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Landscapes

As a practitioner in AgilePM, a professional Scrum Master and working in the role of an Agile delivery manager, I don’t consider myself an expert. If I did I would probably remain lost in the sea of Agile experts. There are a lot. Although I’m unsure exactly what an expert is. Feel free to let me know if you have any insight.

The idea that ‘Agile’ is order is not respecting the environment where it operates.

I have mentioned before the belief that many people who consider themselves ‘Agilists’ do so to fit into the crowd without really getting the point. Another misconception about ‘Agile’, is its simplicity! It’s a piece of cake… Go away for a couple of days or a week on a course and the little bit of knowledge starts to open up the possibility of what it can produce. It it’s no secret that it can be an incredibly valuable method / mentality / idea / thing / whatever… It certainly seems to work well in a development / software environment, but it is far from simple when it comes to implementing it.

When you look at it as a Scrum team or other small team working towards a valuable product, it looks pretty simple, and those diagrams do a good job of making it appear simple, but that is their job.

The problem is though, ‘Agile’ does not operate in a sterile bubble, where communications are controlled on rails and everyone knows exactly what they and their whole team are doing down to the minuscule detail and management sit in their offices comfortable that the scrum team is producing immense value every iteration.

If only it was that simple…

Now, I don’t have the solutions for you, I told you I’m not an expert, all I do know is that I have looked at an organisation in. the past and said to myself, “Agile would really work well there!”, and then the real work begins. You don’t have to have a vision as to how it will ultimately look, because, the point is that true ‘Agile’ adapts to and around the team, as long as it’s understood and respected enough. I mean, have you ever truly thought about exactly what an empowered team looks like? It’s about the loss of control and ultimate trust, mountains of trust and that subject is a blog post in itself.

How many times have you managed a team that was a carbon copy of the team before?

Thats right and the primary reason a lazy, formulaic approach to ‘Agile’ will be doomed to fail, it will never get to perfection for more than a moment and some dynamic or other messes with it.

It will always and constantly need attention and love to succeed. It’s just not simple to organise a group of human beings into a performing team by just reading a few pages in a text book. It’s a challenge, a rewarding challenge at times, but a challenge all the same..

But, you know what? It might just be worth that effort…

We all have bad days, weeks… Don’t we? [pleading].

I’ve had better days, I’ve also had worse days, although it’s easy sometimes to forget that little nugget.

What is different these days, is that I have methods to help me get through the tough times, that I didn’t a few years ago.

It’s nearly time for me to get up (at 0445 hrs) even though I’ve been awake since 0130 hrs. On a plus point I’ve done some reading so thats a tick on my to do list. I’m ahead of my game today already… Every cloud.

I’ve journaled, another tick.

I will go for a run once there is some light outside (another tick).

I need to find a photograph from my archive to put on this post too. What shall I use? What seems appropriate?

I have fight now, I won’t let this grind me down. However I feel at this moment, I’m a day closer to my goals.

Mission for today…. stay positive.

Thankyou.

The lake district in the UK is a really special place.

Covid has not affected everyones productivity.

Like pretty much everyone else, Covid19 has affected their work lives, the ‘work from home’ scenario should be in full swing now. For most, it has been a change, some for the better and others… well you know?

I must admit, that for me it started pretty well. I could see better communication within the department although the down side was more meetings I did not ‘need’ to be at.

I think that when changes in the work place occur, either by design or necessity, it is very important to keep checking. What starts off as progress can soon lead to complacency and turmoil if not unchecked.

In particular, in these circumstances, when there is such massive change in an organisation, it is important to be heard. Your opinion counts and if you are having issues with a process (they are not working for you), it is better to address them directly and positively than just letting them go on. The chances are, others are feeling the same but possibly don’t have the courage to bring up the problem.

Stay strong, stay polite (although you may not always feel like it), and remember that a team is only as strong as its weakest member.

We all have our imperfections but it does not mean we are useless.

Landscapes.  I dabble, I will be honest, I don't spend the time on them that I should.  Commercially they are quite hard to make any profit from them, unless you happen to be called Peter Lik (Google him).  Worst of all, though, is that as the summer gets closer, the mornings get even earlier. So every once in a while, when work allows, I will get out there and capture a landscape or two, or just go and look for a possible future image for when the light is better. Mark-2016-04-04--42 I know I should do more, I know I should, but that is where we must try to balance our lives.  There are times that I wonder how some photographers manage to make their photography the sole purpose (or certainly give the impression).  Life does not seem to be in the way for some. 22608538936_448323f4e3_o I contemplate offering framed landscapes to clients who book a particular wedding package, but struggle with this too.  Who would want one of my Landscapes on their wall?  Lets face it, I don't even have any of my own hanging up. [caption id="attachment_1949" align="alignnone" width="3000"]British Army assist the Environment Agency with floods.  

I don’t really get to take too many landscapes.  I feel you really need to be out looking for them constantly and the reality is I will see a potential but the weather is either wrong or it is the wrong time of day.  So I make a mental note and go about my business.

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I have been eyeing up this location for a while, the leaves are turning and in the evening light these colours will simply pop.

