Showing posts with label 90mm Schneider Angulon f6.8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 90mm Schneider Angulon f6.8. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

A Youth In High Places


The Cairn On Mayar
This Was Made With The Rollei T With 16-On Kit.
Film Was FP4 Developed In Rodinal


Morning folks, well, in the absence of any photographic activity whatsoever, I was scrubbing me noggin, trying to think of something, and then came across this quote in the booklet of a recent CD by a Dutch musician called John Kerr. 
I personally think he is under the hammer of some ultimately fatal diagnosis, for (much like the uber-famous Klaus Schulze) his recent albums have had a theme of memorial to them - anyway, aside from that, the album is called "Requiem For A Dream"; it isn't the sort of music I listen to, just one of the artists we sell, but I was touched by what was quoted:

Youth is happy because it has the capacity to see beauty. 
Anyone who keeps the ability to see beauty never grows old.
Franz Kafka (1883 - 1924)

It's a brilliant quote isn't it.
There was something about it which resonated with me, and days later, there I was again in the preternatural morning light of Scotland, this time not with socks in my hand, but two recycling bins.
The sky was dark turning light.
I happened to glance up at the stars again and there, quicker than a thought, quicker than it took to register in my mind, shot a meteor.
It was an incredibly brief unzipping and zipping of the dark, like a shining through to some vast, bright beyond.
And again, like a distant gong, something resonated within me and I felt that kinship with my proto-me.

The always interesting Kate Bush once had this to say on the matter:

"I have a theory that there are parts of our mental worlds that are still based around the age between five and eight, and we just kind of pretend to be grown-up, Our essence is there in a much more powerful way when we're children, and if you're lucky enough to... hang onto who you are, you do have that at your core for the rest of your life." 

I think what she said has a lot of validity (though maybe everyone is different in which bit of their early years they most associate with). If I were stuck with The Blob (that was me, pre-teens) all I'd be interested in was 'Where's the food?' and farting . . oh and fishing . . .
So in my case, proto-me dates from my later teen years; a younger, hairier Sheephouse, who, despite the passing decades, is really (in essence [he's not changed much]) still here.


Fairly Typical Scottish Mountain Weather.
This Is The Foot Of Jock's Road Before It Gets Really Serious.


We're a funny pair, him and me - he's a bit mad; worried about his future and the mantel of responsibility that comes with leaving youth behind. He's also a bit in awe of the machinations of  nature; a bit bewildered by how his world could change on a sixpence and if truth be told, deeply sad . . not in the modern sense, but sad from sadness. 
He finds solace in peace, aloneness, and a deeply-tuned syzygy with the countryside that surrounds him.
That's him over there examining some lampreys and water nymphs.
He always yearned to get into the high mountain passes too, because he was fascinated by them; but the absence of transport/someone to go with/correct gear, meant he never did, 'til one day (in his late-30's) he said to himself,
"Feck it"
bought some boots and a map and got out there.
Anyway, before we go and speak to him, let me tell you something - he's got some thing.
I am jealous because I had it once too . . . (no laughing at the back) . . . 

There are numerous references in ancient literature to the 'third eye' - y'know, that place in the centre of your eyebrows where your uber-consciousness; your key to infinity, dwells.
He had one.
No kidding!
It was there like a subcutaneous feeling above his eyes, but weirdly, it was only a thing he discovered after long hours of outdoor solitary confinement.

Let me explain myself there.
Isolation can do weird things to a mind.
In my later teenage years I was isolated.
This wasn't really true loneliness - the two are very different things.
No, I was isolated in the middle of nowhere.
Sure there were buses (last bus to anywhere about 5.30PM) and even if I got there, what was I going to do?
Only two of my friends drove and petrol was expensive, so when I came home from school at night or at weekends, that was pretty much me on my tod.
I dreamt a lot.
I walked miles in open-air solitude.
Sure, I had aspirations and all that shit that people expect you to be thinking about for your futurebut in reality I really wanted to be a roadie (!) though what chance had I of that (despite the [no doubt] numerous bands whizzing up and down the A74 in their transit vans) . . . it would have (temporarily) broken my Mum's heart.
So all I could do was hunker down in the long grass, immerse myself in nature and dream of a time when I could get out into the world.
Circumstance meant that I was fortunate to be living at the top of a steep drop down to an incredible riverbank, and it was there I would spend long hours just sitting and watching.
I let the warp and weft of moving water enfold me in a richly contemplative peace.

