
Get Out There Podcast
34 episodes
| 266 Starwatching, Camping, and Photo Stories from Eastern Oregon
Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast Episode Summary Billy shares reflections on creative workflows in photography, discusses Comet NEOWISE and stargazing in rural Oregon, recounts recent outdoor camping and photo expeditions, and dives into technical thoughts on camera equipment and the creative process. He also touches on issues like light pollution, the evolving nature of digital cameras, and the unique challenges of capturing stunning night sky photography. Chapter Guide Timestamp Chapter Title Segment Highlights 00:00 Opening & Creative Reflections Creative challenge in photography, blending business and creative growth, brief show intro with music. 01:30 Website & Book Plugs Directing listeners to BillyNewmanPhoto.com and his photo books on Amazon; themes — film, desert, surrealism. 02:30 Camping & Comet NEOWISE Recounts July camping in Eastern Oregon seeking views and photographs of NEOWISE; context of earlier “great comets.” 06:30 Childhood Astronomy Memories Reminiscing about viewing comets Hale-Bopp and Hyakutake in the 1990s; missing Halley’s comet and thoughts on astronomical cycles. 08:30 NEOWISE Observing Details Discusses best locations, challenges of light pollution and haze near sea level, and the difference clear mountain skies make. 10:30 Field Photography and Stargazing Describes equipment and techniques: using binoculars, manual focus, and camera settings, plus tips for night sky shots in the John Day River valley. 15:00 Outdoor Adventure Recap Details on the travel route, dispersed camping, Oregon terrain, rivers, geology, and solitude near the John Day River. 19:00 More on NEOWISE and Night Shots Observing NEOWISE in prime conditions, handling photography challenges, recording images till late night, astronomical observation techniques. 22:30 Tech Talk: Cameras & Workflow Reflections on camera gear — Sony a7R, its quirks, “chimping,” differences with older cameras, and latest high-speed image technology. 27:00 Outro & Calls to Action Directs to BillyNewmanPhoto.com and Patreon, thanks listeners, previews new content, and encourages support. Support the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, visit billynewmanphoto.com/support or patreon.com/billynewmanphoto to participate in the value-for-value model and find ways to help keep the podcast going. Check out new blog posts, photo books, and more behind-the-scenes content. View links at wnp.app Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast producer. Connect, learn, and follow along. Quick Links:Portfolio: billynewmanphoto.com/photographsStudio: wphoto.coPosts: billynewmanphoto.com/postsPhoto Books: billynewmanphoto.com/booksAmazon Author: amazon.com/author/billynewman Podcast Episodes:Billy Newman Photo Podcast: Listen hereRelax with Rain: Listen hereNight Sky Podcast: Listen here Connect With Billy Newman:Email: [email protected]: @billynewmanLinkedIn: billynewmanphotoX (Twitter): @billynewman Recommended Books:Landscape Portfolio (PDF): DownloadBlack and White Photography (PDF): DownloadWorking With Film (PDF): DownloadWestern Overland Excursion (PDF): Download Support the Podcast & Photography Projects:Make a sustaining financial donation: Visit Support Page Podcast Forward:The Billy Newman Photo Podcast blends real-world outdoor adventure, technical insight, and practical photography tips. [MUSIC] Hello and thank you very much for listening to this episode of the Billy Newman photo podcast. I hear different industries kind of talk about what a good day of work is or how that is to kind of get out and get what you need done. And just as like a creative system, it's sort of tough in photography. There's a lot of the entrepreneurial and sort of business related stuff of how do you get paid and how do you operate in a business, how do you function as a photographer sort of a thing. But still outside of that you need to do something nourishing in the system of creativity where you're kind of gaining new ideas and putting new materials together and sort of figuring out a way to make a union of something new with media and with something visual, especially as fast as technology is moving forward. It's definitely an interesting vector kind of using the progression of technology and artistic creativity to try and make new pieces of media to put out. And that's what I really like about new media as it goes. So it's kind of interesting. I'm kind of thinking about the way of making pieces of media and new media elements and working with photographs and stuff. But it's something that I've been really interested for a long time. [MUSIC] You can see more of my work at BillyNewmanPhoto.com. You can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think you can look up Billy Newman under the authors section there and see some of the photo books on film, on the desert, on
265 Blue Hour Coast and Cold Mountain Nights: Oregon Photography Adventures
Show Notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast View links at wnp.app Explore outdoor photography, technical media projects, stories from backcountry expeditions, and insights from the creative process with Billy Newman—photographer, author, and podcast producer. Connect, learn, and follow along. Quick Links: Portfolio: billynewmanphoto.com/photographs Studio: wphoto.co Posts: billynewmanphoto.com/posts Photo Books: billynewmanphoto.com/books Amazon Author: amazon.com/author/billynewman Podcast Episodes: Billy Newman Photo Podcast: Listen here Relax with Rain: Listen here Night Sky Podcast: Listen here Connect With Billy Newman: Email: [email protected] Instagram: @billynewman LinkedIn: billynewmanphoto X (Twitter): @billynewman Recommended Books: Landscape Portfolio (PDF): Download Black and White Photography (PDF): Download Working With Film (PDF): Download Western Overland Excursion (PDF): Download