Tuesday 5 November 2013

Volcanic desolation at Carsaig, Isle of Mull




In the previous blogpost, I included a photograph of volcanic rock at Carsaig, Isle of Mull, being overgrown by fresh, green foliage.  Carsaig is full of contrasts and, in fact, I was standing at exactly the same point, facing in another direction, when I took this photograph.

This was more of the kind of image that I had in mind, and which drew me down to Carsaig on this inclement day.  I’m always struck by the dead and destructive desolation of the volcanic rock on the shoreline at Carsaig.  The emptiness of the shattered landscape, characterised by devastation of the volcanic activity 65 milion years ago and more, and the rocks that had fallen down and still remain at the shoreline today.  It’s a scene frozen in time, a prehistoric ghost town which (facing in this direction, at least) looks never to have recovered.  The immediacy of the volcanic force hits you in the face as if it only happened yesterday, or last week.

I wanted an image that would capture the haunting weirdness of the scene – not a pleasant landscape with blue water and the horizon in the distance – that just wouldn’t be right for how I feel here.  On this foggy day, only the first few yards of the sea seemed to sit at the shore before fading into a curtain of white invisibility.  The mystery of the weather leant a sense of eeriness to this mysterious place. 

This is what exactly my photography is about, the connection between the human imagination and nature.  It’s why I call this blog Human Nature.  The weirdness of the scene makes the imagination run wild; and I really hope that this is a weird picture to reflect that view. 

Monday 4 November 2013

Rugged coastlines on the Isle of Mull

Loch Beg at low tide, the view towards Glenmore.

Travelling around the Isle of Mull and soaking up its stunning scenery, the varied, rugged landscape of hills, valleys, coastal lochs and woodland clearly shares many characteristics of the Scottish mainland, sharing also the dramatic weather, changing light and sunshine, cloud and rainbows. But the story of Mull’s landscape is very different, and the island stands out for being geologically more complex than most of its neighbours.  To see the difference, you need to go to the coast.

A remote stretch of coast on the Ross of Mull.  Five miles from the nearest road, and involving a long trek over uneven grassland and rocky cliff tops (and not a footpath in sight), some of these gem sites really need hunting out, but they're well worth it.


I’ve started to document parts of the coast more recently with a series of landscape pictures, some of which will appear on this blog over the next few weeks.  There is truly an embarrassment of riches here for interesting coastal scenes quite different from anywhere else on earth.

The island was at the centre of a large amount of volcanic activity around 65 million years ago (around the same time at which the dinosaurs were wiped out to extinction) which created many layers of rock which form the foundation of the island we know and love today.  Trapped within the layers of rock is evidence of plant life which reveals the climate at the time would have been subtropical.  In areas such as Carsaig, where the volcanic rock characterises the landscape, there are stretches of bare rock which take on the appearance of post-apocalyptic devastation at the foot of the staggering cliffs, whilst elsewhere along the same coast, the running waters and plant life give the impression of verdant rejuvenation of life around the dramatic shape of the landscape.  Nevertheless, these areas can take some serious trekking to get to.

In some remote stretches of Carsaig, the volcanic rock is once again supporting a great deal of life.


In some places the flowing lava cooled to create the characteristic basalt columns for which the area is well known (nearby Staffa is the most famous example), while in neighbouring regions  there are ancient crystalline rocks and pink granite stone.

Pink granite stone at Kintra


The island may be best known to visitors for its beaches and hills, but taking a trip to some of the more remote areas of coastline can be quite an eye-opener.


Tuesday 24 September 2013

Memories are made of these.

Sleepy red grouse in purple heather.


Every photo carries with it a set of memories.  Like with family photos, I don’t have any difficulty remembering exactly which spot each was taken, and when.  Every photo makes up part of the story in my mind of what happened on a particular day, and the joy (or discomfort) that I experienced on that particular encounter with a subject or place.  For this reason, it’s always good to review pictures from previous years to be reminded of the events in nature’s calendar.  Even if you can’t get out on a particular day, the memories can help to keep you in touch with the world’s natural cycles.

Alert red grouse in purple heather.


I’ve been doing a lot of fitness training recently, which has eaten into my photography time but will be important for a few ventures I have planned (and hopefully I’ll be able to fit into my mankini by Christmas).  It means I’ve missed a few things recently, most notably the season of purple heather on the moors of the Peak District – one of my favourite events in nature’s calendar.  But pictures from previous years are a great reminder of the great things that are going on out there, and that they’ll happen again next year.