Fish became somewhat of an obsession.
You've really never lived till you've seen large sea-trout lift themselves free from their fluid domain, urge themselves into the weight of gravity, take a passing insect and then crash back into the water.
Similarly in the languidity of summer, when all the water is as golden brown as the brown trout who wait, idle in the lea of river-stones, till some hapless fly or nymph floats by.
To watch trout rise, quicker than thought and see them repeat it endlessly, whilst the sun moves beyond the hills and the cold of the river meets the heat of the land, raising mist free of the fields, is something beyond the soul.
To see that mist rolling down to lay itself atop the river, like some sweet lover tucking their water-born companion to sleep, well, it got to me.
But then I guess that is part of what we are. 
Pre-industrialisation the world was a quiet place, leaving room for thought (if you weren't too knackered from the pressing activity of life). What was human consciousness like in that silent time? Was the third eye only there for some?
Was it a mystic and mythical thing for only those who could listen to nature?
Or was it, as I believe, some sort of inner natural link to a deep human past, sort of like a gut-instinct for the mind?
Who knows - all I know is that is what happened to me - I started to feel something I had never felt in my 16 years of living in London. 
It felt rather like an expansion of my mind, which centred around the middle of my eyebrows.
And one day I discovered that nature and me, were (like mist and river) entwined.



Peace - My River
Olympus MjU, Agfa 200 Film


Peace - My River II
Olympus MjU, Agfa 200 Film



BOLLOCKS! I hear you shout, but look at the pictures above - I can only tell the truth.

I felt so attuned to nature that I became a part of it - not a visitor - not a human really, just something natural, something that belonged.
I wandered freely without disturbing creatures. All was open to me: the patter of hedgehogs circling each other in a love dance; clouds of midges that refused to bite me; deer; fish; heron and kingfisher; coypu (!); mink and weasel and stoat; water voles; eagles; a myriad of flocking birds.
I was no danger to any of them.
We saw each other and moved on our way.

I so deeply belonged that when my Mum moved, my heart broke in two and my soul was cast to the winds of the world.
I was (very privately) utterly distraught.
Coming to college in a smallish city sealed thick concrete flaps over that 'eye'.
My mind was stuffed with cotton wool.
The deep awareness I had felt was smothered (even in the bits of the city that were relatively green, there was nothing to tickle my amygdala) and I have rarely felt that connection since.

OK you boring bugger, what has this got to do with photography, or even mountains?

Ah, I knew you'd ask eventually.
Well, my artistic leanings (with the encouragement of Joe McKenzie) and love of the natural world led me to admiring and trying my hand at landscape photography.
I was shit at it.
I tried really hard; I took lots of photos of rocks and trees and rivers, skies and distant hills and the rise and fall of landscape, but for all I tried, I couldn't do it, because landscape can be a double-edged sword.
It is at once awe-inspiring and moving and trite and bland.

There's not that many images which have ever captured the land in a way that speaks to my proto-me.
I don't wish to point any fingers, but go and pick up any photography magazine or go on any photography website and you'll see it in all its (in)gloriousness.
Work your way back through the billions of square inches of film, the googolplex's of pixels. I'll warrant that if you are being honest with yourself, there's some stuff that stirs emotion and a ton that doesn't.
I really don't want to be so horrendously damning about it, but I'm only talking from my point of view - there's an awful lot of 'landscape work' that makes me  go (in modern parlance) "meh".
I no longer look at the majority of it actually (including my own) simply because I can't.

So where are we going with this you pontificating git?

Ah, so glad you asked.
Well, y'see, I think you can squeeze something out of landscape, but it's difficult.
It's not a case of popping your tripod here and there and taking pictures of every incredible vista that assails your eyes.
And it certainly isn't worth playing the emulation card (poor Joe Cornish! if he had a penny for every bloody image that tries to be like his . . . )
So definitely don't just think:

"Ooooooo, wot pic am I going to snap next?
Ohhhhhh Buachaille Etive Mhor looks awesome, I know, I'll do that". 

Because it is EXACTLY THE SAME as that other utterly pointless human activity - ticking Munro boxes.
Not only that, but these poor majestic beauties of nature (hills and mountains) have been photographed more times than you've had hot dinners.
They are sleeping old bones.
Let them sleep!

To capture nature, you first need to understand it.

