Winterlude in Ottawa

Winterlude is one the winter highlights for Ottawa’s locals and tourists. This two week festival celebrates all things cold. It is famous for both the largest skateway in the world and an exciting ice carving competition.

This winter Webster’s Wildshots enjoyed a reunion in Ottawa, as Paul and Michael visited their son, Richard. This was a great opportunity to do some photography and filming of a Canadian winter… a scary thing for us mere Brits.

Camera in hand the reunited trio set out to capture some photos of Winterlude.

The ice carving competition opened with the one block challenge. Here the grandmasters of ice carving gathered to transform one block of ice in one hour!


As Winterlude continued more ice sculptures were added. The NCC has some great photos on Flickr too And more and more people started to visit, lots travelling by the Rideau canal Skatway.

Environmental Leadership

The Leadership in Environmental Action Forum is a special opportunity for high school students who are interested in environmental leadership.  The forum held by Ottawa’s Natural History Museum allows students to interact and network with students from other high schools and hear from a variety of speakers.

I was asked to speak at this event about my expeditions with Row to the Pole. I discussed some of the scientific evidence for climate change, the decline of Arctic sea ice and the importance of science communication.

 

Check some of the Row to the Pole videos produced by Websters Wildshots to learn more about the ice boat, what Arctic sea is like and why the Arctic is changing.

Lea Meadows Nature Reserve April 2012

 

The Bullhead fish

The Lea Meadows nature reserve is to be found in the Ulverscroft valley, on the Charnwood Forest in Leicestershire, England.  The reserve is bisected by a brook which rises in the hills a mile upstream

and as this catchment area is low intensity pasture land where few if any chemicals are used ,the brook remains clear and unpolluted by modern farming practices.

Either side of the brook lie  meadows which have probably not been ploughed since medieval times.  Such lack of disturbance means that the meadows are rich in wild flowers.

 

 

Lea Meadows nature reserve

 

Although the brook may appear small and inconsequential, its cleanliness is rare in the modern industrial midlands of England.  The brook is characterful, some sections with gravel islands, some with muddy edges.

Where the water flows over a harder rock  the water is only two fingers deep, however in other places, where the gound underneath is soft, the water has cut down and will come up to your knees.

The course of the brook twists and turns between  alders, hawthorn and oak, tight bends have created small banks and winter floods have led to the creation of small ‘ox-bows’ here and there.

Each of these tiny variations and nuances in the character of the brook provides a multitude of niches where wildlife can specialise and thrive.

The brook has an infinate variety of niches where wildlife can thrive.

Bullhead fish are common, in April they lay eggs under stones in the brook.  Here you can see the larvae, each surrounded by a spherical yolk sac which sustains the larvae until they hatch.

 

 

The eggs of the Bullhead are guarded by the male fish until they hatch.

Bullhead males have a large mouth and for the size of the fish a large set of fins, which helps to keep the fish steady in the fast flowing, shallow water where they live.

They do not have scales and their skin colouration of mottled dark browns camouflages them well.

 

Bullheads are nocturnal and at night feed off invertebrates especially along the vegetated edges of the brook  but during the day they conceal themselves on the bottom of the brook amongst the stones.

 

 

Lighting backgrounds

I have a wedding photo shoots in a few weekends. It will be of the Rideau Club. This will be a great venue, but it’s difficult to get into the place to check it out before hand. To prepare for the shoot of I need to practice some off-camera flash. I love off-camera flash work because it gives you so much flexibility with the light: and we all know that photography is painting with light! A particular challenge of the Rideau Club is the dark and rich wooden walls. These potentially beautiful backgrounds can be awkward to work with because the wood harshly reflects flashes. Here is a sequence of shots that I built up to not just manage woods reflections, but make something beautiful out this challenge. First flashes used to light the background. This can replace the uniform dull wood with a gradient of light. A subject is then placed off-center and in front of this halo of light. The subject is then light separately, with the second off-camera flash.

Building a background with lights

 

The Canadian Ski Marathon

 

The Canadian Ski Marathon is an epic winter event situated in Quebec.  Skiers come from all over Canada and the USA, as well as other northern countries such as Norway and Sweden.  Skiers of all abilities and ages can participate by choosing any number of course sections through the snow covered western Laurentian mountains and its surrounding forests and frozen lakes.

For those who dare to ski the full 100 mile course -a true test of endurance- they earn the right to call themselves Coureur de Bois and in so doing take on the challenge of Canada’s winter.

 To see more photos click here!!!

Ski marathon startline

Start of the Ski Marathon

 

Beginning of the ski marathon

 

 

x-treme cross country skiing

Geoff White completes his first GOLD Ski Marathon

 

 

 

 

Urban crow roost

In Ottawa city, thousands of crows fly in to roost every winters night.  Birds do this as cities are slightly warmer than the surrounding countryside and therefore they conserve vital energy, energy required to survive. Crows are intelligent and highly social, two traits that enable them to compete successfully .

 

Check out Wildshots other crow images

Murder of crows by the Rideau river, prior to roosting

 

 

Roosting crows are safe for the night in trees

 

Speed Skating

A popular winter sport in Canada is Speed Skating

Racing starts at Brewers park speed skating ring Ottawa

 

The skaters enter the first bend

 

Skating fast

 

One of the strategies of Speed Skating is the use of the 'pelaton'