Support the Podcast & Photography Projects: Make a sustaining financial donation: Visit Support Page Podcast Forward: The Billy Newman Photo Podcast blends real-world outdoor adventure, technical insight, and practical photography tips. [Music] Hello and thank you very much for listening to this episode of the Billy Newman Photo Podcast. I’m talking about a photograph that I made on the Oregon coast today doing Blue Hour probably. I think it was after the sun had set. It was sort of like the golden hour to talk about right as the hour as the sun is setting into sunset. The blue hour they also talk about as after the sun goes down there’s a lot of those blue kind of purple tones that show up in the atmosphere or you know in the clouds and in the water. There’s just a lot more of that tone as the sun drops and it’s a spectrum shift from what we see in the daylight to what we see at night time. But I think this was a photograph taken on the Oregon coast. I think your band-in if I’m right. And I really liked this photo. It just had it wasn’t really a big structure in the wave or a big curl or anything like that. That would be that’d be really striking but I really appreciate this photograph as kind of a close-up look at I just sort of the dreamy feeling of being on the coast. But it was definitely a photograph that I liked a lot and I like that line in the skies as it cuts across as you can kind of see at the top there there’s a bit of like a cloud break that goes down and that’s where we get a lot of that light from the sky in the background that kind of cuts underneath that big brim of cloud that goes over the top of the snet that causes a lot of bounce from the ground back up to the sky and then back down and you get a cooler or you get a defused sort of soft light in that effect which I think is really cool. You can see more of my work at billyneuminphoto.com. You can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think you can look up billyneumin under the authors section there and see some of the photo books on film, on the desert, on surrealism, on camping. Some cool stuff over there. Finished up that camping trip I was doing up the mountain creek there in the cascades a couple days ago. That was that like Wednesday. I think it was like maybe like Tuesday, Tuesday night to Wednesday morning. I think that was this super moon that was coming up that night if I remember right and that was pretty cool. It was cool to see the full moon up there and they always talk about the super moon which is kind of a I don’t know it’s a little bit of a misnomer but it’s cool to see too that I think they talk about happening every six months or so. Really it’s just kind of the oscillation of a bit of the eccentricities and the orbit of the moon that make it I think about 25,000 miles closer that it’s maximum and then maybe about 25,000 miles further away and it’s distant maximum but I think it’s really like a little bit of a sliver larger than it normally would be. If you notice though it’s a thing I learned way back and I think they they they show it in a scene in Apollo 13 but if you put your hand all the way out and you put your thumb up at all times you’re able to cover the entire full moon just with your thumbnail. It’s pretty wild but you got kind of always like visualize the moon is being this really big thing in the sky and really a lot of the time it’s it’s just as big as your thumbnail at arm’s reach which is kind of a trip but it’s kind of a it was cool to see the super moon that night it was really bright it was cool to kind of watch around and kind of look at how it was illuminating the forest and the trees and the mountains and stuff around me that was kind of nice to see cold that night though man I tell you so I have a 15 degree sleeping bag and that’s great 15 degrees is fine but and 15 degrees really is is more than adequate for most circumstances that I e
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 200 Hunting Camps – Creating IPFS Networks
Donate to the podcast with any Lightning wallet including the Cash.app from the links below. Donate $1 in Bitcoin to Billy Newman https://www.plebpay.com/059564df-319c-4757-b694-892d9a659722?brandColor=deepskyblue Donate $5 in Bitcoin to Billy Newman https://www.plebpay.com/b83e4a90-1311-4c3d-a76b-42c67a3bd86b?brandColor=deepskyblue Donate $11.11 in Bitcoin to Billy Newman https://www.plebpay.com/5fca8498-487b-4bf1-8199-86e977fe774d?brandColor=deepskyblue Donate $50 in Bitcoin to Billy Newman https://www.plebpay.com/a48b2ab4-a192-4bbe-b67e-c5fe2b9f222c?brandColor=deepskyblue Billy Newman Photo, has decided to be a viewer / listener supported production. This means the viewers / listeners contribute to Billy Newman Photo both financially and through volunteerism. If you feel you are getting value from this, please help by becoming a supporter and send some sats. Get a Bitcoin Lightning wallet for free instant transfers https://breez.technology https://muun.com https://bluewallet.io The Value for Value streaming payments system enables listeners to send Bitcoin micropayments to podcasters as they listen, in real-time. Get a Podcasting 2.0 podcast app and start streaming value! It's easy to remember: newpodcastapps.com If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 200 Hunting Camps - Creating IPFS Networks 0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. 