72 landscape photos from our vacation in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland

Every year I enjoy showing you my best photos from my vacation. I enjoy doing my own photography while on vacation (no client looking over my shoulder…). Just me, the camera, and an amazing landscape. This year we vacationed in Canada, and as you probably know, in Canada there’s an amazing landscape around every corner!

Rest assured, these are not your holiday snaps. You will see no pictures of kids eating ice cream, or pictures of me lying on the beach. What relaxes me is seeing amazing landscapes. Capturing those landscapes is a way of bringing my vacation home with me. At various points throughout the year I look back over those photos and it reminds me of a good and beautiful time!

Route

We started our trip in Halifax, Nova Scotia. That’s really the only city we visited. Sophie has family who live there. From there we drove to Fundy Bay, which has the largest tide-difference in the world: 11 meters difference between high and low tide. We visited Annapolis Royal and saw the first European settlement in Canada, visited Kejimkujik National Park, and then visited Mahone Bay and Lunenburg with it’s colorful houses.

After a brief stay with Sophie’s family again we drove up the Nova Scotia Coast (the most beautiful drive!) to Sydney where we caught the 7hour ferry to Newfoundland. We landed at Port-aux-Basques and then drove to Rocky Harbour in Gros Morne National Park. From there we did a one-day trip to Saint Lunaire-Griquet where we took a boat ride to see whales and icebergs. I had high expectations of seeing the whales, which turned out to be disappointing; I had low expectations of seeing icebergs, but it turned out to be amazing! Funny how that goes…
From there we travelled to Bovavista and English Harbour, where we saw more whales and also visited a Puffin colony. We spent 6 days in Newfoundland, and I thought it was absolutely fantastic.
We then took the ferry back to Sydney, where we stayed with Sophie’s family in Cape Breton for four days. Cape Breton is the northern most top part of Nova Scotia. From there we went back to Halifax. All in all we drove 5400 km.

A couple of observations

Eastern Canada is absolutely beautiful. We visited Western Canada (Vancouver to the Rockies and then back to Vancouver island) 2 years ago (photo’s), and that was fantastic. I had fairly low expectations of Nova Scotia — you don’t hear much about that part of Canada. But I can tell you the coastline was amazing. The drive from Halifax to Sydney is as beautiful as the Pacific Coastal Highway in California. There are endless beautiful beaches, totally empty. Of course the water is chilly, so there’s no one in the water.

The roads are long and empty. Two lanes, and often you will not see another car for miles. Sophie’s behind started disliking the many potholes after a while; many of the roads are in urgent need of repair. We even drove over a few roads that had a sign: ‘the department of fishery no longer supports this road’.

You can drive for miles and miles before you see a gas station. You better make sure you have at least half a tank of gas when you pass one, because the next gas station could be a while!
And the next restaurant or supermarket might take even longer. Sophie and I are not sure what Canadians eat, but more than a few times we were just amazed to discover we had driven for miles and miles before we found a store, only to see endless rows of snacks and junk food.

There are more churches than gas stations and restaurants — that’s for sure! Every few miles you will pass a cute little white church. Most of them look like they haven’t been used in years. I photographed a few, but after a while you just give up.

I may have seen a lot of churches, but I never saw any moose. Canadians will be quick to tell you that is a good thing: moose are back animals and an accident with a moose can be deadly (not for the moose, but for the human). There are warning signs for moose everywhere. I wanted to see one, but never did.

Canadians are incredibly friendly and helpful and talkative. They will engage you in conversation quickly and easily. You will find out lots of private details that a European might not even share after you had been friends for a decade. I met a gentleman on the boat from Sydney to Port-aux-Basques. Within 5 minutes I had heard his whole life story, including the fact that he had just sold his business in Thailand for 10 million dollars and was now returning home to build his own property in Deer Lake, just ‘up on the hill behind the power-station’.

And then there is the emptiness and the quietness. There is a picture in this set of nothing but pebbles and quiet waves on a misty beach (English Harbour-307). It was there that I realized I found the rest I so craved on this holiday.

Thanks for reading and looking. Enjoy the pictures. Leave a comment? Click on the photos to see them larger.

