It’s time to photograph the spring colours.

I can hear my neighbours mowing their property. Its spring and with the cool sunny weather and light spring rains everything is growing colourful and fast. 

Every year and I am sure they look at the almost knee high grass that fills the bushed in area between my house and the lilac covered fence that hides me from the road and shake their heads at I’m sure they think is my lazy behaviour.

Ok, yes I am good at being lazy. However, the real reason I don’t clip the growing grass is the flowers.  This time of year there are colourful flowers everywhere.  In my yard there is no plan, no cultivated areas with no well-kept borders.  There is just a wild canvas of colour. Most flowers have planted themselves and last year my friend Jo added to the colours by scattering mixed seeds.  

I’ll mow when the blooms are over and the summer heat turns the grass yellow, but for now the poppies are getting close to blooming, maybe after next week there will be hundreds of tall, bright, orange flowers added to the reds, whites, pinks, yellows and blue flowers and multi-coloured bushes that are showing now. 

There is cornucopia (that’s a good word to use) of colour that will happen till about the end of June depending on the rain and the summer heat. (It all doesn’t happen at once. Some colours are early and some colours are late)

For me it is time to photograph another season in my garden.

This past week I have been walking around the garden looking and deciding what I want to photograph.  It has been wet and not to hot so everything is at it’s best for me.

Yesterday around 2pm I put a 200mm macro (manual) lens on my camera and I got my tripod and walked out. The light was excellent, not too bright and not to dull. Some moving shadows from the high clouds and there was just an ever so slight breeze. (Sometimes)

I usually bring one or two flashes on stands, but the light was so wonderful that I didn’t want to change the change it with a flash. I kept my camera on Manual mode and moved the shutter speed faster or slower depending on the light and what Aperture I wanted to use.

Sometimes my subjects demanded a short depth of field and sometimes I wanted to see more behind. That meant constantly changing the aperture.

I used ISO 400 most of the time and only increased it when my subject was in low light or the breeze picked up.  Using the higher ISO meant I could increase my shutterspeed when a plant moved.  The tripod kept the camera still and in position while I adjusted my camera’s meter. 

I chose the old manual focus macro lens instead of my AF macro so I could focus on a flower and slowly increase or decrease my depth of field using the aperture without changing the view. It is neat to watch parts of flowers come into and go out of focus as I change the aperture.

Mostly I am photographing the light and the colour.  Although there were times when I would think, “this might make a good B&W image” and work to capture the tonality that I can continue to be creative with later on my computer. I do shoot RAW files, but on most of the images from that walk all I did was crop, increase the contrast and slightly sharpen. (RAW images like sharpening)

This is a good time to photograph a garden in my part of British Columbia.  In Kamloops just 45minutes away the flowers have been blooming for over a week and I expect if I drove up the hill only to my friends Nancy and Bill’s house only 15 winding road minutes away the colours wouldn’t quite be ready yet.

It’s a neat time of year and do take my advice to have some fun photographing the colours.