Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

National Geographic Announces 2018 Adventurers of the Year

While I was away exploring Arctic Europe last week, National Geographic announced its list of the 2018 Adventurers of the Year. As usual, the winners of this prestigious award are names that we've shared on this blog in the past, with some obvious choice from last year, mixed in with a few nice surprises too.

Two of the names that would have been easy to predict making the list include climber Alex Honnold, who stunned the world with his free solo of El Capitan last summer, and Kilian Jornet, who managed to summit Everest twice in a span of five days. They're joined by surfer and humanitarian Emi Koch, ski mountaineer Hilaree Nelson O'Neill, mountain biker Rajesh Magar, photographers and scientists Cristina Mittermeier and Paul Nicklen, as well as stereotype-breaking ultrarunner Mirna Valerio.

As usual, all of these adventurers have great stories to share and each is deserving of making the cut. This year's list is a bit smaller than in year's past, but I think that helps lend an air of exclusivity and prestige to the winners. Unlike in years past however, it does seem that Nat Geo has done away with the "People's Choice" award.

Normally these awards would be announced in November or December as a recap to the year that had just passed. When the announcement failed to come last fall, there were questions as to whether or not the Adventurers of the Year program had gone away. I had several of you email me to see if I knew anything, but I didn't have anything to report. In the past, I was honored to have been asked to submit some suggestions for nominees, but that didn't happen this year either. In the end however, I'm just glad to see these deserving men and women get their moment to shine and to know that we'll see more adventurers get the nod in the future too.

Find out more about this year's class of adventurers by clicking here.

Video: Iceland in Winter

This video was shot as part of a travel photography workshop that was conducted in Iceland in the winter. As you would expect, it features some of the amazing landscapes that the country has become so well known for. When you have places like this to shoot, it's hard to take a bad photo, and the video is simply spectacular too.

Iceland Photo Tours - Winter Image Spot from Dennis Schmelz on Vimeo.
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Video: 130 Years of National Geographic Covers in Under 2 Minutes

Many of us who have a thirst for outdoor adventure and exploration can trace the origins of that curiosity back to National Geographic magazine, which has been an iconic part of our lives for more than a century. The monthly periodical with is broad yellow border and astounding photographs has stirred the imagination of generations of readers. In this video, we take a 130-year tour of magazine, watching its covers evolve and change over time. For many years, the cover didn't vary much from month to month, but later its now-famous imagery came onto the scene. As you watch this two-minute clip, you're almost certainly going to see a few that your recognize along the way. Take a walk down memory lane and enjoy this fantastic video.

HEIR: The Historic Environment Image Resource

HEIR: The Historic Environment Image Resource
HEIR, the Historic Environment Image Resource, contains digitised historic photographic images from all over the world dating from the late nineteenth century onwards. HEIR’s core images come from lantern slide and glass plate negatives held in college, library, museum and departmental collections within the University of Oxford. New resources are being added all the time, including collections from outside the University.
HEIR’s mission is to keyword the images and rephotograph them in their modern settings so they can be used by researchers from a wide variety of disciplines to track changes to sites, monuments, landscapes and societies over time. You can find out more about HEIR here.
You can help to keyword and discuss the images through HEIRtagger. Rephotograph images with HEIRrephoto and contribute to this valuable resource. Search this database by keyword to find images.
For Terms and Conditions visit here.

HEIR is funded by The Reva and David Logan Foundation and the John Fell Fund at the University of Oxford.
> Geographic search
> Advanced search

8 Month Old Photos

Calista is eight months old!  She likes rolling over, baby food, her walker, sitting up, paper and babbling.  She dislikes strangers and being put down.
This past month Calista has really started eating baby food.  She has a lot of smushed prunes, green bean, carrots, and plain yogurt.  It is fun to watch her when we get the food out.  She starts rocking back and forth and is visibly excited.  I also picked up a walker toy from the thrift store and she loves it.  The kids push her all around the townhouse. 
Speaking of the townhouse, Calista has moved up from sleeping in my small closet to sleeping in my big walk in closet.  She even gets to sleep in her own crib!  It seems crazy that she was over seven months before she slept in a crib for the first time but it is what it is.  This closet is perfect because it has plenty of room for all our clothes and the crib.  It really is the size of a small bedroom.  It even has a window that we had to cover with a towel.  I like how she is still really close to me at night because I still feed her twice a night.

I wrote that she likes babbling.  Sometimes she gets really loud and will make grunting noises or the most common thing she likes to say is "dadadadadadadada."  After which I promptly respond, "mama mama."

Calista loves paper.  She really wants it all the time, we have to watch her closely because more than once she has started choking on a piece.
She did really well for these pictures.  It was like I set her down and she was all, "Sure Mom, I'll sit perfectly and look at the camera for you."
"Oh, you want a smile, no problem."


Video: How Dog Sledding Helped This Photographer Get Her Groove Back

If you're looking for an inspirational story heading into the long holiday weekend, this one just might suffice. In this video, we travel to Alaska, where photographer Katie Orlinsky is on assignment to document Kristen Knight Pace as she prepares to race in her first Iditarod sled dog race. Along the way, Orlinsky learns a thing or two about herself and her own limits as both a photographer and a person.