You need to observe it.
Stalk it as it were!
Just in the same way that motoring all over the country, ticking boxes on a list of high peaks you've climbed doesn't really give you much of an understanding of mountains, so aimlessly snapping away at anything scenic in the hope of capturing something profound, will not get you anything more than a chocolate box picture of the land, or, that dying pariah, the postcard.
It's like going to a Michelin-starred restaurant, slurping your way through each course in 5 minutes flat and then saying,
"Great, what's next?"

This land is vast.

Mountains are hard and difficult places. They need to be appreciated, and that can only happen with time and effort.
Revisit many times if possible.
Like a person, get to know them!

The marvellous British photographer, John Blakemore, back in the 1970's, borrowed a Bronica and explored and re-explored the same stream that flowed through Lynch Clough from Lady Bower Reservoir.
He did this with other places too, constantly re-examining the areas, to get the atmosphere and feel of a place.
And it worked.
Plenty of other photographers have done it too.
James Ravilious with his Devon essays being a notable example; even Bruce Robbins, friend and fellow blogger, who has been taking photographs in the Carse Of Gowrie (just outside Dundee) for decades. His constant re-examination shows. He has the feel of the place nailed.

Am I saying I've got it?
NO, I definitely haven't.
I still don't think I have captured something that has made me stand back, but maybe that's a good thing because it means I am still trying.

Anyway, some photos - if it is alright with you, I'll write a wee blurb under each one to keep us all right, alright?
The young Sheephouse would have delighted in these high places in his late teens. The older Sheephouse says:

"Here y'go Son - we made it."

You've maybe seen some before, but they're only here because I've not had time.




Permafrost.
Hard to ascertain from the photograph, well maybe the icicles are a clue, but everything, including the tree, was frozen solid. Ground when it is like this is nice and easy to walk over as there is a very slight crunch and give underfoot, so you're not sliding everywhere.
Although I'd walked a couple of miles to get this at least it was mostly on the flat . . 
This was taken on the Sinar with a 150mm Schneider Symmar-S - the cheapest modern lens (nearly) that you can get for 5x4". It is a sterling performer. I think the film was Delta 100 developed in HC 110.
This would (I think) make a good very large print - I've got some 9.5 x 12" paper somewhere . . might just do that.





Lost Boulders.
These beauties were in a quite little ghetto of boulders cast aside by glacial movement, covered in dense forest, deforested, lost in the midst of modern conifer planting and now, in the past year or so, deforested again . . in other words they've been there for a bleedin' long time.
They're hanging over a helluva steep drop and it really does make you wonder about:

a./ The Mentality 

and 

b./ The Stamina 

of the forestry workers who planted that hillside.
It is beside the path that takes you up to The Shank Of Drumfollow.
Camera was the Sinar F1, a Linhof tripod, Gitzo Series 5 head . . in other words about 15 gravities of weight . . but more on that for the next photo which was taken on the same day.
The lens was the under-rated CHEAPEST way of getting into LF photography . . the humble Schneider 90mm Angulon. It just covers 5x4" with no movements, but you know what, there's something about it that takes a really nice photo. It isn't overly contrasty and has a nice way of dealing with midtones.
I was hovered over the rocks with my body supporting the tripod - it was pretty damn steep.
This being said, I could achieve exactly the same (well, better, much better, but similar) result with the Hasselblad SWC's Biogon. AND I WOULDN'T HAVE TO KILL MYSELF LUGGIN' ALL THAT STUFF!





Honest, The Camera Was 100% Level.
The Shank Of Drumfollow. Well there I was, I'd got to the top of the Col between Dreish and Mayar. It was damn misty climbing up. It had taken me nearly 3 hours to do a walk I've done in 1 hour and 40 minutes. I got to the top - ate my second choccie bar of the day, contemplating heading to Mayar, and what happened? Yep, the mist got souper-thick. This is an extra level of thickness above thick. In other words you can't see a damn thing at all. 
The only way to find your way is to get your bearings with map and compass. Lugging a Sinar F1, Linhof Twin Shank Tripod, Gitzo Series 5 head, 10 dark slides, spare gear, water, and slogging a pair of boots that weighed 1275gms PER BOOT, I was fecking knackered. 
All my enthusiasm for picking my way across a plateau to top a Munro only to be surrounded by dank mist and silence, sent me turning tail and back down again. 
Coming down, I turned around and was astonished by the near 45 degree shape of the hill with all that mist floating around, so I set up the camera and took a photograph.
I kid you not. THE CAMERA WAS LEVEL.
The lens was the 203mm Kodak Ektar; film was original Adox CHS 100 in 1:50 Rodinal.