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On the way home today, I stopped…… and explored.

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There is not much more I can say about that.

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I have talked about Landscapes a few times on here and openly admit that to do them justice (for the vast majority) you have to invest time and effort.  Sometimes you have to see an opportunity and try to find a way to make the most of it.

On my way home today the weather rapidly changed.  My cameras were sat on the front seat and I spent the next few minutes looking more at the sky than the road.  I had already decided that I was going to stop, but I just needed to find the right place.

Surrounded by fields with varying crops, I settled on a strawberry field where locals were busy picking and eating the crop.  The sudden darkness did not seem to bother anyone.

Enjoying the fresh breeze that you have craved all day on a day like these, I rushed to select lens, ISO, shutter, Graduated filter, tripod, I had to work fast as the clouds moved so quickly.  I managed to make a few exposures before I had to move on.

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This one is my personal favourite.

How many of us drive around, see something interesting and stop to take a photograph?

In these days of being so busy, it is not always that easy, is it?

I carry my camera around with me most of the time, and after a recent visit to a Peter Lik gallery, I have been invigorated by the landscape around me.

The reality is that we are mostly rushing around towards the next deadline that is simply to close.  What is the answer?  Leave plenty of time to allow for opportunity or change your mind set so that time is really not all that important.

Now the German landscape in my immediate vicinity is not the most dramatic and certainly not the kind that Peter Lik visits for his landscapes (sounds like excuses I know and perhaps they are).

The reality is that to do landscapes justice, you have to dedicate time and effort, more than most people (myself included perhaps) are willing or simply able to give.  It is sad and a little depressing to admit but like most photographers time is our enemy and quite profound as it is one of the primary parameters we work with on a daily basis.  We are always either fighting it or trying our best to manipulate it.

Now I am by no means a landscape guru by any stretch of the imagination but sometimes it is fun to get out on your own with a camera and a 4 x 4 and simply look for the opportunities.  There is a convention that says decent landscapes should be taken at sunrise or sunset and really most of the time these are the best times as you can get some amazing light but quite often these times can give you a pretty cliche’d image.  That is not to say a bad image, but for me they can lose impact if you feel you have seen them before.

We get so bombarded with imagery these days as there are so many cameras clicking away all the time, there ends up being some fantastic stuff out there but sadly often they are hidden among the mundane.  A quick look on flickr searching for landscapes and you will see what I mean.

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Germany is a stunning country in so many ways and I plan to try to capture more of this, I will of course share with you too.

There are some more examples of my Landscape work on our website http://www.LIMEfotographic.com Please feel free to visit.

Landscape photography is I think in many ways one of the hardest genre’s of photography and certainly one of the more difficult to make a living from.  The search for a photograph is demanding and very time consuming and nothing beats experience.

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Whilst in Las Vegas we have the opportunity to visit the gallery of Peter Lik, arguably one of the most prolific landscape photographers of our time.  Now there are some amazing landscapes out there to see if you look hard enough, digital photography has certainly made the skill more accessible.

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To see inspirational imagery in the flesh is always very inspiring for me, the internet and books mostly sell the real stuff short but to see these images as the photographer intended can be great fun.  I have to say that the way Peters’ images are displayed is nothing short of amazing and has given me ideas for presenting some of my own work.

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Inspired I decided to make some landscapes of my own.  These are not in the same league as his dedication to capturing the greatest of images is overwhelming and shows you what it takes to succeed in this, at times, fickle industry.

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I don’t really do many landscapes but I would seriously like to rectify this if I can.  Maybe 2013 will be a year for landscapes after all.

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Never been to the United States before, wow this place is big. Travel from Europe is long but this is what we were greeted by from our hotel.

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At times the life of a photographer can send you to some stunning locations.  I recently found myself working (yes, you heard me, working) in the French Alps to cover a skiing competition.

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So rather than show you images of skiers, I thought I would share something else.

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I don’t really do many landscapes, although I enjoy them, I find them frustrating most of the time because I am either there in the wrong time or I am simply unable to stop and take the photo.  Comes with rushing around doing other things I suppose.

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Not typical landscapes and not the same as I have done in the past (I do have some examples on my website http://www.LIMEfotographic.com).  This time I was interested in the fast flowing water, the fresh snow and ice sitting on the rocks and the at times abstract nature.

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Specifically looking for long exposures, a good tripod was a must and the help of a local (well kind of a local, an American, or Texan, if he had his way), we went exploring a small stream looking for interesting shots.

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I have experimented with some different post production ideas and was inspired to be bold by this same ‘local’ who showed me some of his own work.

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Like always, like it or loathe it, the work should speak for itself.  You decide.

One of the biggest jobs we as photographers have is trying to keep on top of our archives, this is no mean feat for those of us that are not what you would call a specialist photographer.  As a generalist, we can tackle most things.  Also like anyone else we need to recharge our batteries.

After a few days away (somewhere we have not been before), we had been to the seaside.  On looking around on the map we settled on an area to the north of Germany, close to the border of Holland.  With a huge Dyke along the coast, breathtaking and dramatic the scenery was not, but what that gave you was the potential for big big skies.

Thankfully one night did not dissonant.