Video: Photographing Polar Bears in One of the Most Extreme Environments on Earth

While they don't get the same level of recognition as explorers and extreme athletes, adventure and wildlife photographers also go to the ends of the Earth to get that perfect shot. Take nature photographer Joshua Holko for instance. In this video, we join him on an expedition to Svalbard in Norway, where he battles some harsh arctic conditions to photograph polar bears in their natural environment. The place is beautiful and unforgiving, and sometimes he must brave the cold for hours to get the photo he is looking for. But when everything comes together, it can be spectacular.

Calista's 7 Months

Calista is now seven months old.  She likes sitting, mom, rice cereal, white noise, and toys.  She dislikes other baby food, strangers, and tipping over. 
I feel like she is starting to get a bit easier to take care of.  She now usually only wakes up twice in the middle of the night (I know that still isn't great but it is an improvement) and the best part is that she started napping in her bed!  It is so great, I feel like I can do so much during her short one hour twice a day naps.  And she is happier throughout the day!  I love that.
Her stranger anxiety has grown in the past month.  She now really doesn't like to go to people she doesn't know.  And even in our family she usually wants me although she will go to others if I'm not around.
Her hair is still super thin and because it is cold out now she wears a hat everyday. 
Calista can sit, but she does still tip over.  I need to watch her closely whenever she sits because she usually falls after a minute or two.


I love this girl and am so happy she is part of our family.

Calista's 6 Months

Yay!! Calista made it to six months old!  The first six months with a newborn are such an adjustment period for the family.  Everyone is getting used to having a baby and the baby is getting used to being alive.  We saw a three week old baby the other day and the kids were in awe of how little she was.  They claimed that Calista was never that little.  It is crazy how fast they grow.

Calista likes:

Toys, she always wants to hold something and loves staring at it while grabbing, eating, and turning it around in her hands.
Music, a few times I've noticed she stopped crying when music came on.  I even spotted her dancing a few times.  It was really really cute.
Rolling, she has mastered the front to back roll.
Mom, this is the first month I've noticed she has wanted me over others in the family.  She will lean toward me if someone else is holding her and act like she wants me.  She will be fine with someone else but sometimes when I walk in the room or start talking she will see/hear me and start crying.  Sometimes I feel like she is crying only at me, like, "Mom, why aren't you holding me?"

Calista Dislikes:
Tummy time, she cries the whole time.
Her bed.  We still cannot get her to nap in her bed.  It somehow seems worse this month.  And let me tell you, it is sooo hard to homeschool the other kids while trying to get Calista to take a nap.  She perfers to be held all day long and just take periodic small naps in your arms.

She is so cute!  I love her little face.
It is impossible to be mad at her.  She has the sweetest smile and the prettiest eyes.

I love this girl!

Penelope's 8 Pictures

Penelope is getting Baptized tomorrow!  We are so excited and happy for her!
Penelope is such a sweet and thoughtful child and this is a huge milestone for her.  In so many ways she seems extra mature for an 8-year-old.  
She definitely is a planner, everything is thought out and preplanned in her head way in advance.  She rarely forget things.
Penelope can get really nervous for thing but this past year I feel like she has started to come out of her shell.  She started going to activity days (a group of girls 8-11) without any problems and she went to her new church class without hesitating.  She even talks to the other kids in her class, which is huge if you knew her in our previous ward.  She tends to stay quiet in group settings but she will talk to her friends and answer questions in a group if asked.
I've noticed she really takes on the big sister role with Scarlett.  They do a lot of things together and she has really stepped up and been the one to lead the way, where sometimes Scarlett will be too scared.  She is also a great big sister to baby Calista.  She loves to hold and play with her.  She cracks me up because she is was so analytical about it at first.  The first time Calista cried while Penelope was holding her she didn't know what to do.  So we talked about softly bouncing her.  So the next time I saw that Calista started crying she mechanically started bouncing her.  Penelope was confused as to why Calista didn't instantly stop crying.  That seems like ages ago because now Penelope is a pro and holding and calming down her baby sister.  It has been such a lifesaver because Calista hates to be put down.
Penelope has specific tastes when it comes to her hairstyles.  It was hard for me to convince her to leave her hair wavy like this for pictures.  She likes it straight down, because that is easiest and quickest.  When I convince her to let me do her hair she likes it neat and nice.  No bumps or poofs on top, and absolutely no messy buns.  Which is a shame because messy buns are my fav.  Even when she takes her hair down at night she doesn't like to go to bed with it looking crazy.  Once she was up crying about it.  It seemed silly to me because no one could even see her.  But I took her into the bathroom and sprayed her hair down and let her comb it out to get rid of the "craziness."
We are homeschooling her this year and it is going really well for her.  She is an awesome reader and has even taken to staying up later than Scarlett and Leon because she is reading on her own.  Math isn't a problem for her although she does sometime write a few numbers backwards.  Writing seems to be the biggest struggle for her.  But we are working on stretching out the sounds and just putting down her best guess.  She gets frustrated because when I tell her to just guess she will but then she won't be able to read it back to herself later.  So so wants to spell everything right but she doesn't know how.  I made her a little chart with common words that she can look at.  That helped but it also slowed her down a ton because she was trying to find how to spell the whole time.  When I'd rather she just let go and let her creativity flow by forgetting spelling and write whatever pops into her head.
Penelope is such a great child, we love her so much!