Cairn To The Witches.
Another uphill, down-dale and UPHILL again, though fortunately not carrying a 5x4 kit. This was my Minolta Autocord - it's totally battered and scratched to buggery, but still manages to capture something.
The cairn is on the shoulder of Cairn Inks, and it was from here that witches would throw boulders and generally have a good mess around with travelers on the Clova road which follows the line of the river in the distance (well, there's two roads in a circuit actually at that point, but below the Cairn it narrows down to one long and lonely dead-end one heading deep into the hills.
I've been to this point a number of times - the hill up to it is about 50 degrees of steepness and it doesn't get any easier.





The Watcher.
I could reveal where this is, but I'd have to kill you. The stone, to me, so resembles a human sitting, watching that I need to explore it more, so Mum is the word.
It was bloomin' cold, but fortunately I was only carrying the Rollei T, Screamin' Chimp (Hakuba tripod) and me. Film was Acros 100 and developed in Rodinal.
Contrast is through the roof,





Bones Of The Earth.
This is quite a common sight on hillsides - burning back old heather cover to encourage new growth which is favoured by grouses, grousci or even just grouse. It makes for a very weird texture, sort of crispy and brittle, but resilient and bouncy all at the same time. This could have been a better photo - if I remember rightly it was the Rollei T and I was stuffed for DOF because I was in close.
Must go back with the SWC.
This being said, aren't those distant hillsides impressive . . but I wouldn't like to climb them!


And that's about it really - where has this long ramble got us?
Well, if you are inclined to get out and explore nature, do it, enjoy yourself, but TAKE YOUR TIME. Munros and other mountains, countryside, hills and Corbetts aren't a competitive sport - they're for contemplation, reflection and exploration and maybe, if you're inclined to pick details, then they can be incredibly revealing of the nature of land and man's interaction with it AND ALSO your own place in that landscape and what it means/has meant to you.

The countryside isn't just somewhere you go through to get from A to B. it is a living, nurturing entity that can teach you a whole deal about yourself if you give it a chance.

TTFN, now where did I put my laxatives . . .

Thursday, May 07, 2015

Il Buono, Il Matto e Il Cattivo - Parte 1.3

OR


HOW TO SPEND A HAPPY COUPLE OF HOURS NEXT TO 
A RIVER


Morning folks - fed up of the election yet? 
Remember a vote for Sheephouse is a vote for fair dealings and honesty, so I urge you to go and put your X in the correct box - we're fielding candidates all over the country - YOU KNOW IT MAKES SENSE.

Well, here we reach the happy conclusion of something started a while back - you can read about part 1 here . . . and part 2 here . . .
I'll let you get on with that if you haven't read them already, and for the brave and exhausted souls who have . . . on with the show! 

OK, so I'd been weathered off and decided that I simply must take some pictures, so I found a nice riverbank and did something I haven't ever done with a 5x4 camera - 
I parked myself
Wot's that Sheephouse? Parked?
Yeah, parked - dumped my rucksack, unpacked it, set up camera on tripod, attached LowePro bumbag to my bum and over the next two hours wandered up and down the riverbank taking pictures leaving rucksack where it was and packing/unpacking nothing apart from at the start and at the end. I made 8 photographs - this would normally have taken approximately 3 total hours of time were I having to pack up and move on every time, so essentially I shaved around an hour off of valuable time. 
Light waits for no man and I was alternating between astonishing, bright sunshine, heavy cloud and deep freezing shadows. The river was running fit to bust. The air was filled with clouds of water droplets all diamondy and wonderful in the sunshine. The noise was incredible and my soul flew. 
It was a pleasure which I can hardly describe
How wonderful not to have to think about packing up and moving on! Never done it before, but I will from now on. I dug deep into the landscape and felt that having the freedom to just wander about paid out in spades. If you are a LF photographer, please consider using this approach:

study your maps
pick a spot that looks good
PARK
and then have fun

It made all the difference to me.
Anyway . . . 
Right, well what have we here Sheephouse?
It's prints M'am innit.
Oh really?
Yes M'am . . . proper prints, made on proper paper and developed in proper chemicals. The paper, if you don't mind me telling you M'am, is some ancient Agfa Multicontrast Classic (or MCC if you like) - it's at least 10 years old and has lost about a Grade of sensitivity, however it doesn't appear to be fogging. The paper developer was Fotospeed - it is excellent and very fast, and then they were archivally fixed and toned in Kodak Selenium.
Really young man . . . that's jolly interesting.
Yes M'am, I agree

