Steve Marshall
I was travelling up from Berkshire on the day so had to leave home about 4:30a.m. A glorious trip; mist lying on the fields before sunrise, an enormous, red, dull sun rising, the twisty church in Chesterfield, dry-stone walls, green dales, heathlands all these opportunities I've missed because I'm travelling hard. Once I got there I didn't miss them at all. A great day.
I arrived about 7:30am - early! I could have stopped for that sunrise in time to get some shots of some of the riders 'in civvies', walking the course. If I had been knowledgeable about who was who, I could have got some good candids then. As it was, I think I walked past the competitors to get shots of the grooms.
Eventually some of the others arrived (did I mention that I had the furthest to come and got there first? Shall I mention it again?) and with them, another highpoint of the day. I bought Brian's 14-54. I now had the E1 with 50-200SWD and E500 with 14-54 so dumped everything else in the car and stuck with that combination for the day. Once the sun was fully up I dropped the E1 from ISO 200 to 100, the E500 varied between ISO 100 and 200 as I used it for some shots inside the various trade, market and entertainment tents.
All shots were taken using Aperture Priority, about 50% using a circular polariser (sharing it between the 50-200SWD and 14-54 which have the same filter size)
I did try pre-focussing on a jump and then waiting for the horse to appear but in light that good both of these lenses could lock focus as soon as the horse appeared so it didn't give much benefit except where you wanted to compose in-camera (with wildlife/animals I generally shoot to hit it and crop later to compose it! I'd rather have a badly composed but saveable shot than a beautifully composed background with the subject missing. Some of the landscape photographers might give us an insight into how they approached moving targets though.)
The excellent Olympus vests coped happily with the E500/14-54 in one inner pocket and a mound of cards, batteries, EC20 (not used on the day as we could get as close as we wanted) and the Hyperdrive Colourspace in the other. This tardis-like garment swallows masses of gear, unfortunately you still have the weight to carry.
Things I learnt about the equipment
(a) 14-54mm will focus to 22cm but this is only an inch or two from the front element, so that was an unexpected bonus for close-ups. The lens hood will show in the corners at 14mm. The lens hood will go over a circular polariser, but you won't be able
to turn it!
(b) E1/50-200SWD combination: if you tuck the lens under your arm to hold it while you use the other camera, and if you are stood in front of a bright red London bus, and if your arm presses the auto WB button your next set of shots will be glowing and blue! If you do the same thing again, but this time nudge the focus switch to C-AF, with the silent SWD lens it can take a while before you realise why your focus keeps wandering off!
(c) Colourspace Hyperdrive: I took about 950 RAW+JPEG shots during the course of the day. I did have just enough cards to last but the Colourspace Hyperdrive (whichever way round the name is) does give peace of mind. I could clear down a 4G card in 5 minutes or so and be ready to carry on. Quick and easy to use but, on the down side, the screen is hard to see in bright light and, as a glasses wearer, I find some of the on-screen instructions hard to follow. The controls are generally along the playstation lines (you have 5 buttons, laid out like a dice, each with a symbol on. If you can't read the symbols on the screen, they are generally shown in a position that also reflects the position of the button, i.e. if the instruction is the Symbol from the Bottom Right button, it is generally shown Bottom Right on the screen). Given a bit more familiarity and confidence with this new toy, I probably won't need to read the instruction, I'm just a bit nervous of accidentally finding the Delete All button until I get used to it.
Things I learnt about 'covering' an event: It helps to know what it's all about!
We had the timetable and it told us things like 'what starts when and where' but it didn't tell us how long each event would last. That made planning difficult. We knew which were the main events, but the competitors in these were competing in different classes. Well, is 'Class A' better than 'Class H'?
I lost track of what was going on, gave up on planning and just drifted where the mood took me ? that's probably why a group of us were halfway round the cross country course and missed the Official Photo Shoot. It should give some idea of the day to say that, whilst the Official Photo Shoot would have been great to be part of, I can't say I'm upset about missing it, I enjoyed what I did do plenty well enough.
There was Dressage, Show Jumping, Cross-country, Ferret-racing, Punch and Judy, Shetland Ponies pulling carts, Birds of Prey (two lots), Pony Club Gymkhana events, a Jack Russell Grand National, a display of Nissans, stewards on trials bikes and on Segways, and people and people and dogs and people and?.
There was also a Silver Band and I had one of those magical 'everything is right with the world' moments to an excellent trombone solo of 'Summertime' in a minor key. It just doesn't work as a photo though.
I have attended two superb events with the group (Parrots and Big Cats) but this one was just exceptional. If you haven't tried it you just wouldn't believe the peace of mind that an 'official press accreditation' in your pocket gives you. I would have said that this was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity but, with the roll that Brian is on, I expect we'll be working the Pits at the Brazilian Grand Prix before the year's out!
Seriously, incredibly well done, Brian, and many thanks for all your efforts
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