blow you away, but until the 1st of October this is all I’ll be showing :)


October 19, 2010

Travel Time…

As the last clouds leave the Cape, the First billowing thunder heads roll on to the other parts of Southern Africa. This is my time to leave the prison cell that is my desk and head for freedom in the mountains, the deserts and on the coastline. New goals and new aspirations call for new material and that is exactly what I’m planning. I’m finally going to Hole in the Wall and the great Drakensberg. Two of South Africa’s most prominent landscapes that are not only missing from my portfolio, but that I have never seen with my own eyes.

Hopefully La Niña will deliver some of these!

I leave this Sunday the 24th on a 5 week trip that looks roughly as follows

  • 3 nights at the Storms River Mouth
  • 2 nights at Kenton on Sea
  • 5 nights at Hole in the wall
  • 2 nights at Giants Cup in the Drakensberg
  • 2 nights at Kamberg in the Drakensberg
  • 5 nights at Mahai in the Drakensberg
  • 1 night at Golden Gate
  • 6 nights of workshops in Bloemfontein and Pretoria… can’t be all play, no work
  • 5 nights at the Rhodes/Barkly mountains
  • Then it’s the December holidays including
    • 3 nights at the Barkly mountains…again :)
    • 5 nights at the Dwesa reserve on the wild coast
  • In late January I head off to the Blyde River Canyon for 4-6 nights
  • 4 nights at the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park
  • 4 nights in Kokerboom kloof in the Richtersveld
  • 2 nights on the farm Kanaan in the Namib rand…remember in my Namib post I mentioned the book with the amazing images? All taken on Kanaan!
  • 2 nights at a lodge next to Wolwedans
  • 2 nights at Sossusvlei
  • 1 night at Augrabies
  • 2 nights rest in Pretoria
  • 6 nights Sehlabathebe in Lesotho

Wilderness night skies

(more…)

October 6, 2010

Namibia: The Ancient Frontier II

It’s almost 5 months since my brief and rushed trip to that unbelievable place on Africa’s West Coast. Every time I see one of my images or someone else’s I get a sick feeling inside of me and my whole being aches to get back to the red sands, white grass and Acacia trees. Luckily there is less than 4 months separating me from my next trip to the Namib Rand.

Don’t forget about the C4 landscape photography workshop in the Namib Rand and Sossusvlei from 3-9 April 2011. I will be co-hosting along with award winning nature photographer Shem Compion. Only 6 of 12 spots remaining and they’re filling up quickly so book ASAP!

The images from my first blog article were less than half of the good material I got on my trip in May, but time is scarce and I wanted to get my processing skills back from the grave again. It’s amazing how much it deteriorates after 5 months away from a ‘proper’ computer (not a laptop). I’ve been at home for the majority of winter and thus my processing skills are back on track and better than ever. I’ve processed some of the unseen material and I’ve reprocessed a few which I’ve already posted online in various places. Any critique or queries are welcome!

Biblical - Another one from the most unbelievable sunrise I've ever seen. I tend to always be complaining about how unlucky I am with light and weather on trips, but in this case I was truly fortunate! Stitch of two shots @ 16mm. Here is a slightly larger version - http://hougaard.deviantart.com/art/Biblical-181361944

Netherworld - Mid day light with some alternative processing gives some interesting results. I was just going crazy with snapshots while doing reconnaissance climbs of every dune and hill in sight. I liked the composition so I played around in PS a bit.

Bronze and Blue - These koppies are on a farm owned by one of my dad's best friends. It's just past Grunau next to the B1 and we got there just before sunset after a 900km drive. I scrambled up these rocks and managed to compose a shot in time

Mini Fairy Circle

Acacia Star - The first morning was pretty much fooling around in the dark, but I managed to get one or two good ones. The Raw from this isn't quite nice, but some double blending to get more detail from the branches and highlights gives it a nice touch!

Deep Skies - I posted a similar, but portrait composition with different weather of this exact scene. I don't really know which one I like more. The other sky was much more simple, but this one has better depth and tonal variety

Fairy Circle Twilight - A crescent moon hangs over a landscape unique to this small region of the world. Grass covered dunes strewn with these circles where nothing grows. Reprocessed, but I'm still not quite happy. I tried to get it to look like the velvia version.

Nubib Sunrise - The beautiful farm of the Nubib lodge on my first morning. a Big thanks to Rust Brand for showing me the area and introducing me to all the farmers

Unforgiving - The desolation accentuated by some alternative processing

Inferno - And one last image from that stunning sunrise!

So far I’ve got 4 trips to Namibia for 2011. One in January, March, April and September and really I’m looking forward to the January trip for rain and thunder and the March trip when it’s green! Please feel free to give me some critique!

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