So, here they are as promised at the start of this lengthy process - film was the last of my well expired TMX 400 (when it cost £50 for 50 sheets) and some of my well-expired TXP 320 (when it cost £50 for 50 sheets). All were developed in 1:25 Rodinal at 21 Centigrade. Some of the negatives were sorely underexposed (because I'd knocked my meter and hadn't noticed) and I had to try and enhance the upper Zones by Selenium toning the negative - this works quite well actually.
The lenses were a 1980's Schneider 150mm Symmar-S and a late production Schneider 90mm Super Angulon. I like them both - they are superb lenses.
Camera was the Wista DX which is a superb companion and my tripod was the Gitzo Series 2 Reporter - it is ancient but operates as new - testimony to great engineering and build.


So, kick back, dip your bagel in your coffee and tell me what you think.


















OK - the eagle-eyed will notice that is only 5 contacts . . well the other 3 were impossible to get looking right so I haven't included them, I have however printed one of them!
So now for the projection prints. All printed on my DeVere 504 through an ancient 150mm Rodagon.



This was actually bleached and then toned - unfortunately it was a bleach too far and it has given it this lith look. That being said a number of people have said they really liked it . . so there.




I like the tonality of this one - it did need a little bleaching, but I was careful and then toned in Selenium




This is a little section from the above - you can see how well the Super Angulon has rendered the water.




And finally . . . this is my favourite - it reminds me of John Blakemore.
It's hardly original, but I find it pleasing.
The thing that attracted my eye first was the reflection of the tree at the bottom of the frame.
Bleached selectively along the water's white and then Selenium toned.



And that folks is that - was it worth the wait? 
Only you can decide. 
LF takes a huge amount of effort, and sometimes I am not sure it is worth the effort, however with that last print, I can say to myself (as I wash up on the beach of emptied and dying LF photographers, spent before their time on the river of photography) 
"Yes . . . at least I think so."

TTFN - poiple pills - yum yum yum.

Thursday, April 09, 2015

The Good, The Mad And The Ugly 1.2

Morning folks - well the madness continues . . . if you read the last one, you'll know the story . . . if you haven't, best catch up here.
Anyway rather than bore you with acres of meaningless rambling, I went with the adage that a picture is worth a thousand words . . so you've got 16,000 words ahead of you . . good luck!
Oh, and I apologise in advance about the picture spacing . . . strangely for such a wonderful tool, Blogger is total shit at handling pictures and text together - it's a well-known problem. 
So, do like I do: put on your best Yorkshire accent and keep muttering: 
"Chuffin' bloody technological bloody marvels . . "



Once rinkling, tinkling burns turn into raging slippery torrents, courtesy of the melting snow.
Deeper than you think, you wouldn't want to fall into one.
  
I have often just stepped over this one. I couldn't jump it this time though - the bank on the far side is pretty soft.
Slip, crash, smash . . . . goodbye camera.


At last - something I could cross.
New pair of Altberg Defender boots get a good work out - they passed with flying colours.


The snowy-mist just wasn't having any of it.


Every time I take a picture, my Mother stares back at me . . . not that she had a beard or anything.
What you see on my head is God's gift to Winter headwear - the Lowe Alpine Mountain Cap - it's Goretex, warm, covers my elephant's ears and keeps my head well dry.
My Buffalo Special 6 shirt (star of several FB's) was wet through, however still remained warm.
Just about sums up the day so far.
The small ridge you see just to the right of centre, is up by Davey's hut on Jock's Road. It doesn't look that high, but in the words of Father Ted:
"This one is near . . . that one is far away. Near . . . Far Away."
You can't tell from this pic, but my rucksack was steaming in the sun - it had got very wet


I count the blessings of Mother Nature.
Resting besides a small river is a true heart's ease. I could have spent all day here, lazing in the sun . . . but there were photographs to be taken!
 
Hello Mum!
The look on my face says it all. I was steaming too, though not in the accepted Scots fashion . . . however had someone passed me a bottle of Woods Old Navy Rum, I would gladly have obliged them.