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My favourite spot on earth

I would like to show you my favourite spot on this earth. No, I haven’t seen everything yet, and yes, I could wait with choosing my favourite spot until I had ‘seen it all’. But then again, I haven’t seen all the women of this world, and yet I choose one — and that’s worked out pretty good for me so far (we just celebrated our 26th anniversary). So yes, I have a favourite spot. It’s a spot where I feel completely at home and at rest.

My favourite spot is called Crackington Haven and can be found on the rocky north-cast of Cornwall (that’s the peninsula that sticks out into the Atlantic in South-west England). Crackington is not even a village; it’s just a few houses with a small beach between two enormous cliffs. At night the sun sets in perfect view; the waves can be enormous; there are wonderful rock pools with all kinds of sea life in them, and the water is so cold. Sophie’s family had a small cabin here and so she spent her summers on this beach. Naturally it was one of the first places I had to see when we first got to know each other, and for me too it was love at first side.

Our most recent holiday was in Cornwall and of course we spent a number of days at Crackington. It had been a few years since our last visit, but I’m happy to say beyond a few minor improvements it hadn’t changed much!

Crackington is also meaningful place for Sophie’s family. After her Dad died we scattered his ashes on the high cliff overlooking Crackington. Sophie and I have decided we each want our ashes to be scattered here as well. Sorry of that sounds a bit gruesome, but there is something deeply peaceful about ‘knowing the place’, and having a sense of belonging and peace with that.

On this blog I like showing my best and my favourite photo’s. Crackington never ceases to amaze me in how she can look. I took a ton of photo’s there this summer. Here are some of my favourites. I know I should be more selective, but heck, I can’t. I’m just going to show them all to you! As always: click on the photo’s to see them larger!

Do you have a favourite spot?

I’d love to know if you have a favourite spot. Where is it? And why do you love it so much?

 

 

 

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Canada: Vernon and Vancouver

Our beautiful Doge Durango. We drove 3000+ km's in three weeks. Love that car. This photo was taken near Princeton, on Highway 3.
Our beautiful Doge Durango. We drove 3000+ km’s in three weeks. Love that car. This photo was taken near Princeton, on Highway 3.

OK, last set of holiday pictures, I promise! I just love showing images… Our trip through the Canadian Rockies ended in Vernon. No idea why the tour operator would have us spend two days there: there’s really very little there. Except that it is… Canada. So I took my camera and drove around looking for sights I would not see otherwise in Holland. From there we drove back to Vancouver (beautiful drive!). I spent another day with a camera in Vancouver. Truly a city of glass, water and steel!

Click on the images to see them larger.

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Holiday – Day 1 – Vancouver

We have arrived in Vancouver, Canada! So excited to be here. I am here with Sophie to attend the wedding of my brother-in-law, Jobie, to his fiancee, Terra. We’ve attached a little holiday to it  Since being on holiday for me means taking lots of pictures, I intend to keep a running account here on my blog with some of our adventures.

You may wonder: how are you on holiday if you are still taking pictures? Isn’t that your job? Do you never stop? Ah – good question. Well, no, not really. You see, photography is my passion. What makes it holiday is that I get to take the photo’s I want, and there’s no client leaning over my shoulder saying: now take a photo of this product, speaker, building, person… I get to do what I want!
Also, I am playing my my Fujifilm X-E2 and my new lenses. And I have to say I am very impressed. For the wedding I’ve also brought my Nikon D800 and a set of lenses. But for walking around, hiking, and general holiday photography M intend to use the Fujifilm mostly.

Arrival and first half day

We are arrived here safely after a great KLM-flight. For some reason KLM put us in Premium Economy, which was really nice, We left Amsterdam at 13:25 and arrived here at 14:00 on the same day. Always inteersting how you can fly for nine hours, watch four movies, and then arrive at roughy the same time you took off. We picked up our rental car. I had reserved a small SUV (Hey, it’s Canada!). Years ago someone taught me to always ask for the possibility of a free upgrade. They guy at the desk just smiled and said nothing, but when we were shown to the car it turned out to be a Dodge Durango — if you don’t know what that is, think of a small but comfortable tank Guy who gave us the keys said: Ah, I guess he gave you a nice upgrade, Indeed! Pictures  later.
Then to the hotel (Sandman, downtown Vancouver, nice enough) and to dinner at my brother-in-laws). Got back to the hotel at 9 PM and fell asleep before my head hit the pillow. Woke up at 3 AM. Jet-lag kicking my butt.

