Sunday, 20 November 2022

Ross on Wye from Brampton Abbotts


The clarity of summer seemed to extend well into autumn this year but now that season's mist is regularly upon us. Hard outlines have become softened, strong colours muted and distant objects reduced to outlines. It's a time of year when I like to take landscape photographs with long lenses, stacking up the scene's layers in the image. Today's photograph shows a view of the town of Ross on Wye, with its prominent spire of St Mary, taken from near Brampton Abbotts church.

 photos © T. Boughen     Camera: Lumix FZ1000 2

Friday, 18 November 2022

Bus station silhouettes


We regularly walk from home for business and pleasure. It's good to leave the car in the garage, stretch our legs, enjoy the sights to be seen, and feel we are reducing, in a small way, our contribution to climate change. We also, periodically and for the same reasons, use the train or the bus. Our bus journey usually takes us to and from Gloucester and necessitates the use of what I call a bus station, but what is labelled the Transport Hub. It's across the road from the railway station so I suppose it has greater claim to the title of Hub than many similarly named places. But to my mind it is, and will remain, the bus station, a place where bright yellow double-deckers and passenger silhouettes can be found.

photo © T. Boughen     Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10

Wednesday, 16 November 2022

Weather vane and autumn leaves


This weather vane has featured in one of my blog photographs before. It is on a building in Ross on Wye that was originally a church, then became an antiques shop and is now a collection of flats (apartments). I was drawn to the subject by its close visual juxtaposition with the top of a tree that had turned red for autumn.

photo © T. Boughen     Camera: Sony DSC-RX100

Monday, 14 November 2022

Autumnal silver birch

There are a number of striking trees in autumn - the lime trees with their yellow leaves, the beech with leaves that I suppose are orange but look like gold, and the acers seemingly capable of producing leaves of any colour or even any two colours. However, for subtlety the silver birch (Betula pendula) takes some beating. We came across this example as we walked home and the juxtaposition of the leaves and bark lit by the low sun was hard to resist.

 photos © T. Boughen     Camera: Lumix FZ1000 2

Saturday, 12 November 2022

Two Hereford views revisited


There are photographers who, on principle, take a picture of a view or other subject once only. More common are those who revisit locations looking to get a better shot. Time of day, time of year, type of weather and other factors make such an undertaking quite rewarding. I'm firmly of the second camp. Here are two views in Hereford that I have posted once and photographed several times. The first shows a statue of Edward Elgar (with bicycle) looking at the cathedral. The second image features an interesting house called "The Fosse". Both take advantage of autumn leaves.


 photos © T. Boughen     Camera: iPhone

Thursday, 10 November 2022

Wet autumn leaves


Regular spells of useful rain are now following our dry summer and early autumn, and the leaves are steadily falling from the trees. A walk in the Forest of Dean found us tramping through carpets of assorted leaves that still glistened from a recent downpour. The low morning sun illuminated them quite nicely adding shadows and bright points to the subtle colours, inviting a photograph.

 photos © T. Boughen     Camera: Lumix FZ1000 2


Tuesday, 8 November 2022

Welsh Mountain Ponies


The first time I saw Welsh Mountain Ponies was during a visit to Llanthony Priory in the Vale of Ewyas at the eastern edge of the Brecon Beacons. As I surveyed the medieval ruins I heard a shepherd high on the valley side calling to his dogs that were herding sheep. When I looked at the scene through my lens I could see the shepherd was riding a white pony - an unusual sight in the UK. On our recent walk to the highest point in Herefordshire we came across a group of these semi-wild ponies foraging in the grasses near the mountain summit. They took little notice of us, not even moving away very much. As I took this photograph on a day of benign weather I reflected on the harshness of their life in the winter months.

photo © T. Boughen     Camera: iPhone

Sunday, 6 November 2022

Edge of Herefordshire views


The topography of the county of Herifordshire is often described by analogy with a saucer i.e. lowlands in the centre with hills and mountains at the edge. That's not wholly accurate but the western rim where the land rises to meet the east of the Brecon Beacons fits that picture. Our recent walk took us up the rocky ridge called the Cat's Back (from its profile) (see first photograph) onto the mountains that are often hidden under low cloud.

The views on clear days are magnificent with the field boundaries of the ancient countryside looking like a net or latticework stretched across the terrain. As our walk progessed the cloud came and went then eventually rose completely. Many views resembled the scene out of an aircraft's windows as it makes its descent. The third photograph shows the Olchon Valley, the Cat's Back and a view across Herefordshire.

photos © T. Boughen     Camera: Sony DSC-RX100

Friday, 4 November 2022

View of Pen y Gadair Fawr


When you walk along the ridge that includes the highest point in Herefordshire (and Southern England) you have good views to the west and east. In the easterly direction is a panorama across the county of Herefordshire. To the west are some of the higher peaks of the easternmost Welsh Brecon Beacons. The notable prominence on the skyline in the photograph is Pen y Gadair Fawr, a peak of 2,625 feet (800m). The name translates as "top of the large chair". During our walk we had intermittent low clouds that   looked threatening, but as the day progressed they all but disappeared.

photo © T. Boughen     Camera: Sony DSC-RX100

Wednesday, 2 November 2022

Herefordshire's highest point


We recently undertook a strenuous family walk to the highest point in Herefordshire. This lies on the border with Wales on a mountain known by two names, Black Mountain and Twyn Llech (hill of stone or crag). The summit is on a wide ridge 2,306 feet (703m) above sea level and is the highest point in Southern England (there are higher summits in Wales). This location comes as a surprise to many who do not know the area and assume that Southern England's highest point is on Dartmoor at High Willhays which is 2,037 feet (621m). The most southerly summit in the North of England that surpasses Black Mountain is Great Whernside near Kettlewell at 2,310 feet (704m).

photo © T. Boughen     Camera: Sony DSC-RX100