This gives you an idea of the sound!  
Sheer heaven
You can tell there's a lot of water moving along though by the sound. Outwith spate, river's tend to have an upper, higher-pitched tone. The bass aspect of this is indicative of thousands of gallons of water passing each and every minute.
I'll take this little break in the pics to say how fortunate I am to live not that far away from such beauty . . . of course, for me, it would be better to live in the thick of it, however it would make commuting a tad difficult . . how the feck did I end up in retail in a city?
Right, back on with t'shite . . .

 
The power of our Mother.
Dense clouds of fine water droplets were thrusting into the air and being illuminated by the bright sun - it was quite something.
My inner caveman stood in awe.
Unfortunately the photo doesn't convey just how much water was passing by - it was lots, and rapid too.
Yes I know . . . the centre column shouldn't be raised (slapped wrists) however the Gitzo reporter is pretty sturdy and it doesn't seem to have any detriment.
And anyway, I couldn't get the legs in a position where they wouldn't be in shot, hence the jaunty angles.
Same again please.


'E's big, 'airy and 'orrible and I be feared of him.
Passing Yeti decides to take a snap.
© Shite Sheephousian Shelfie

Ah  yes, the Craghoppers Microfleece Darkcloth!
You can often find them for about £6 in their sales. It works well - very breathable, doesn't cling too much, keeps out a decent amount of light. Has a zip neck so you can get it tight 'round the rear standard, and being a fleece, seems to eliminate some of the 'Darkcloth breath' condensation problem.
Packing up to go



And the weather just glowered in again.
As I was driving off from the car park, a massive snow storm blasted in.
What a day!































And I am going to call it a day there - the films are processed, but I have hit a time-related problem in being able to show you real prints, so I shall endevour to do that in the next one. 
The one thing I haven't mentioned, is that, rather than the usual 'set the camera up, compose, take photograph, take camera down, move on' . . regime (approx. 20 minutes taken each time) I decided to park my rucksack in one spot, set up camera, get dark slides into Lowe Alpine Fjell bum bag (very handy) and just wander up and down and enjoy this small section of riverbank - it made a hell of a lot of difference.
But more of that later - so, until the next time, take care and remember to start heading to the bathroom before you get the collywobbles.














Tuesday, March 24, 2015

The Good, The Mad And The Ugly 1.1

Winter hillwalking in Scotland is a complex and dangerous activity pursued on a regular basis by lots and lots of people with a hunger for danger. Yes there are countless experienced individuals who do it well-equipped, with the level of experience and skills necessary (and also the much-needed ability to realise defeat and turn back if it all starts to go pear-shaped).
However, there are also others who approach it with a loose whimsy nothing short of a death-wish - jeans, fabric walking shoes, no emergency gear, you name it, its been done, and then the wonderful VOLUNTEERS of our mountain rescue services put their lives on the line rescuing them.
Hmmm, blatant and foolish risk taking = financial culpability . . sounds reasonable doesn't it?
I think so, but obviously things can (and do) go hill-shaped quite often through no fault of your own - a good day can end up a total nightmare, so you should always have an out - things you can do to mitigate the end result . . . BE PREPARED - like, f'rinstance, thinking about whether you really could sit out a storm with 6 inches to two feet+ of snow.
I think if the shit hit the fan most people's answer would be . . Er . . NO!

"So Sheephouse, how does this apply to you and why are you boring us with such shite?" I hear you cry . . .
Well, despite having walked mountains for a longish (20-odd years) time now, I've never done a proper Winter walk, and you know what, I probably won't as I like my days in the hills to be solitary  - ergo, it's only me in some very BIG nature - at 3500ft and a howling white out, I'd be the one on my tod with the brown trousers . . . no, I value my life more than to take a solitary risk.
But like that rash you get from too tight underpants in the summer, itching at the back of my brain is a need to photograph permafrost and ice and hard granite and snow . . . and with a large format camera too!
Sometimes itches have to be scratched.
The title of this blog though does tell the truth . . .
Lugging a 5x4 and its copious accessories into the wilds is not an undertaking for the faint of heart. I've done it a few times and the sheer weight of everything is enough to put you off as you heft your rucksack back in the carpark.
The heaviest part is undoubtedly the tripod (unless you can afford carbon fibre) - it is a total bastard to carry, weighs a ton, and is as awkward as it gets.
After this (if you are brave) comes (in equal levels of awkwardness) the Double Dark Slides (they're cumulatively heavy, not massively heavy each, but when combined, heavy enough to make you wish you'd only taken 4 . . . or 2) and the camera (well actually it's a toss-up between the two) - but in all cases, BULK is your main problem.
My ancient Wista DX is almost as light as it comes for a 5x4, but it is still heavy, however not as heavy as my Sinar F . . . now that is heavy and yet, strangely carryable.