0:23 Here different industries kind of talk about, you know what a good day of work is or how that is to kind of get out and get what you need done. And just as like a creative system, it's sort of tough in photography, there's a lot of that the entrepreneurial and sort of business related stuff of, you know, how do you got to get paid and how you operate in a business, how do you function as a photographer sort of thing, but there's still outside of that you need to do something nourishing in the system of creativity, where you're kind of gaining new ideas and putting new materials together, and sort of figuring out a way to make a union of something new with media with something visual, especially as fast as technology is moving forward. It's definitely an interesting vector, kind of using the progression of technology and artistic creativity to try and make new pieces of media to put out and that's what I really like about new media as it goes. So it's kind of interesting how kind of thinking about the way of making pieces of media and new media elements and working with photographs and stuff, but it's something that I've been really interested for a long time. 1:25 You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo comm, you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon, I think if you look at that Bitly Newman under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism on camping, and cool stuff over there. 1:48 But I was going to talk about that a little bit, I thought it'd be kind of cool to talk about at least some of the stuff that I know about. Some of the stuff sort of around hunting stuff, I don't I guess I don't really get into a ton of hunting stuff. But But I was trying to think a little bit about some notes that I had about finding and scouting out dispersed hunting campsites or dispersed campsites that are that are away from parks away from state parks and, and sort of those, those bigger areas that are just kind of wide out open that you can camp in.
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 162 Recording Landscape Videos In The Rain
162 Recording Landscape Videos In The Rain Recording landscape video clips of Oregon in October. Creating time-lapse video of the clouds passing over the valley. Working with wet camera gear. Gear that I work with Professional film stock I work with https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/ When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/ A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4 https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3 https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4 https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV. My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places. Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 158 Early Chanterelle Season
158 Early Chanterelle Season Scouting for Chanterelle mushroom areas. Camping around hunting season. Photography gigs at properties damaged by the fires. Gear that I work with Professional film stock I work with https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/ When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/ A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4 https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3 https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4 https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV. My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places. Link 158 Early Chanterelle Season Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 158 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Early Chanterelle Season Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys checking this one out. It's been falling off for this last week. So we got a good bit of rain that had come down for a while here in the northern Oregon area, I was looking on the map on the like radar map the weather map, and it was showing like a pretty good bit of rain that was hitting, I think I call across the wall. Now across the west coast, but all across the Northwest area is, I think it's all like going up into British Columbia pretty far. But I think for this week, it's supposed to be dry, as like, we wait for the next system to kind of push through, and it was kind of weird to kind of change the weather pattern there a little bit, but I think it's been going okay for the fire recovery stuff. So a lot to do and a lot going on. And a man like I'm sure like some of the state highways that cut across the Cascades are going to be shot for probably most of the winter, I wonder if they're going to recover in that way, you know, like just with some of the towns that are just no longer there, they're gonna have to take a long time to rebuild but all the fire damage of, of trees and stuff, they're going to be down the road, and then all the potential damage that's going to come from this winter, as we get hea
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 156 Oregon Wildfires
Oregon Wildfires Smoke across the west coast, Oregon Wildfires 1 million acres burned, Phoenix, Talent, Blue River, Vida, Lyons, Gates, Detroit, Molalla, Estacada, Lincoln City If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV. My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places. Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 156 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Oregon Wildfires Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast, recorded for the second week of September 2020. Thanks a lot for listening to this podcast. If you're in the northwest or anywhere on the west coast, and if you're probably anywhere in America, I'm sure you've heard about the wildfires that are going on here in Oregon. And if you're on the west coast, as west of the Cascades, I'm sure you've been inundated with smoke for the last week or so, just about like most of this last week, I think since, like Labor Day, it's been pretty intense here. It's been just smoke all through the valley. And I think smoke all the way down to California. Now, I guess I was just reading that there's smoke that's now Kind of pushed out all the way to Michigan. I think a scene and satellite photos are really interesting satellite imagery. I don't know if you guys have been able to see that. There are also some like time-lapse captures of the satellite imagery. And it's really interesting to Kind of see the changes and how the weather was working during the period of