Wednesday 11 September 2013

Women wildlife photographers, badgers, Chris Packham and Gandhi – at the British Wildlife Photography Awards

Chris and Kris - posing with Packham

Not enough women entrants – that was the view of Chris Packham, commenting on the overall profile of entries in this year's British Wildlife Photography Awards, and one of many opinions so eloquently voiced in his address to last week’s awards ceremony.   Looking through the winning images in the exhibition and in the book, confirms the point.  Although there were two female category winners (in the Habitat and Wildlife in HD Video rounds [click here for a look at the winning entries]), there were 14 categories in total, so it’s certainly true that women are under-represented here.  Not just that, but tramping round the countryside and nature reserves of Britain, it’s usually men who behave like boys with toys.  And while there seems to be an even distribution of men and women amongst the public who enjoy these places, the balance of people carrying cameras is certainly slanted heavily towards in the direction of men. 

I spent most of last week down in London visiting various exhibitions and friends.  My wife, Katherine, came down on the train on Wednesday evening to meet me for the awards ceremony, before catching the train home the same night.  The next morning she texted me whilst I was having breakfast in St Pancras station – something to the effect of: ‘Chris Packham thinks more women should enter – if we go out some time, will you show me how to take pictures? I’d like to enter the competition next year’.  I nearly fell of my chair – sounds like the peeerfect date!

With my image 'Sundew' at the British Wildlife Photography Awards exhibition.
With my image 'Peekaboo Ant' at the British Wildlife Photography Awards exhibition.

The evening was awash with photographic personalities, pictures with messages, pictures with  voices, pictures with grit and determination and pictures which show a love of the land, sea and air.  Perhaps most moving was Neil Aldrige’s winning entry to the documentary section.  Entitled ‘The Alternative’, this documents a badger vaccination project in Bedfordshire, a clear reminder that there is a peaceful and workable alternative to the badger cull that had not started at the time the photos were taken, but was in its second week of piloting by the time of the awards ceremony [click here to see the full series of images].  We’ve all heard the arguments for and against; anyone with access to this blog also has access to the report of the Independent Scientific Group on cattle TB, commissioned by DEFRA and presented to the government in 2007 (point 9 reads: ‘After careful consideration of all the RBCT and other data presented in this report, including an economic assessment, we conclude that badger culling cannot meaningfully contribute to the future control of cattle TB in Britain.’) [Click here to read the report in full]. 


On presenting the award to Neil Aldridge, Chris Packham was applauded for his words: the ceremony was ‘not the time or the place’, he said, to launch into a tirade of criticism of the cull...‘but I’m going to do it anyway’.  And he certainly did.  I don’t need to go into detail into Packham’s views on the subject – they are available on the badgergate blog [Click here to read it].  Nevertheless, I found it notable that in addition to despairing of the government’s actions, which for the most part fly in the face of science, he was also clear that naturalists, activists, photographers, and any other groups against the cull could take a share of the blame: ‘we have failed!’ was his view.  We have failed to communicate absolute facts to the government in a meaningful way that they have been able to make sense of.  At first I found this point slightly bewildering, but of course there’s good sense of it: if activists and naturalists accepts some responsibility for not having communicated the point adequately, then this means also that the matter is not closed – if the battle is one of communication, we have not lost the battle, but we must feel compelled to continue communicating, peacefully, but with greater fervour than before.  (A mere glance at the twitter feed of Simon King, @TVsSimonKing, shows that this communication is continuing with great animation – it’s very moving and often devastating reading).

After the ceremony, I managed to grab a quick chat with Chris Packham, who was very amenable to all those taking an interest in his views.  His final words to me on the subject were a quote from Mahatma Gandhi, which he said he was taking great hope from in continuing the fight:

‘First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.’


Wise words for us all, men and women, as the battle goes on.

Monday 2 September 2013

Who you gonna call? Goat busters?

We’ve all seen those bizarre old photographs of fairies and ghosts and spirits and everything else weird, usually Victorian, usually blurry, usually a trick of the light. 

I ain't afraid of no goat!


Light is a tricky thing to control at the best of times, and when you’re engraving with light (‘photo’=light; ‘graphy’=engraving) it can behave so unpredictably…especially when you point your camera right into the big light in the sky (don’t try this at home kids!), should you ever be lucky enough to see it.

That’s how a lot of those freaky images are made.  And here’s one I made earlier.




Don’t have nightmares – do, sleep well…or the headless wild goat’s gonna come and get you  WWAAAAAHAAAHAAAHAAHAAAHAAAAAAA!!!

British Wildlife Photography Awards success!

