Northern Dawn I got back into photography in 2007. At last, the hardware could do what I wanted without needing chemicals to edit my own work.
I went out at dawn with my new prosumer Nikon and looked above the smokestacks of Rotherham. Most landscape photographers use wide angle lenses a lot. I expected to do the same. But a really big telephoto can be used to pick out the little details that would otherwise make no impact.
@ Northern Dawn Jaime Lanister begins his photographic tour of Northern Light: Landscapes.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Ivory.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Ivory the Leopard gecko. They both received one silver mole!
Ivory and you found 10 Travel Tokens!
Tries today: 1 Find points today: 1 Hunt total: 1
Ivory
Jaime Lanister
QUEST REWARD x 10
12th Apr 2023
Jaime Lanister views : Landscapes!
Photo 2/25
Parkhouse Hill Sharp as a blade, this unusual hill formation can be seen from Derbyshire, but lies in Staffordshire. For once, the sun is out.
The old hill walkers used to say the best parts of Derbyshire were in Staffordshire. For sheer visual impact, this has to be one of them.
Right down the road is a dairy farm where the farmer leads his cows down the road each day. Places like this are the last holdout of real old time farming … too hilly to turn into a prairie, but low enough and fertile enough to grow crops or herd cows.
@ Parkhouse Hill
Navy Flower Power Egg The first painted eggs came from Mesopotamia, and because eggs were forbidden food during Lent, people painted eggs while Lent was being observed—after Lent, they would eat the eggs on Easter Day.
Beautifully decorated eggs “pysanka” are associated with Ukraine, and the oldest painted egg that was unearthed in northern Ukraine is dated to the end of the 17th century.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Choose a name.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Choose a name the Tabby Cat. They both received one silver mole!
Choose a name gave you 1 "Navy Flower Power Egg" FULL SIZE
Tales of the Riverbank This little idyll is on the bank of the River Rother, between a car park and a factory. Amidst all the urban sprawl and derelict industrial sites, one can still find a little piece of heaven. On the other bank, kingfishers were spearing lunch for their chicks. Six feet from either riverbank, the north of England reverts to what people think it is. But beauty lies hidden in tiny corners.
@ Tales of the Riverbank David's Native American name is "Dances with Rabbis".
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Daphne Fluffster Tinklehoof.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Daphne Fluffster Tinklehoof the Midnight Mauve Unicorn. They both received one silver mole!
Daphne Fluffster Tinklehoof and you found 10 Travel Tokens!
Scarborough Castle Sitting atop three hundred foot cliffs by the sea, this site has been fortified in one way or another since the Iron Age. The current castle was built by Henry II in the twelfth century.
If, as I once did, you think the ruined castles of England have simply crumbled from lack of care, think again. Following the English Civil War (1642-1652), any fortification which had held out for the King was not only rendered incapable of doing so again, it was destroyed as an act of propaganda; oppose the winning side, and this is what happens. So you can immediately tell which side the lord of a castle fought for; if it is still in one piece, it had declared for Parliament.
@ Scarborough Castle David's favourite book of the Bible is Hosea.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Benny.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Benny the Brown Funky Monkey. They both received one silver mole!
Scarborough Harbour Harbours make appealing pictures and even better jigsaws. But few of them can compare with this one as a tonguetwister!
Having been brought up in the very centre of England, it is all too easy for me to forget my country is an island. But you cannot drive far in any direction without reaching the sea.
@ Scarborough Harbour David ended up in IT because he only got an average physics degree. The main reason was the exams were set on the wrong syllabus and the entire year of graduates was wrong-footed. David was furious for the next twelve months. Then he did a Master's degree in IT.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Choose a name.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Choose a name the Tabby Cat. They both received one silver mole!
Sepia Sky Sepia toning was a common technique for adding impact to black and white photos long ago. However this sky has sepia toned itself. I never recolour photos; I go and look for pictures where the earth and sky have recoloured themselves.
