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Photo Tours and workshops with Australian Photographer Adam Monk

Lake Argyle Skyline

January 4th, 2013

Happy New Year,  I’m back at work and it all begins anew.  At the end of my photographic tour to the Bungle Bungles in 2011 we took the group on a cruise on Lake Argyle.  It was a perfectly still afternoon without a breath of wind, a perfect day for cruising on a beautiful lake with the Carr Boyd ranges for a backdrop.

Invisible Horizon of Lake Argyle, Kimberley Region of Western Australia

Islands hanging in space

Still waters of Lake Argyle

At one point somewhere near he middle of Lake Argyle, just as the setting sun was making the Kimberley Sandstone come alive and the reflections were rippling on the water, this image presented itself.  It seems to me that the water continued on and on up into the sky with no horizon visible, while the islands in the distance seemed to just hang in space.

The image only remained for a few seconds, and the Linhof Technorama is not the easiest camera to hand hold… and keeping the horizon straight with the 72mm Schneider Kreuznach lens was a challenge (35mm equivalent of about 17mm), but i think its worked and so did the AIPP as they gave me a silver award for it in last years APPAs.

For all the latest Photographic Tours and Photographic workshops with Adam Monk click HERE>

Dancing Monks of Bhutan

December 19th, 2012
Costumed dancers in a Dance festival in Bumthang, Bhutan

During many of the festivals in Bhutan (a country with lots of festivals), they act out their traditional stories in dance.  Most of the stories are quite incomprehensible to the uninitiated without a guide explaining them, but they are fantastic to watch and exciting to be a part of the enthusiastic crowd as the dancers whirl around the coutyard with their costumes flaring out in bright vibrant colours and patterns.

Costumed dancer in a Dance festival in Bumthang, Bhutan
Black Hat Dance
Costumed dancer in a Dance festival, Bumthang province, Bhutan
Black Hat Dance 2

Monasteries, Dzongs and Festivals

For many of the festivals, especially those in the Monasteries and Dzongs (temple fortress), the dancers are often the local Monks.  During my recent photographic tour of Bhutan we all saw many temples and Dzongs, but generally photography is forbidden within the inner sanctums of the temples themselves (fair enough i reckon, got to have some privacy).  Well imagine our surprise when we were standing (quiet and respectful) outside the temple door of the Trongsa Province Dzong watching while the Monks rehearsed their dances, when one of the senior Monks invited us in to take photos!

The light was streaming through the ancient windows behind the Monks and falling onto the old planked hardwood flooring creating a stunning backdrop to set off the deep red and saffron robes of the whirling Monks.  It was a magical experience, and was very hard to leave.

Dancing Monks of Bhutan
Dancing Monks of Bhutan
Dancing Monks of Trongsa Dzong

Bhutan Photo Tour 2013 dates released

The itinerary and the dates for the Bhutan Photography tour for 2013 have been finalised and booked.  I have reworked the whole itinerary and reduced the numbers of this photographic tour down to a maximum of 10 people to ensure a better and more rewarding experience for all.  You can read about this exciting new photo tour to Bhutan right here.

Chilli Bhutan

December 13th, 2012
Chillies of Bhutan
Dried red chillies for sale

The Bhutanese love to eat chilli, they eat it with almost every meal, but more like a vegetable (actually a fruit) rather than a seasoning. The chilli  is actually the main dish.  To achieve this they need a lot of chillies, so almost every small farm holding throughout rural Bhutan has at least one field of chillies, some have very big fields of Chillies, and every market will have a large selection from green to red, and from fresh to dried.

Iron Bridge Monastery during Chilli harvest, Paro Bhutan
click the image to see the chillies

The image on the left shows the Iron Bridge Monastery in Paro province during the chilli harvest.  The field in the bottom left is al chilli bushes, and the red spreading down the hill from the monastery are the freshly harvested chillies drying in the sun. Click on the image to see a bigger version.

Not everyone has a big piece of land to dry their chillies on, so what better place to dry your chillies than on the roof of your house… or convent?

drying chillies on the roof of the Buddhist nunnery in Thimpu, Bhutan
Making good use of roof space

This is one of the few Buddhist Nunneries in Bhutan (in Thimpu, the capital) and this young Buddhist Nun has been sent up to the roof to collect the chillies that are dry and ready for storage for the winter.  Seems like it was a nice spot in the sun to rest and contemplate for a while… and blow bubbles.

If you would like to visit Bhutan with me next year go to my Bhutan Photo Tour page for details.

drying chillies on the roof of the Buddhist nunnery in Thimpu, Bhutan
Taking a well earned rest
Chillies for sale in the markets of a small town in Bhutan
Chillies for sale
Chillies for sale in the markets of a small town in Bhutan
Spot the Chillies

Vietnam and Cambodia Photographic tour info sessions

December 11th, 2012
Vietnam and Cambodia photographic tour with Adam Monk
A young Buddhist Monk in Vietnam

The Vietnam and Cambodia Photographic tour that I am leading is approaching fast, we depart Perth 27th April 2013 and arrive back in Perth 11th May 2013.  This tour is a great combination of fantastic photo opportunities, cultural experiences and culinary delights combined with lots of free time to explore these locations in your own time and to download images, To read more about this photographic tour click HERE>

Information Sessions

I am having an information night on this Tour at 10.00am and again at 6.30pm, on Tuesday Dec 18th in Leederville.  If you would like to register for one of these sessions please call Maxiema  on 0415 854 179 or you can email tours@adammonk.com

Vietnam and Cambodia photographic tour with Adam Monk 2013
Halong Bay at sunset

Cats of Bhutan

December 11th, 2012
Cats of Bhutan, Trongsa Dzong. Bhutan Photo tour with Adam monk
Are you getting my best side?
Cats of Bhutan, Bumthang Dzong.  Bhutan Photo tour with Adam monk
The face of contentment

Bhutan is a great country to be an animal, stray animals are cared for and fed by just about everybody and i have never seen so many happy well fed stray dogs.  The bhutanese almost never or rarely eat meat, usually only when an animal dies by accident or old age, and i’m pretty sure they never eat cat!

