Seasons, Weather and Light – Views at Home and Around

Sun catches the tops of trees on a January day on Mount Kobau near Osoyoos. Many trees were killed by forest fire in 2015, while others nearby survived. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

My local landscape photography will be displayed at The Art Gallery Osoyoos during the “Up Close And Personal” show and sale by the Osoyoos Photography Club (OPC).

The show runs from Thursday, March 4 to Saturday, March 27. The gallery is located at 8713 Main Street, Osoyoos, BC — just up the street from town hall — next to the quail sculpture. Opening hours are noon to 4 p.m., Wednesday to Saturday.

The work of more than a dozen other local photographers who are OPC members is also on display during this show. See the Osoyoos Photography Club website.

Seasons, Weather and Light – Views at Home and Around

“Seasons, Weather and Light – Views at Home and Around” is my own show within the OPC show. Due to limited wall space, only a few of these photographs will be shown on the wall framed. Most of the rest should be available at the gallery either as prints or photo greeting cards. Any sales must be handled by The Art Gallery Osoyoos during the show.

These are photos I’ve taken over the past three years in the South Okanagan, Similkameen and Boundary District of southern British Columbia. There are also a couple from an OPC trip to Palouse, WA in early 2019.

In landscape photography, I’m drawn by seasons, weather and light — these are constantly changing and they give a landscape character. They also convey a sense of time — of day and of year.  It’s a theme in all my landscape photography.

Enjoy!

Click on thumbnails to view as gallery with larger images:

 

After an early February warm spell, the Similkameen River is carrying chunks of ice downriver. (Richard McGuire photo)

 

Winter is not my favourite time of year, but getting outdoors helps you make the best of it. By February there are usually signs of relief in the southern BC Interior. Ice melts, days get a little longer and there are more days of blue sky. Weather inversions still hold fogs in the valley and mountains, making for moody atmosphere.

A man walks a dog at Haynes Point (swiws) Provincial Park in Osoyoos on a mild February day. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

A mallard duck showers by flapping his wings in Osoyoos Lake. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

A Canada goose loudly expresses an opinion while another picks through snow on the shore of Osoyoos Lake. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

In February in the South Okanagan, sometimes the cloudy skies break up to let in sunlight. Spotted Lake, which is sacred to Okanagan First Nations, is already a magic place. This day was especially magic. (Richard McGuire photo)

Other winter months — December and January — can be flat and almost monochrome, crisp and cold, foggy and freezing.

A bird rests on ice next to the raging Ashnola River near Keremeos. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

Burned trees near Rock Creek are shrouded in fog on a January day. A vast area of forest burned in the wildfire of 2015. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

Horses graze on dry vegetation through the snow near Anarchist Summit, east of Osoyoos, B.C. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

An old log barn on Wagon Wheel Rd. sits in a farmed area with many evergreen trees all around. On this late December day, the top edge of a foggy thermal inverson was lit by the afternoon sun. The Okanagan Valley below was covered in clouds and fog. (Richard McGuire Photo)

Mount Baldy is covered in January snow as seen from the Okanogan Highlands near Molson, WA. (Richard McGuire Photo)

Horses graze on dry vegetation through the snow near Anarchist Summit, east of Osoyoos, B.C. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

A man walks his dog along the road through swiws (Haynes Point) Provincial Park at the end of December. Much of the lake is still open water. (Richard McGuire Photo)

Burned trees near Rock Creek are shrouded in fog on a January day. A vast area of forest burned in the wildfire of 2015. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

Burned trees in the Similkameen rise from the snow on a January day. This file occurred in 2018. (© Richard McGuire Photo) (276) (© Richard McGuire Photo)

Spring, summer and fall round out the year. For more from those seasons see some of my previous shows. Here are a few:

The setting sun casts shadows on the undulating land of the Palouse, Washington as seen from Steptoe Butte in late April. Isolated rainstorms create moody skies. (Richard McGuire Photo)

Several members of the Osoyoos Photography Club met up in Palouse, WA and drove up Steptoe Butte for sunset — a popular spot for photographers. The weather and light this evening as the sun went down were amazing.

The setting sun casts shadows on the undulating land of the Palouse, Washington as seen from Steptoe Butte in late April. Isolated rainstorms create moody skies. (Richard McGuire Photo)

A flower has gone to seed in a burned forest on Mt. Kobau that is now regenerating after a fire a few years earlier. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

From late April until well into May, a yellow flower blooms on the mountains and grasslands of the South Okanagan. Arrowleaf balsamroot is a native species related to the sunflower. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

Warm sun lights the mountains in gold as seen from the boardwalk at the Osoyoos Desert Centre. (© Richard McGuire Photo)

There are rainbows everywhere in Vancouver’s Davie Village, the heart of the gay community. From my 11th floor balcony at the Sandman Inn, I looked out on the action. (HDR with composite of rainbow) (Richard McGuire Photo)

When you book a discounted hotel room through a popular site — Hotwire — you often don’t know the hotel you are getting. You just know the class of hotel and the general area. I drew three nights at the Sandman Inn in Vancouver’s Davie Village at the end of October 2019. It was a lucky draw because this area has dozens of great restaurants of every ethnicity and style, and it’s an active part of the city. It’s also the heart of the gay community, and crosswalks and posts were decorated in the colours of the rainbow. As my visit coincided with Halloween, many people were dressed up. As I went up to my 11th floor room, I shared the elevator with a group of men in drag. I photographed the scene at night with a tripod on my tiny balcony, only looking down through the viewfinder.

I normally don’t manipulate photos beyond basic exposure and contrast adjustments, but I had fun afterwards layering images taken at different time exposures and compositing in a much bigger rainbow. Below is a detail of the crosswalk on the lower right of the larger image:

There are rainbows everywhere in Vancouver’s Davie Village, the heart of the gay community. From my 11th floor balcony at the Sandman Inn, I looked out on the action. (Composite HDR with multiple time exposures) (Richard McGuire Photo)

 

About Richard McGuire

Richard McGuire is a photographer and photojournalist based in Osoyoos in the South Okanagan region of British Columbia, Canada.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.