@ Sepia Sky David was brought up on plain British fare (which he still loves) and was very nervous about foreign food. He only bought his first pizza because he worked out he could get money off for late delivery by ordering just before rush hour. The pizza tasted great and he's been eating them ever since.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Gideon.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Gideon the Garter snake. They both received one silver mole!
Sheffield Supertram in Winter The further north you go, the deeper the snows get; but in the lower parts of Sheffield, snow like this is no longer common.
The Supertram has an unusual route map, connecting two shopping centres to a mental hospital. A western extension was planned, but would have to climb some serious hills. Time was when Sheffield had a heavily subsidised bus system (85% off!) extending all the way to the Derbyshire border. The subsidies are long gone; but the city still has the hilliest roads any row of houses was ever built on.
@ Sheffield Supertram in Winter David took an interest in (fluff) friends because a real-life friend said it would unite his love of writing with his love of visual art. The result was the 616 episodes of "Tweety Pi's Daily Adventures", the last set of which was posted the day SGN introduced the 'new UI'. This made him so furious he began work on his own software that month. See the cartoons here!
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Tressla.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Tressla the Blue Beautiful Unicorn. They both received one silver mole!
Playing with Light The Sheffield trams come down the hill very slowly to make sure they can stop here. This platform is a great place to see what you can do with a time exposure. The Christmas lights helped make this a memorable picture, too. It took me years to realise the rising streaks between the upper and lower tram lights were reflections off the windscreen.
@ Playing with Light David hated secondary school (11 to 16) intensely and was so badly bullied he never finished his time there. He went to a 'college of further education' and rebuilt his education from scratch in a place where students were treated like human beings.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Cindy.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Cindy the Ragdoll Kitten. They both received one silver mole!
Northern Light: Strines Moor There are places in the Pennines where you can feel close to God, and even closer to a thunderbolt. Golden shafts emerge from sepia clouds, illuminating grim wastelands. When the fences have not been mended, you know the land is not even fit for sheep. But to stand beneath such a cloud is to be in awe of creation … as long as you are wearing the right gear to stay dry!
@ Northern Light: Strines Moor David would like to drive a Lamborghini, maybe once; but he could never justify owning one.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Chessie.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Chessie the Manatee (Blue). They both received one silver mole!
Monochrome Oddity 'Old John' is a folly, built long after the name was used to identify the spinney to its right. The archway serves no purpose other than to be picturesque. In 1784, landed gentry could afford to play with the landscape.
It is a lot easier to convey a sense of age with a black and white photo than with colour.
@ Monochrome Oddity David was born three doors from the finest fish and chip shop he has ever known. People used to catch a bus eight miles to his village just to come and eat Hilda Harrison's fish and chips. David preferred fishcakes.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Pete.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Pete the Pistachio Green Dragonfly. They both received one silver mole!
Coniston Water and ‘Old Man’ Cumbria’s lakes are set between grim hills thousands of feet high. Coniston is a small village. Coniston Water is a long, thin lake. The Old Man of Coniston is the high hill behind it; its picturesque name derives from ‘Alt Maen’ - Celtic, ‘High Stone’, or Viking, ‘High Mine’. Over 2600 feet high, it towers over the area.
You can walk to the top up a path in a few hours, only to find the clouds close in just before you get there. I have often been to the top, but have never seen the view. Old mines scar the surface in places. You can tell there is copper around just by looking at the deep blue lake on the other side. Without great care you could end up at the bottom of it, because the paths have no safety rails. When the clouds come down, you could fall hundreds of feet down a cliff into that lake before you can see the cliff edge. I once nearly did so.
@ Coniston Water and ‘Old Man’ David found out about girls rather late at 22. Before that they seemed entirely baffling to him. It was probably mutual.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Flapke.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Flapke the Tabby Cat. They both received one silver mole!
Hill Top, Near Sawrey Once the home of Beatrix Potter, and the inspiration for many of her tales, this was the farmhouse from which she ran a 34 acre farm.
Miss Potter was not just a writer; her book sales paid for the purchase of several local farms, which she left to the National Trust. By doing so she preserved the landscapes she loved for many generations.
