This time last year….

I’ve enjoyed August this year for a different reason to last.  This year it has been a month of r and r after a pretty much non-stop spell since 2012 began – and well appreciated it has been on my part too. Last year it was almost all spent travelling in southern Africa and as seems to be increasingly the case these days unless the images have a very specific purpose that they are heading off for, I still have a considerable amount of Gb still to look at let alone process from the 4 weeks on the road then.

Given that the same is on the cards for this time next year too I have started to catch up with some of the images before they simply get superseded and in particular some of the floral highlights.

As a country South Africa is globally important for it’s flowers and plant life – the southern cape fynbos habitat representing the smallest of only six floral kingdoms in the world and found only here.  I certainly found them colourful and also good perches for the birdlife I might find myself more naturally drawn towards such as this Southern Double Collared Sunbird.

Head further north on the way to Namibia though and you pass through the Namaqualand region in Northern Cape province – famous for it’s fantastic show of flowers in the Spring months.  The timing was just about right for this so we planned a couple of nights stop over both heading north as well as south again a couple of weeks later as the precise timing of the displays depends very much on when precisely the first winter rains fell and we couldn’t be sure when this would be when we were making plans several months earlier.  Last year proved though to be one of the best for many in terms of both quantity and also just how early the fantastic sweeps of colour, in particular the bright orange Namaqua Daisies, were to be found all around the region.

Simply driving on the main N7 trunk road you couldn’t fail to be awestruck by the sweeping vistas of colour – at it’s peak in the middle hours of the day when all the flowers would be fully open and pointing towards the sun – and marvel at how they provided such a dramatic contrast to the otherwise bare rock of the surrounding habitat. The fact that the ubiquitous water pumps were able to provide additional man-made element to some compositions is a reminder of just how dry an environment this is and how sparse it looks for the remaining 11 or so months of the year.

Photographing here is certainly about the big vista – judicious use of a polariser and dropping down to ground level added some different angles to work with too.

Having said that I particularly enjoyed the close-up, narrow depth of field and solid blocks of colour approach in some of the Spring woodland flower photography I did at home earlier in the year so this array of species and shades gave me the opportunity to try to adapt some of that here too – it was just a bit more uncomfortable on the elbows on rocky scree like this compared to the mud and leaves of an oak woodland!

Seeing and photographing amazing scenes like this is a good reminder that nature photography is about so much more than birds and mammals, and although they will always remain favourites of mine then continuing to broaden my approach will be as much of an equal priority for sure, and we’re certainly coming into a good season to be doing so here in the UK now too: bring on autumn!

7 thoughts on “This time last year….”

  1. Some lovely images here (as always), having visited Southern Africa earlier this year and going again in a few weeks time, it is interesting to see how different the vegetation was to my visit. I hope to see and be able to photograph flowers like this.
    Really like the orange flower study, a great image but the orange background works so well.

  2. Thanks both. Nigel this dramatic display really does only last a few weeks but as you can see is quite spectacular. You need to be going to this corner of the country really for this purpose only (albeit that we were passing through) but it is well worth it: now is about the best time to be there too!

  3. Nice to see some landscapes for a change Mark, and vivid ones too. Beautiful colours in an impressive part of the world. Nice to see these images, as when I went to SA, we just headed straight to the Kruger. Good to see these images to put wildlife in context. Without flora, no fauna.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *