Walking along the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park around St. Brides Bay, St. Davids peninsula and along towards Fishguard packs a photographic punch with every corner turned. Each cove opens up wonderful opportunities to find the perfect shot, I can only hope that I have been able to get somewhere close to achieving this! For shots taken on my recent Welsh Walks check out the new portfolio here.
1. Take a photo 2. Ask yourself “Why?”
During my recent tour of Asia, whilst eager to photograph new unfamiliar surroundings and experiences, I started to have a niggling voice in my head asking the question “why are you taking this photo?”. Further, what was I trying to capture through my lens and what was my motive behind the shot?
For those shots that show the beauty of the landscape this is an easier question to answer. But, when walking through a village in Laos on the shores of the Mekong river, it was all too easy to point the lens at villagers and their children and shoot away, albeit checking with them first that it was ok to do so. Now, to me, these village scenes are ones that I seldom see and, coming from the other side of our planet, these sights are one that I wanted to capture to aid my fading memory in the future and to show friends and family back home.

Villagers shelter from the rain in Northern Laos
But let’s put this into perspective. I’m not capturing some long lost tribe and revealing them to the world via a Sunday newspaper magazine supplement or for Nat Geo. This is an ordinary riverside village complete with wooden houses and 21st century satellite dishes. Do I, and perhaps “we”, find these images interesting because there’s an underlying innocence of a life now lost to developed nations, or perhaps because I harbour an underlying guilt about the imbalance between so-called rich nations and developing ones? Or maybe I just like the shot for the colour and texture.
How would I react if, when opening my front door at home, I was snapped away at by some tourist from a far off land who found my living standards somewhat different from theirs?
Perhaps the answer to this is even more straightforward: 1. Ask yourself “Why?” 2. Take a photo.
I’d be interested to know what others think.
Bertie
Conversations
Sometimes there’s a fleeting moment of interaction between people that’s captured, more often by chance rather than design. It’s part of being human, how we interact, a smile here, a smirk there or a glance that says a thousand words. Here are three such occasions witnessed which, still today, bring out the curious in most of us, wanting to know more.
Shoeshine
English Landscapes
Despite common belief, England does get some sun from time to time. Another advantage over those countries elsewhere on the globe is that there are four distinct seasons although spring and autumn seem to be contracting into a few days between summer and winter. The good news is that, as a photographer, different opportunities are made available with respect to light and how the natural surroundings change.
Wadi Rum, Jordan
Jordan is a country rich in both history and stunning landscapes that offers a myriad of opportunities to both the curious tourist and the photographer. Wadi Rum, where camel trains of old traversed the sands transporting goods from the Orient to the western empires, is a landscape of sand valley floors and rising granite and sandstone landforms. To see further images from a recent trip to this fascinating country click here to view a gallery with shots from Petra, Wadi Rum, Amman and Jerash.
Summertime
New Site Launched …
Welcome to the new site, very much a work in progress but please come back and check out the developments!










