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Driving through the countryside of Iceland is a time warp to a land before time.

The landscape is rough and barren. Its moss covered lava fields and tall sloping mountains have an almost lunar appearance.

This is 66 degrees north.  The home of seals and poets.

A few years ago, we produced a multimedia piece on Australia for the launch of the Nikon D3s and rolling through the southwest Iceland felt so much like our time in Tasmania.

Bill and I were lucky to be escorted through the Snæfellsnes peninsula of Iceland on Sunday by our new friend Raymond Hoffmann.

He works with Dionys Moser, a Swiss photographer who is famous for his landscape work.

We will be joining them on some tours in the near future — a diverse selection of locations from the north of Norway for the Northern Lights to the White Desert of Egypt to the Blues country of the Mississippi Delta.  We will have dates and descriptions posted on our blog and their Web sites soon.
Raymond was born in Germany, but moved to Iceland after meeting his wife – a native Icelander – on a trip to the island 10 years ago.
He took us to spots the guide books never mention. A black rock beach, a cozy ocean front hotel for a gourmet lunch — lost on Bill, but much appreciated by me — and small waterfalls overlooking a breathtaking backdrop of Church Mountain.

We started the day with coffee and croissants with his wife and 2-year-old daughter.  Along with spending hours talking with photographers at a lunch graciously arranged by Baldvin Einarsson, this was easily the highlight of our trip.  As much as we love taking pictures, spending time with people and making new friends is the best part of our existence.

Baldvin runs a professional camera store in Reykajavik.  A really professional camera store.  It was a another step back in time for us. Along with our friends at the Camera Store in Calgary, and Light and Byte in Zurich, Becco is a wonderful throwback to when service mattered most.  It’s just a different way to shop, and learn.

We’re lucky because we have Jeff Snyder and Annie Cahill at Adorama in NYC who are long time friends and colleagues. We can’t drop in often and hang out with them — it’s a bit of a commute –but they give great small town service with huge national resources.

The weather Sunday was perhaps less than desirable for most tourists but, as Raymond pointed out, typically Icelandic. The temperature wavered between 0 and -2 degrees Celsius, and the wind was a blustery 30 meters per second, which translates to just over 60 miles per hour.
We spent the day driving along the Snæfellsnes Peninsula, unable to see the famous Snæfellsjökull volcanic glacier due to clouds, but enjoying the scenery nonetheless.  We stopped to watch a family of Icelandic ponies graze in a rocky field. We made pictures of a small church in the center of a lava field. Raymond took us to the famous beach at Búðir where we watched snow fall on its one-of-a-kind round, black rocks, a jarring yet phenomenal scene.

We ended the tour in a small fishing town where we warmed up with a bowl of homemade vegetable cream soup before driving back to Reykjavik. As the sun set behind a wall of clouds, rays of light escaped, allowing us to make the last of our Icelandic photos.

Maybe we’ll make it back there someday.  There is still so much more to see and do.

This is one place I’d like to get back to on a sunny day.  It’s called Gullfols, or Golden Falls, and pictures from there are spectacular when the weather is nice.  I shot this using the 8mm app on my iPhone just for fun, trying to make light of a dark day.

But there is a lot of work to be done this weekend at the Preakness Stakes so after a quick stop in Norway, home we go.

This week, Laura and I are traveling to Germany for Nikon Deutschland’s Nikon Solutions Expo. The Expo, April 27-28, brings together professional photographers, hobby photographers, and photo enthusiasts to showcase some of the latest technology and hold educational workshops and seminars.
Nearly all of my ancestors came to the USA from Germany, and it’s always a treat to be back “home.” My great great great great grandfather Wilhem came to the States on a boat by himself when he was five years old, with a small suitcase and a note pinned to his chest.  His parents sent him during the European potato famine as they could not take care of him.  This is a guy I would like to have met.  Talk about tough.

We’re honored to be a part of such an inspiring group of presenters including Joe McNally, Serge Romanov, Jens Brüggemann, Mayk Azzato, Robin Preston, Florian Schulz, Ralph Man, Sebastian Wiegärtner, and Maike Jarsetz.

We will be presenting three times a day at 10:45, 12:45 and 17:15 on D-SLR Video, Sports Photography and the Simple Love of Photography – if I am not on the stage you’ll be able to find me trying to absorb some of the wealth of information being offered.
Wir würden uns freuen Sie dort zu sehen.

I started the week in Las Vegas and ended it in New York.

I was doing workshops and talks about DSLR video both places.

In Las Vegas, I was a guest of Manfrotto at NAB. I always love to spend time at the Kata booth. They are some of my favorite people and their products, while seemingly simple, are a critical component of what I do. I work on the road, on deadline, and my gear has to arrive organized and protected. Kata bags make that happen.

As much as I enjoyed spending time with Kata and Manfrotto, and seeing so many of my friends on the convention floor, one of the best things I did in Nevada was head to Red Rocks at dusk.  It was great to get out of town, grab my D800 and iPhone 4s and go for a long, slow walk.


In New York, I was speaking at Adorama and the crowd was wonderful. Terrific questions, fun atmosphere — and the knowledge that excellent pizza was right around the corner. I walked from my hotel in Midtown down to Adorama on 18th street, and then back to Sports Illustrated’s offices on 50th street and the Avenue of the Americas. Twice. Lots to see, lots to shoot. Sore feet.

This is easily the best time to be a photographer/storyteller.

At Adorama, I was hosted by Jeff Snyder. We’ve been friends for a long time, which is a good thing in someone you are doing business with, but even better he is a photographer and understands what we do.  With him it’s like having a hometown camera store instantly available, but with national resources.

Bill and Laura are heading to Calgary for a two day multimedia workshop August 6 and 7. Sign up now to receive hands on training for shooting videos, stills and capturing audio. Learn how to gather, prepare and distribute high quality multimedia presentations. The official workshop schedule is now available

Check out the a preview of the workshop now:

Check out the first ever iPad interview featuring Bill Frakes and Joe McNally.

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