Nat Geo Presents the Creepiest Adventures on Earth

With October now more than half over, we're starting to inch closer to Halloween, a holiday that always evokes images of ghosts, goblins, and any number of other terrifying creatures. To help get us in the mood, National Geographic has shared a list of the creepiest adventures on Earth, taking us to remote places where strange things just might go bump in the night.

The list is an extensive one, providing readers with 29 unique and scary adventures. Amongst the options that Nat Geo offers are exploring limestone caverns in Mexico that are filled with bats, visiting a national park in Bolivia that is overrun with termites, and visiting a series of caves that are filled with bones in Mali. Other eerie destinations include a hike through Germany's Reinhardswald Mountains where many ancient fairy tales are believed to have taken place and exploring Joshua Tree National Park after dark.

As you would expect from National Geographic, each of the items on the list includes a great photo to help set the stage. Unfortunately, not all of the entires on this slideshow do a great job of telling you exactly why this place is creepy enough to deserve a mention here. This seems to be a reoccurring theme on the Nat Geo website in recent months, with articles that lure you in with nice images an intriguing headlines, but don't always deliver the goods in terms of substance. Still, with a little research, it becomes clear why many of the entities on the "creepy list" belong there.

Check out the entire story here.

Calista 5 Months


Calista is five months old!  I can't believe she is that old already.  It really does go fast.  She is a slobber monster.  Her clothes are always covered in drool.   She also started rolling over from front to back, always on accident, but she does it all the time now.  She love, love, loves toys.  If you put something in front of her she will get so excited she will start shaking.  She just wants to touch and hold it so bad.  She will be so happy if you give her a piece of paper, and as long as you are willing to pick it up for her every five seconds when she drops it, she will play with it tearing it apart, sucking on it, pulling it from her other hand over and over again for like a half an hour.  But if you don't pick it up for her when it falls man does she get upset.
Calista still really wants to be held constantly. If anything it has gotten worse this past month.  She pretty much lives in our arms or her carrier.  And she does not sleep through the night despite our best attempts.
Calista really does smile at us all the time.  Getting her to smile for the camera is quite the challenge though.  She will smile really big for me, but the moment I lift up the camera her smile vanishes.


 I love this last picture.  I'm sure she was like, "Mom, what is this poky stuff you put me on and why aren't you holding me."  Of course she started crying a second later.

Video: Chris Burkard Shares the Place that Changed his Life

If you've done any traveling, more than likely you've visited a place that changed your life in some way. For adventure photographer Chris Burkard, that place is Lofoten, Norway. In this video, which is the first of a new series under the #LifeChangingPlaces banner, he takes us to this utterly spectacular and remote place to give us a glimpse of why it is so amazing and just how it impacted his life.

#LifeChangingPlaces - LOFOTEN - Chris Burkard from Vincent Urban on Vimeo.

Calista 4 Months


Calista if now four months old!  I feel like in the past that is sort of when babies start to get a bit easier to take care of.  She is still up quite a bit at night but I'm hopeful that things will change in that area soon. Once we are settled we are going to try to get her on a sleep schedule.  Right now she usually takes two long naps during the day in her bed, but the time isn't set.  

Calista likes, kisses, half rolling over, drooling, sucking her thumb, smiling, and of course milk.  She doesn't like being left alone, tummy time, or sleeping through the night as she has yet to do it.  She does let us put her in the bumbo seat more often than before and she is getting pretty good at holding her head up.  I don't seem to be holding her as often because I think she doesn't feel as strong of a need to be held as long as she sees people around her.







Calista's 3 Months

Ok, so I'm a little late on this but our life has been kind of crazy getting ready to move to Japan and all.

Calista is three months old!  She likes, drooling, sucking her thumb, stretching, cooing, milk, and smiling.  She doesn't like shots, tummy time, and sleeping longer then three hours at a time.
I love it when she sucks her thumb.  Not only is it ridiculously adorable but I don't have to worry about finding pacifiers all the time.



She has been drooling so much the front of her shirt seems to be permanently wet.  Between the drooling and the few sleepless nights I'm worried she is getting teeth already.  None have popped up though, and hopefully won't for a few more months.

I wasn't really making her do tummy time because she hates it so much.  But at her 3 month appointment the doctor told me that I really should do it.





Stats: 
13.1 lbs 48%
24.5 in. tall 82%
Head 16 in. 68%

The doctor also said she has a heart murmur but she will probably grow out of it and we shouldn't worry about it.