Travel

I'm lucky enough to travel a lot but I also aim to understand a place in some depth. So I like to find out about the local history, sociology, wildlife and local arts. I prepare for a trip by looking up photos of the famous sights, they're usually a good guide both about the local visual interest and also a warning of what has already been done or over-done.
I try to use the tools of modern photojournalism and photography to communicate how I feel about a place. You’ll see that I have used Portrait, Street, Interior, Historical, Abstract, Landscape, Historical, Wildlife, Phone-camera and Selfie genres at different times for specific effects.

My photo postcard of the Col de la Cayolle between the departments of Alpes-Maritimes and Alpes-de-Haute-Provence in France.

First week the road was open following the winter, a dramatic climb up to the sources of the river Var, the marmottes and other wildlife protected by the Parc National du Mercantour.

We were also there in 2011 see Col de la Cayolle - June 2011

My photo postcard from Castellane in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department in southeastern France.
Small town popular with bikers following the route back from exile by Napoleon. The river Verdon was in flood and the village in fete.

My photo postcard from Tourettes-sur-Loup in the Alpes-Maritimes department in southeastern France

Tourettes-sur-Loup: perched village overlooking the bay of Cannes, an alluring mixture of Mediterranean art chic and Provencal charm.

Postcard from St. Jeannet, Porte des Baous in the Alpes Maritimes

The gîte for our stay for the Camp des Baous was in St. Jeannet in the Alpes Maritimes, resting on a ledge underneath limestone cliffs. Panoramic views to the coast below but high enough to be slightly out of the heat and the bustle. The town calls itself Porte des Baous (gateway to the Baous), Baou seems to refer to both the limestone cliffs and the numerous frogs who inhabit the fields below and were singing loudly in the evening sunshine... The cliffs have an appearance like the snout of a sitting frog, so maybe that’s the origin of the word. It could also be that Baou is a slang word for the people who live underneath Baous (meaning cliff). There’s a climbing school and numerous gîtes, despite the locals seemed to welcome us and our club’s booking.

My pictures of a day out to MediaCityUK in Manchester

My day trip to MediaCityUK started bright and early at London’s Euston station; but inside the building, I faced the onslaught of grey and harrowed faces on the commuters hurrying importantly off trains arriving in the capital.

Once on the train, the countryside flashed past outside; bright clear sunshine revealing fields at last showing the welcome colours of a spring to end this seemingly interminable winter. Going north, it was still spring in the Trent valley but once through the tunnel to Macclesfield, much less of the green glow of new growth on trees and crops. Splendid views from the railway viaduct at Stockport of the town below and now no snow on the Pennine hills far away, unlike just ten days ago on my trip to the Lake District.
Change from fast train to urban tram at Manchester Piccadilly; the sunshine persisted, showing Manchester’s dour red brickwork at its best. Manchester's Metrolink tram ground and bimbled its way out from Piccadilly towards MediaCityUK at Salford Quays.
The tram arrived at the terminus with the sun still shining: MediaCityUK in spring sunshine! The statue of Petra the dog, the first television pet on UK television, surveys the Blue Peter garden, heathers flowering for the first full spring since the Blue Peter garden was relocated from BBC Television Centre in West London.
And so to work in the new buildings of BBC North. Compare with the bleak views of my previous trip to MediaCentreUK in May 2011.

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