Here's a brief aside:
The F stands for Field (Not Feckin' Heavy . . nope, that would be the Sinar FH) and yes, you can use it in a field - grab a 6 inch rail and it will entirely compact onto that, although if you fancy carrying a solid, all-metal, brick that is approximately 6 x 8 x 8" and awkward as fceck to pack, go ahead. Mine actually fitted into a Deuter 22litre rucksack, with the film holders in a click-lock box in the separate compartment at the bottom, the 12" rail in one of the water bottle pockets at one side, and the bag bellows viewer (undoubtedly one of the best LF accessories ever invented - look Ma! No Darkcloth!!) tucked neatly in beside the camera. My light meter was in a small Lowe pouch attached to the side of the rucksack . . . water was in a 1 litre Sigg bottle on the opposite outside pouch to the rail . . . and food? erm. Oh. Dried goods I'm afraid - oatcakes, dried fruit and a couple of bite-sized choccy bars . . . no room for extra clothing really apart from hat and gloves. The tripod (Linhof Twin Shank and Gitzo Series 5 [! - weighing about the same as the QE2]) was carried with a couple of ingenious handles knotted and cable-tied to two of its legs (the material was a stretchy fabric offcut) and the whole thing was stopped from going all splay-ey by a bungee cord. My boots at the time weighed over a kilo each too, so you can see, it is quite easy to nearly kill yourself with such a set-up . . and I nearly did. I've detailed some of it somewhere else on FB - if you want to find it, use the search . . I think 'nearly killed' would be the keywords.

Anyway, as I say the thoughts of carrying such a get-up to such heights as a Munro is nearly too much to bear these days, but I still wanted to photograph Winter.
Allied to this, I had a new (secondhand) rucksack to break in (long story cut short = upcoming camping trip/no wish to tear down compartments on Tamrac bag/not enough room for camping stuff = Karrimor Sabre 45!) hence the near genius idea of a decent walk, but at lower levels - if the permafrost was around there would be ample opportunity to photograph my chosen subjects. And you know what . . . I think I would have made it, were it not for a couple of things.

Number 1:

Low pressure and raised temperatures

Number 2:

Because of Number 1, all the snow was melting - little jumpable burns were now raging slippery torrents.

I had to re-plan on the hoof - the best laid plans of meece and men as it were . . . 
Basically, where I wanted to go, I had recc'ed a couple of years back - there were tiny, lovely, tinkling burns to cross before I got to a small gorge where the White Water forces its way between slippy stones and stunted trees at the edge of a boulder field.
It even sounds bloody great writing it!
My juices were flowing and my energy levels were up - in my minds-eye I could see great slabs of iced-water broken upon oval, water-smoothed, boulders.
I could see shapes and patterns, whorls and melt. It would be perfect.
But I'll go into it (and why it never happened) fully next time.
For now, are we sitting comfortably?
Yes?
Good - it is time for a little Sh-Sh-Sh-Sh-Sheephouse Aside.



 





Wot is it Sheephouse? Wot, I said, WOT, IS IT???

Well, isn't it obvious?

Nah. It looks like a green bag to me, wiv some sticks and fings on it, innit.

(Sigh) OK and just because it is you -  . . . it's a Karrimor SF Sabre 45 - a military grade rucksack which holds a capacious 45 litres - on the sides you see some ex-army PLCE side pockets (or Rockets as they're known) these hold approximately 15 litres each - so basically it is a 75 litre rucksack!
That's a lot of room and way more than I would carry ever (if it was a cloth barrel, could you imagine carrying 75 litres of beer? Nope, me neither . . ) however it is necessary for Winter.
My normal LF rucksack is roughly half that size - it's a Tamarac Extreme 777, which just holds all my LF camera gear with little room for anything else - that is no good for me in the Winter, hence a larger sack was necessary.
Nefarious excuses for buying another rucksack out of the way - here's what it held:

