Lately, I have tried to reorganise some previous travel photos that I have yet properly catalogued. Among them, I spot this whole album of this waterfall in Japan. It is considered as the tallest single span cascade fall in the country. Well, one of friends said to me, "What Fuk u Roda waterfall are you talking about, James?" That is what boys do in a group bantering on innuendo.
As a tourist, it is a great effort to change transport from bullet train to subway, railway, local tram, then buses. In the end, I got lost. I hired a local taxi to bring me to the mountain foothold in the end. Crazy.
Panasonic G9
Leica 12-60mm f2.8-4
I prefer microfourthirds camera on long trips or overseas travel. Just lighter weight and reliable quality.
...lovely. My photos are a disorganized mess.
ReplyDeleteThanks Tom. You are a prolific photo blogger. You post a wealth of information and diverse photographs that I admire the effort tremendously. The flash format of the blog did not work for me in the past. It caused glitches quite a bit too.
DeleteSure would be fun to visit Japan one day, maybe not for the waterfalls, but you got a good shot here.
ReplyDeleteThanks Stefan. It used to be an obsession to hunt for waterfalls in Japan. I stopped it since the world has come to the rest.
DeleteBe wonderful to hear the water falling down those rocks.
ReplyDeleteIt actually sits opposite to a temple.
DeleteWow--- Good waterfall shots aren't easy. But this is a beautiful capture.
ReplyDeleteThank you Bill. At the time, I could not have the luxury of carrying a tripod. So I fix the camera on the rocks without a neutral density filters.
DeleteThe long exposure is just perfect.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the comment. I usually prefer longer exposure but in this setting it probably gets the right amount of time to reveal the velocity of the water
DeleteIt is stunning :-D
ReplyDeleteI need to be better oragnised with my photos!
sometimes the busy life schedule gets the better of us
ReplyDelete