I'm delighted to announce that two of my images have received awards in this year's British Wildlife Photography Awards.  


'Ant Peekaboo' - Highly Commended in the Hidden Britain section

My image 'ant pekaboo', taken in roadside foliage just round the corner from my house, was highly commended in the Hidden Britain section (a specialist macro section),



'Round-leaved Sundew' - Highly Commended in the Botanical Britain section.

and my image of a sundew (another macro image, this time from the Isle of Mull) was highly commended in the Botanical Britain section.

The exhibition of all the winning pictures opens today in The Mall Galleries, near Trafalgar Square in London this week (until Saturday 7th September), then it goes on tour around the country.  The book containing all the winning pictures is also out today and available in most bookshops.

Congratulations to all the other successful snappers out there. I look forward to seeing as many as possible of you at the awards ceremony on Wednesday!

Sunday 1 September 2013

All you need is...

Q: Why should you never trust a wildlife photographer in a home furnishings shop?

A: It's easy - all you need is...



What do you think of that then?

Ooooooooooooooooooooh!!!!!!




Friday 30 August 2013

Wild goats, scraggy rocks, and endless blue sky.




Wild goats have been a part of the British landscape since Neolithic times, although many of the herds in Scotland are descended from those released by the evicted crofting communities during the dark days of the Highland Clearances of the 19th Century.   It’s certainly not difficult to see them as part of the landscape since they make a perfect fit.  Following them around for a few days (or even hours), you become acutely aware of how well adapted they are to the landscape in their habitat, a mixture boggy grasslands and steep, rocky cliffs around the coast.  Moving around this landscape, they can scale near vertical rocky walls with apparent ease.  Following them with a heavy backpack of camera gear is, therefore, extremely difficult at times.



In this series of silhouettes, I wanted to shoot as wide as possible, dividing the earth from the sky, and bringing the goat and the rocky ground together in the black part of the image.  The goat merges with the landscape, but at the same time remains distinct.



This particular goat is a large Billy, whose trust I gained over the course of several days.  In these photos, he found a spot to sit down for a sleep, and was perfectly comfortable with me crawling closer.  I shot the images with a short telephoto lens (my beloved 70-200mm), but then clumsily dropped this into a deep rock pool whilst trying to crawl closer.  Watching four-figure’s worth of lens plummet like a stone to the bottom of a salty pool is not a pleasant experience when you’re in mid flow of a good photo session (miraculously it survived!), but it forced me to switch lenses, and I continued shooting with a wide-angle lens (17-40mm), making the goat very small within the frame.  That’s the kind of picture I really like.  


Wednesday 28 August 2013

Mystery animal revealed!

On yesterday’s blog, I asked if you could identify this animal, and there were quite a few suggestions, some less sensible than others!!




The answer is…




…it’s a Grey Seal.

I took the photo a couple of weeks ago on the Isle of Mull.  That is, the seal was off the Isle and I was on it, but only just!  By the end of the session, at least, I was more in the water than on the land. 

I’d been sitting on the rocky shore for most of the day, hidden away between a group of rocks about 30 yards or so from the water.  This position kept me hidden whilst affording me a good view of a stretch of coast, in case my otter friend should come along.  He didn’t.  But much as I was hidden adequately from an otter, the seals were on to me, and five of the sat bobbing about in the water for the whole day (don’t they have things to do?) just watching me inquisitively.

Towards the end of the day, the light was getting good and the tide was coming in, so I decided to edge slowly down towards the rapidly receding shoreline, and see if I could get some frame-filling head shots at water height.  I like the fact that the waves were coming in, and that these partly obscured the seals’ faces as the water level bobbed up and down. 





The only problem was that I hadn't protected my camera, and taking photos at water-level with an incoming tide means your camera can get wet, and salt-water is a particularly bad addition to a camera.  I tried my best to keep the salt water off it, but given the choice between being careful and getting the shot, I always go for the shot.  By the end of the session, the seals’ inquisitive nature, combined with the incoming tide, had brought them very close to me indeed.  I was lying on the rocks in the shallow water, with my camera held just above water height by the beanbag it was resting on.  I was cold, wet and happy in equal measure.  My camera was not so happy – the battery grip is almost certainly a write off, and I’ll need to get the whole thing serviced before I’m able to use some features again (I can’t switch to movie mode!).  Was it worth it?  For me, yes, definitely!  Moments where you manage to get this close to wildlife, and your presence is accepted, are simply golden.


Tuesday 27 August 2013

Post bank-holiday quiz fun!

Post bank-holiday FUN! 
Here’s a little quiz question – can you identify this mystery animal?