Exped 40 litre dry bag - almost everything was in there, which was in turn within the main body of the rucksack
Wista DX (protected in a small Lowe shoulder bag)
Schneider 150mm f5.6 Symmar-S (inside collapsed camera)
Schneider 90mm f8 Super Angulon (in lens wraps)
Light meter - Gossen Lunasix-F with spot attachment (in Lowe digital camera shoulder bag - it's small)
Note paper and pencils
2 cable releases
Reading glasses (in hard case) for composition
Silvestri Loupe
Spare meter batteries
Tape measure
Spirit Level
Dark Cloth (a Craghoppers microfleece with a zip neck - breathable and very light tight)
4 Dark Slides in a Lowe bumbag + 4 spare in a cliptop box
2 litres of water
Enough dried food for a monster like me
Emergency space blanket
Compass
Knife
Whistle
Torch
Map in waterproof mapcase
Small digicam case attached to waistbelt (to hold small Panasonic Lumix)
Ventile Jacket
US Army Poncho (in case of maximum wetness)
Buffalo systems hood and mitts (to match the Special 6 shirt I was wearing)
Gaiters
Ex-Army neck buff
Lowe Mountain cap
Spare cable ties
Leki Wanderfreund trekking pole (for crossing dodgy burns)
Oh and the tripod, which actually attached pretty well to the pack when I was using the Leki

Basically, if you can imagine carrying a toddler robot, you've got it.
I see the Army bomb disposal got there before me - sort of like this:



Or like this, but in reverse . . . if Altaira was carrying Robby, he would feel like the Karrimor Sabre fully loaded.




I've no idea what the weight was, but it was heavy . . . however (and strangely) with the pack on properly, waist belt clipped so my hips were taking the strain rather than my shoulders and with the sternum strap done up, it was surprisingly comfortable.
I was expecting to get truly hot and sweaty, but I was alright - so was the rucksack - nary a complaint - it is built like a brick sheephouse after all.
I'm not sure if I'd like to climb a Munro with that level of stuff though - I could probably slim things down a bit, to lessen the weight, but not that much. It would be a huge test of fitness.
Anyway, suitably ladened and after having had a quiet word with myselves in the carpark, off I marched into the wilds for 5 miles of phun and phrolics.

***

Phew, that was tiring wasn't it!
Well, this is what your intrepid reporter looks like after a sweaty yomp into the far beyond. Jings that load was heavy.


Your intrepid reporter, feeling less sweaty now the toddler robot has climbed down and is off for a play in the woods.
Note extreme wide-angle, off-axis, enlargement of facial features (Official Nikon F & Nikkormat Manual, p38).
Or am I just reverting to my childhood porkieness?
I prefer the technical answer.

But isn't it incredible, that even in the middle of nowhere, there's still some f'er taking a 'selfie'. 

Another Sh-Sh-Sh-Sheephouse aside . . .
Sorry to say it folks but I genuinely believe that Ali and me invented the modern one back in the very early 1990's, except we called them self portraits then . . and they were on film . . . but the concept was the same:

Point and shoot camera.
Reverse lens back to the picture taker.
Arm out, with that now oh so familiar pose.
Steady.
Say cheese
Autofocus at work.
Click.
That was it.

Nowadays you can even get a feckin selfie-stick so you can get all of yourself in . . er . . isn't that what self-timers are for?
Selfies have lost any meaning they might have had.
They used to work - the unusual angle, the self-proclamation of 'I WOZ ERE', it all led to a different slant on things, rather like the woman who managed to catalogue a visit to Egypt with her disposable 110 camera reversed so that every shot featured her ear (!).
You laughed at her mistake, but seeing most of the Wonders Of Egypt with an ear attached to them wasn't just a laugh, it was almost ART.
Nah, selfies, as common as dog muck and I hate them with a vengeance . . .
However, seeing as we invented them, why not . . . .

Er wait a minute Sheephouse . . . is that really you?

Och bugger . . . spotted again. Indeed it is. 
If you can find me in public and come up to me and say
'Your name is Herman Sheephouse and I claim my free sticker now' 
I can guarantee you'll get a special prize . . .

Anyway, where is all this going?
I am not sure actually, as it looks to me like I am just twiddling my fingers and writing the first thing that comes into my head . . . marking time I think my Dad would have said . . and he would have been right.
Why?
Well, I haven't developed the film yet. Well I have now actually, however no contacts have been made - more of that next time. For now let's just say, LF Photography Makes Men.
It's like a boot camp for the visual arts. it really is.
More next time in an epic and exciting episode:
The toddler robot returns, the weather turns, I have a turn, and, after nearly walking away disgusted, eventually end up whiling away a happy couple of hours next to a raging river.

Exceptionally precarious


TTFN -  and remember if the blue pills don't work, there's always the green ones.