If you would like to meet and photograph the cats of Bhutan join me on on one of my Bhutan photo tours. 15 days of adventure through the magical Himalayan Kingdom of Bhutan.

Rivers and Rice fields of Bhutan

December 11th, 2012
Rice field landscape of Bhutan.  Bhutan Photo tour with Adam monk
Rice field landscape

I thought it was time to put up some shots from my recent photography tour to Bhutan that were not portraits, so here we go…  Bhutan is situated at the Southern base of the Himalaya range, squashed between India, Tibet and Nepal, so as you would expect most of the country is mountainous.

traditional house and rice field in the countryside of rural Bhutan.  Bhutan Photo tour with Adam monk
Traditional Bhutanese architecture

They have the knack of terracing out rice fields on the edge of mountains and these are visible all along the winding roads of rural Bhutan.  The houses are all built in traditional style, which is unique and quite beautiful, really defining the countryside as different to anywhere else.

Rivers of Bhutan

Wild Bhutanese river at twilight
Wild river in the Chumey Valley

Rivers and waterfalls are everywhere, the countryside is full of them rushing out of the mountains.  Many of them are fed from glacial or snow melt and most of them run all year long.  Bhutan is a very lush and fertile country indeed.

Dont forget to click on the images to get a larger view.  more soon…

Wild river of Bhutan
Wild river in Trongsa Province, Bhutan

Portrait of Bhutan

December 6th, 2012
Bhutan Carpenter Portrait.  Bhutan Photo tour with Adam monk
Bhutan carpenter.  Bhutan Photo tour with Adam monk

These are random shots from a roadside stop on the way to Trongsa Dzong in central Bhutan shot on one of my Bhutan Photo tours.  This fellow and the rest of his team were in the process of putting up a viewing platform shelter on the opposite side of the valley from the Trongsa Dzong (temple fortress).  

And like almost all officially placed lookout platforms, it was in the wrong place!  It was situated directly opposite the Dzong and the view was very uninspired, the workers themselves were much more interesting, this fellow in particular.  He has such a lovely open face, and the light was just right.  I got some more interesting pictures of the Dzong later.

Trongsa Province, Central Bhutan.  Shot with a Canon 5D Mk II, 24-105mm f4L lens.

Bhutan, Roadmap of Life

December 5th, 2012

If the Wrinkles on a persons face are the roadmap of their life, then this Bhutanese fellow has had a very full life indeed.  For me it seems that Bhutan is a country of people photography. The countryside is spectacular, the nature is wild and the architecture beautiful, but the faces of the people were what i kept seeing and photographing first.  

The people have such beautifully open and diverse faces, so i took lots and lots of portraits, some sneaky ones, like this one, but most with the consent (and a conversation, with lots of hand waving and laughing) with the person involved.

A Buddhist Monk watches a festival in Bumthang. Bhutan Photo tour with Adam monk
A road map to life

This image shows an old Man watching a festival in a small Monastery of Prakar Lhakhang in the Chumey Valley, Bumthang, a province of Central Bhutan.  Maybe for the next Photography Tour of Bhutan I will concentrate more on landscape?

Bhutan, the land of National Happiness

December 5th, 2012
Prayer Flags on a bridge in Bhutan.  Bhutan Photo tour with Adam monk
Prayer Flags and no Depth of Field

Im back from my first Bhutan photo tour.  What an amazing country full of lovely people and spectacular scenery, Bhutan really is a photographers paradise.  The problem is, I took 2000 photographs, well, that’s not actually the problem, the problem is choosing which image to put up first!  So i’ve begun pretty randomly with the first images that caught my eye when i was editing in Lightroom this morning.

Buddhist Monk in Trongsa Dzong Bhutan.  Bhutan Photo tour with Adam monk
The National Happiness Index

The image above is a detail of Prayer flags on a bridge over a river, shot with a 400mm lens wide open (f5.6) to create a very shallow depth of Field. The image to the left really typifies the Bhutanese people and the National Happiness Index, which really does exist.

I’ll just keep adding images here randomly, and I’m in the process of writing a page reviewing the whole of my first photographic tour of Bhutan.  If you were on the tour with me, please feel free to write feedback here on the Blog.  More to come, next is the photographic tour of Cambodia in March April next year, cant wait!

I will be running another Bhutan photo tour each year, click the link to see all the details.

Photographic Tour of Vietnam and Cambodia 2013

August 20th, 2012
Photographic tour of Vietnam and Cambodia with Adam Monk 2013

Exciting news!  I have just finalised the details for an amazing Photography tour of Vietnam and Cambodia for 2013.  Their will be a whole page going up about this with loads more details (very soon), but i wanted to get this up straight away.  The tour is 15 days/14 nights and leaves Perth 27th April 2013, includes just about everything and costs just $3950 (twin share) per person.

Information Night

We are having an information night this Thursday evening 23rd August in Leederville.  I know its short notice, but if you would like to come along Give Maxiema a call on (08)9382 5049 or you can email maxiema@traveltree.com.au  Even if you cant come to the info night but you would like to know more Maxiema will be happy to send you some information.

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