If you think you know (and even if you don’t), have a guess and post your answer as a comment here or on my facebook page, or you can tweet me using the hashtag #krisquiz.  The answer will be revealed tomorrow! 

Monday 26 August 2013

Wild Goat Rut

Wild Goats Rutting - Isle of Mull, UK



I’ve just returned from the Isle of Mull, where I spent most of my time tracking a herd of wild goats across various different types of landscapes within their habitat.  Over the course of a few weeks, I was privileged to witness a whole variety of behaviour, including a birth, attempts at mating and (as pictured) a rut, as well as numerous types of social bonding and other herd behaviour.  It’s fascinating to watch a group of animals over such a period as this, and witness their social hierarchy in action, as it is established, challenged, and redefined.  Even as part of an established herd who spend most of their time grazing together, life in the wild is my no means straightforward.  This becomes particularly evident in their rutting, where these shy, easy-going mammals demonstrate an enormous level of strength, power and determination – and as an observer, I was very happy not to be caught in the middle of it all!

On the day I took this, I had been sheltering in a rocky spot by the shore, hoping to catch up with a local otter (whose picture I posted in the previous blog), when my attention was drawn to the sound of clashing horns, about 200 yards behind me.  A sub-group of six goats were standing on a grassy mound just above the coast line.  The rutting goats stand opposite each other before one rears up on its hind legs before using the momentum of its fall back to earth to drive its weight head-first into the other.  It’s an immensely powerful move, and as both sets of horns meet with great force, it’s possible to see the shock waves ripple back through the loose woolly coats of each animal, from their heads down towards their back ends. The sheer force is eye-watering, and I found it difficult not to wince a little each time they ram into each other with such force.

In spite of the power and ferocity of the rut, there were many aspects of this behaviour that seemed surprisingly civilised.  The goats had chosen a site for their rut within a rectangle marked by the ruins of an old crofters’ building.  This appeared to be established as their ‘ring’.  As soon as one of the rutting goats stepped outside of this boundary, the clash was over temporarily, and both parties took a few moments to collect themselves before coming together again.  As they battled it out further, the others goats in the group stood around watching, with one particularly dominant bystander looking almost like the umpire of a boxing match, standing close with his eyes fixed on the action, even breaking the goats up when they became too entangled.  In between bouts, the goats go through a complex ritual of communication through licks, sniffs, and scraping at the floor with their hooves, a conversation in gesture which appeared to clarify the outcome of the previous rut, as well as offering them a moment of respite.

Assuming a position close by from which I could observe them (which was not difficult, since the goats themselves were so absorbed in the rut that they hardly paid any attention to me), I rested my camera on a rock.  After taking and reviewing a few pictures, I was initially disappointed that they didn’t convey the sheer power of the battle between the goats – instead the images appeared rather static.  Instead, I started using a slower shutter speed (1/15 sec) to ensure that more of the movement of the tussle was shown in the resulting images.  Using such a slow shutter speed means having to throw away a lot of pictures in which the action appears as nothing other than a blur of wool and horns.  But by moving the camera as precisely as possible with the movements of the goats, it was possible to get one or two shots in which some of the features were suitably sharp.  These pictures demonstrate the turmoil of an individual caught up in this whirl-wind of behaviour, which is just what I wanted, and this shot was my favourite of the whole bunch.  

Saturday 24 August 2013

An unexpected otter

European Otter with a crab - Isle of Mull.

Photographing wildlife can involve a great deal of planning and patience, although on other occasions you can be grabbed suddenly by the unexpected.  When I photographed this otter on coast of Mull, it was a chance encounter that I wasn’t expecting, but one that will stay with me for years.

I’ve photographed otters many times before on Mull’s coast, but never on this particular stretch of coast, where the rocky shore is almost constantly beaten with waves that can reach heights of 12-15 foot on a fairly regular basis.  But, I’m in the middle of nowhere: I’ve hiked a good way over hills and grasslands to get here and the nearest road is around 5 miles away, so I’m virtually guaranteed not to be disturbed. 

So here’s how it happened.  I’m standing right on the water’s edge, photographing some of the smaller waves coming to shore,  when I hear a peculiar grunting noise in the water – I’ve never heard this sound before – a repeated, short, sharp ‘nguh, nguh, nguh, nguh’.  I look up and right in front of me, no more than 12 feet away, a dog otter is in the shallow water, with a crab in its mouth, trying to come ashore – and he’s glaring at me, angry!  It’s rare that otters will approach humans, particular in places like this where they are unaccustomed to seeing us around.  What surprises me most is that this otter has not only come so close, but is actively drawing my attention towards himself to show my his fury that I’ve invaded his territory.