First full day: out on the boat

Je weet dat je niet meer in Capelle aan den IJssel bent als ze vrachtwagens zo vervoeren.
Je weet dat je niet meer in Capelle aan den IJssel bent als ze vrachtwagens zo vervoeren.

So my brother-in-law is a successful entrepreneur here and owns a nice house and fast boat. Best way to relax, he says. Here are some photo’s I took from his boat.

Took this following photo with the XF100-1400 and 1,4 extender. 1/1000s af F6,9. Pictures was taken from a boat well over 50km/hr, at a boat going the opposite direction at the same speed. Still, it’s tack-sharp. I am so impressed with the ability of these lenses!

Fast boat on Deep cove Indian Arm
De foto is 100% scherp, ook al werd hij vanuit een stevig bewegende boot genomen met een zeer lange lens!

It was gorgeous weather. We went fast and slow. The scenery changed by the minute.

Indian Arm Deep Cove sailing
I made the same photo without a boat in the frame, but found that adding the boat gives a sense of scale. You get to appreciate the grandeur of the place…

One reason to go to Canada is to see wild-life. This was the first wild-life we say: a bunch of seals staring at us from a distance,

Seals staring at us on Indian Arm Deep Cove sailing
Fujifilm X-E2, XF100-400 with 1,4 ext, F7, ISO 800

Went back to my brother-in-laws place and swam in the pool. His fiancee keeps bees. She had to inspect the beehive. So she got on her suit and opened the boxes. I took some photo’s of that. Here’s one I really like. Amazing how calm the bees are. I wore nothing but my swimming trunks and was quite close – and they never bothered her or me.

Imker-1

After she was finished I noted this flower in their garden. Again, I’m just showing this because it demonstrates the amazing lens. This is with the XF100-400 and 1,4 extender at 560mm, 1/500s, F8, ISO800.

Vancouver flower

 

After dinner we got back on the boat and sailed in the opposite direction, towards Vancouver. As we had driven home the previous evening I noted how the sun was setting behind Vancouver’s pretty amazing skyline. I thought it might be great to capture some images of sunset from the water.

Iron workers memorial bridge
Iron workers memorial bridge

As we got closer to the city, a problem emerged. The sun was setting beautifully; the colors were amazing — and my camera battery warning light came on. Ai… and I only have the one battery with me for this camera… Pretty soon the camera stopped working al together. We sailed all around the city, which was amazing, but of that I can show you nothing! Fortunately I get to sail the boat back, which was a lot of fun also. Good first day!

Vancouver skyline

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Enkele vakantiekiekjes…

Is het gek om op een blog van een professioneel fotograaf ook enkele vakantiekiekjes te plaatsen? Ik weet het niet… maar als wij op vakantie gaan gaat de camera altijd mee. Deze keer ging de reis naar de Atlantische kust van Zuid-Frankrijk, net boven de Spaanse Gres (Aquitaine).

Ik heb niet enorm veel gefotografeerd. Ik was eerlijk gezegd een beetje teleurgesteld in de buurt: weinig leuke franse dorpjes en beetje saai landschap. Beetje karakterloos, zeg maar. Maar desondanks heb ik wel een aantal leuke plaatjes kunnen maken en heb ik verder heerlijk kunnen uitrusten. Dat was ook wel eens nodig…

Klik op de foto’s om ze groter te zien.

Deze stoere gozers zijn mijn drie zoons: Joshua (19), Judah (17) en Joel (14).

Deze mooie dame is al 21 jaar mijn lieftallige echtgenote. Ieder fotograaf heeft zijn muze nodig…

Dit heerschap kwam regelmatig voorbij om te kijken of er nog wat lekkers op de grond lag. Op een dag zaten Sophie en ik Pistacio noten te eten. Kwam die tussen onze voeten zitten. Toen we opstonden en iets verder weg liepen had hij de nootjes (of wat daarvan over was) snel gevonden.

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