You can visit Hill Top today and view wild rabbits frolicking without concern behind a wire fence. They are only afraid of Mr Tod; the sandy-whiskered gentleman is just as much at home here as the rabbits.
@ Hill Top, Near Sawrey David was born three doors from the finest fish and chip shop he has ever known. People used to catch a bus eight miles to his village just to come and eat Hilda Harrison's fish and chips. David preferred fishcakes.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Maxwell.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Maxwell the Garter snake. They both received one silver mole!
Just Another Farm in Cumbria If you go exploring down narrow lanes in Cumbria, you will see many sights like this. You might also find your car has a choice of an impossible turn between high stone walls, or ending up in a forbidding farmyard before you can make a U turn. I tried to make the Y turn between stone walls and got a scratched door to remind me of the photo.
@ Just Another Farm in Cumbria At university, David was captain of his hall of residence table football team. He actually did weight training to develop powerful wrists.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Kirsten.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Kirsten the Ragdoll Kitten. They both received one silver mole!
Elterwater This little village is now mostly a home to tourists. Agriculture is no longer as labour intensive as it was, and few farms in the high hills are economic. On this journey I slept in a tent. Next time I am going to stay somewhere in Elterwater; I am too old for tents now.
@ Elterwater David was brought up in the English countryside in the 1960s. Outside toilets were still a thing, nobody had divorced parents, and illegal drugs had not even been heard of. He first realised people killed one another when JFK was assassinated just before his fourth birthday. His aunt lived in a nearby village and never locked her door at night until the 1980s; there was no crime.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot ~kaliki~.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with ~kaliki~ the Party Fowl. They both received one silver mole!
Cockley Beck The River Duddon rises in the mountains between Eskdale and Langdale, before flowing into the Irish Sea near Broughton in Furness. Here at Cockley Beck, the bridge separates Wrynose Pass from the Hardknott Pass, one of the toughest driving roads in Britain.
@ Cockley Beck Oh look ... you won a little pet!
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Tranquility.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Tranquility the Dashing Violet Fish. They both received one silver mole!
Tranquility gave you 1 "Sweet Old Wolf In A Nightgown" size 7
Sunlight in Cumbria In April 2011 I put my tent in the back of my car and prayed that I would go to Cumbria as soon as there was a forecast of three clear days of sunshine. I kept my word, and got there in the last week of September.
Cumbria is not known as the Lake District for nothing. Most of the year, the skies spend their time filling those lakes as clouds scud in from the Irish Sea. When the clouds part, the views are breathtaking. But Northern Light is usually grimmer and greyer here than anywhere else.
@ Sunlight in Cumbria David would like a model railway, but in 63 years he has never had one of his own that worked.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Eddy Easter Bunny.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Eddy Easter Bunny the Eggstravagant Easter Bunny. They both received one silver mole!
Cumbrian Fells A fell is a mountainous area above the tree line. Much of Cumbria is just such a land. Roads cut between the fells, but sometimes have no choice but to go over them. This cyclist is between, and about to go over. The best of luck! The weather here can change in minutes.
@ Cumbrian Fells David was born at home, which was his mother's preference. Home was above his grandmother's shop until a year later.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Choose a name.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Choose a name the Tabby Cat. They both received one silver mole!
Hardknott Pass Hardknott is as hard as it sounds. Near the bottom, the road has a gradient of one-in-three (33%). I looked at this, stopped, put the car in first gear ... and could not get up. I had to back off and storm the rise with all the engine had got. This view was my reward.
@ Hardknott Pass David invented the 'gap year' by forgetting to fill out his forms for university. Instead, he spent the year cycling about ten thousand miles.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Jesse.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Jesse the Green Beautiful Unicorn. They both received one silver mole!
A Refuge for Henry VI After the Battle of Hexham (1464) Henry VI wandered the northern hills until he was taken in at Muncaster Castle, near the west coast of Cumbria.