Immediate I hit the deck, and throw myself to the rocky floor, water swishing around me.  I don’t care much about getting wet, but I do care about disturbing a wild animal that is in its home territory here.  Perhaps if I lie still, he might think I’ve gone, and come ashore to eat his meal.  In truth, however, I’m far too close to the shoreline to avoid being seen – the otter’s eyesight might not have great definition, but he will know every rock of this shoreline piece by piece, and can recognise easily when something is out of place. 

The otter swims away and I sit tight, allowing the rhythm of the shoreline return to normal before I get up and move on.  The light is fading, the sun is about to set (although on a cloudy day like today, sunset is more a theoretical event of the clock than anything else), and I have a long walk ahead of me to get back home.  The opportunity to photograph the otter has gone.  Or has it?

I climb back up to a peak in the rocks, a place that affords me a view of a good stretch of shoreline, and see the otter fishing again in another area around the bay.  I have to be careful: if I’m going to make an advance, I need to be absolutely certain I’m not going to disturb him for a second time.  This means keeping my distance, finding a good position where I’m well hidden, and sticking to it.  Slowly and painfully, I work my way between the rocks, high up on the land, moving only when the otter is underwater, until I finally reach a position high up from which I can look down upon the rock where the otter is repeatedly coming to shore.  I’m behind a wall of rocks with a small gap in them – if I stay here, I’m as certain as I can be that I won’t be seen.  And so once again the otter comes to shore, with a crab, and I start photographing.  He flips the top off the crab onto the rock in front of him where it lies in the picture, just about to be swept away by the incoming wave, and tucks into the fresh, succulent meat of the crab.  By now the light is very dim, and I’m forced to use slow shutter speeds which blur the water – I’m just hoping there may be the odd moment in the otter’s feeding frenzy where I can catch some sharpness in his eye that is needed for the picture to work.

The otter continues fishing, coming back to the same rock several times with crabs aplenty, one after another, before moving on. 

Once again, I stay in place for a good fifteen minutes afterwards, waiting to make sure he’s gone and that I’m not going to disturb him by getting up now and moving.  It’s dark now, and time to begin the long walk back across the grasslands, which I’m able to navigate through by following the wild goat tracks.  This, coupled with a love of the land, which I know very well, makes certain that I can find my way from sea level up to a local trig point, and back to the house, all in the pitch black without using my torch, map, compass, satnav, or any other modern gadgets. 

With over 20 kilos of equipment on my back, it’s a gruelling walk.  But navigating through this wild and remote area in the dark, unaided by technology, makes me feel closely in touch with nature, which can be full of such unexpected pleasures. 

Friday 23 August 2013

Time for a rebrand!


It’s been a good long while since I posted on this blog – in the meantime, I’ve been doing some thinking and asking myself all sorts of questions about my images and their meanings.  Questions about the subjects I write about and want to share here.

And so the rebranding: Human Nature.  It’s nature, but...as we know it – or, as how we as humans think of it.

I’ve been fascinated for a long time with the role of animals and natural images in the human imagination and mythology, and that is where my photography begins.
 
In ancient, mythological stories, as well as in the images depicted in paintings from prehistoric times to great masters of the second millenium, animals often take on a magical, supernatural appearance, and it’s this magic and super-nature that interests me.  Not because I believe in the magical or the supernatural, I don’t; instead, it seems clear to me that people in ancient times must have had a sense of deep connection with nature to the point where real-life encounters with animals, plants, woodlands, etc, led to the experience of some magic moments that triggered their imagination, generating magical stories and associations.  Perhaps it’s a moment of where the light reflects in a certain way, or a mysterious encounter in the dark. 

Wild Goat, Isle of Mull

It’s this kind of magical encounter with real-life nature which triggers such stories of magic that I want to seek out for myself and depict in my photos.   All my photos show real-life encounters with nature.  I shoot and process my photos digitally, but I don’t construct images after the event or carry out techniques of digital manipulation.  I’m concerned with finding the natural facts behind the myths, since the facts often reveal that nature in its purest form can be experienced as fantastically and emotionally as in any myth or story of magic.

What is this emotion, this instinct for a connection with nature? It’s an instinct that every child has, but it isn’t childish.  A primeval instinct that we undoubtedly share in some was with our ancestors tens of thousands of years ago, but it isn’t primitive in the crudest sense of the word.  It's nature as we have come to experience it internally.

So, for now, let’s call it ‘human nature’.