The history of Britain was written not in books, but in hard high places far from help, where small armies determined the future of an Empire that went on to cover a quarter of the earth's surface. Who is King? The man who can survive these pitiless hills in all weather and find a friendly shelter. Henry VI was king again before he died. But he could just as easily have died out here in adverse weather.
@ A Refuge for Henry VI David's father drove steam trains and his grandmother ran the village toy shop. As a small boy, David thought nothing could be better.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Shadow.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Shadow the Black Lovable Labrador. They both received one silver mole!
Red Squirrel's Refuge Aira Force has a Viking name ('fors' means 'waterfall'). This is only natural in what was once known as the 'Danelaw', the north and west of Britain once controlled by the Vikings.
The red squirrel is oppressed by another invader; the grey squirrel. Here in the heights it still thrives, whilst the bigger grey squirrel bosses the lowland trees.
A wonderful view and one of my favourite shots. Take a look if you travel in Cumbria ... if you fancy a 450 foot climb to see it!
@ Red Squirrel's Refuge David would like a model railway, but in 63 years he has never had one of his own that worked.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Sassyfly.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Sassyfly the Green Rapid Dragonfly. They both received one silver mole!
Lost in the Gorse Anglesey is a lowland island off the north west coast of Wales. Today it is a place to grow crops. But the Romans probably invaded Britain specifically to get rid of the druids, whose culture was centred there and affected the Celtic regions of Europe.
This is one of the lesser-known standing stones on Anglesey, disappearing into the gorse which dominates the wild areas of the island.
@ Lost in the Gorse David was taught to solder aged 31 by an 11 year-old boy.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Bea.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Bea the Bee. They both received one silver mole!
A Beautiful Place The name Beauly is thought to come from the words of Mary Queen of Scots when she stayed there in 1564; 'un beau lieu' (a beautiful place).
The Firth of Beauly is a magnificent body of water. I had to use an adapted telescope to get this shot of the surrounding hills.
@ A Beautiful Place David invented the 'gap year' by forgetting to fill out his forms for university. Instead, he spent the year cycling about ten thousand miles.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot slider.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with slider the Playful Penguin. They both received one silver mole!
The Blue River The River Moriston (Scottish Gaelic: Abhainn Mhoireastain) flows out of wild mountains into the bottom end of Loch Ness. There is much to explore here, but I never had the opportunity to go further.
Northern skies can be a very deep blue with the sun in the faraway south, and it is this deep blue which the pristine river reflects.
@ The Blue River David would like to drive a Lamborghini, maybe once; but he could never justify owning one.
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Boci.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Boci the Chocolate Milky Moo Cow. They both received one silver mole!
Eternal Snows You won’t find anything like this in England. The Cairngorms reach up to 4300 feet and due to their height, host eternal snows. Looking out over Loch Ness, the Englishman has to concede he is in a land unlike his own; wilder, unconquerable, and resolute.
@ Eternal Snows David can remember random moments from his infancy, some even before he was two years old. But he can never remember where he has put the TV remote!
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Viola.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Viola the Midnight Violet Butterfly. They both received one silver mole!
Viola gave you 1 "'Northern Light' Travel Token" size 7
Northern Moonlight The moon shines just the same on the south as on the north; but it is easier to find a dark place to view it from in the north. 'Light pollution', as astronomers call it, dims the night sky in the south.
The moon is a tantalizing quarry at the best of times for a photographer; never the right shape when the sky is clear, and never on view when its phase is full. Clouds conspire to hide her; but when she comes out, she is clearer and brighter in the wild north than in the civilized south.
@ Northern Moonlight Jaime Lanister has now completed his viewing of Northern Light: Landscapes. As he prepares to go home, he receives a wonderful gift!
Jaime Lanister has enjoyed his photographic tour of Northern Light: Landscapes, but it is time to go home now! Please select another pet as visitor, so it can also enjoy a photographic tour of "Northern Light!"
While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Moonabelle.
Jaime Lanister shook paws with Moonabelle the Moondust Squirrel. They both received one silver mole!
Moonabelle gave you 1 "Sweet Old Wolf In A Nightgown" FULL SIZE