time with those wildfires took off. But as a quick rundown, I'm sure there have been better, better news outlets than I am to give you the rundown of the facts of the fires. But yeah, it seems like it's a historic amount of burn. And just a couple of days. I think they've mentioned that it's now more than 1 million acres have burned, and wildfires created. I think just this week, but I think it's for like the Oregon year-to-date amount. I think they mentioned 2 million acres of burned in California this year. pretty significant burns. I think that's at least for Oregon. I think it was double the amount that they had expected for this year was interesting is that it's all occurred so late. I think I was even captured talking on a podcast about a month ago or so that I was surprised not to see more smoke in the year this year as we were Kind of fortunate to not see, you know, some kind of fire complex build-up somewhere in Oregon, there's always been some circumstances that when you get out to Eastern Oregon, you see smoke in the air on the horizon, you figure it's come from somewhere a lot of the time, like when I was growing up, it came from the southern Oregon area, this is used to seem to catch fire every couple of years. Or it was, you know, somewhere, someplace up in the Cascades, you know, Kind of a remote location is somewhere up in like northeast Oregon that was burning. There'
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 155 Scouting Remote Hunting Camps
Hunting camps on public land in the John Day river canyon. Working with a GPS to scout locations year round. Smoke in Oregon. Lightroom photo development with controller. Editing with an Xtouch compact. Over-processing a raw file. Amplified sound with a PA. Hunting Camps Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 154 Developing Film And Converting MiniDV Tapes
Developing Film And Converting MiniDV Developing a roll of film. Converting Mini DV tapes from 2006. Camping around Mt. Jefferson. Viewing the meteor shower. 154 Developing Film And Converting MiniDV Tapes Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ Developing Film Converting MiniDV If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Billy Newman Photo Podcast Feed https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast 154 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Developing film and Converting old tapes Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast for the first week of September 2020. I hope everybody's doing well. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode. I wanted to talk a little about the start of September, some of the stuff I've been up to. It's cool, and I just finished a roll of film here pretty recently. Like I think during this last week when I was out traveling around, and I haven't finished a roll of film in a while, I've been shooting mostly on the digital camera that I've got kind of moved over to canon equipment back in 2018. And I've been shooting with that for, and I guess now almost two years is what it's coming up too. And so, during that time, I picked up a Canon film camera.And I've been using the Canon lenses that I have for my digital camera. On the Eos system over on an older canon film camera from I think the late 90s is what I was able to pick up. So I went over on like kth comm. I think this was this is probably like nine months ago or so at the beginning of the year. And I picked up a really inexpensive Canon camera body was like $35, something like that, to, to pick up this camera, mostly plastic in the body, but it has a bunch of the manual controls that you would expect from the sort of mid-range SLR sort of like the five D Mark, or you know, the five D Mark, the five D line, you know, whatever when you want to pick, but it's not the full professional build model. But it's definitely not the lower-end one. So yeah, it has like kind of the same layout of buttons and stuff on it as you can get with the more modern layout of cannon buttons and stuff. So most of it's really the same as it kind of translates back from one to the other. But it's a cool, pretty simple camera, and it's got, I think, like three focus points, three autofocus points on the inside. And that works fine for the kind of simple stuff that I was trying to do. But it's cool I was a cargo by I'm out here at a wildlife refuge spot. And I was checking out sort of has changed now that it's September 1, they've cut all the grass that they grow in these fields out here, that's all been cut, bailed, driven off. And then now it's like been tilled up, and there's like dirt and rocks and like all of these big multi-acre fields that kind of a stretch on out here. So we're working with this canon film camera, this, I can't remember what the name of it is. But it's got pretty simple controls, and it's been easy to use. It has a weird battery. Maybe I have talked about that before. The kind of tricky thing about some of these late 90s SLR cameras is that they take this sort of proprietary about these almost proprietary disposable batteries. I think this one is something sort of like to sort of fat double A's that are bonded together. And then kind of wrapped in this, you know, this little casing unit and that's supposed to like fit in your camera, and then the power of the camera for a cou
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 153 Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak
Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak Camping on a mountain top, Finding cabins in the woods, Lookout towers on national forest land, 50 million years of geology. Camping At An 8500 ft Mountain Peak Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.comor you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast 153 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Camping at an 8500 ft mountain peak Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded for the second or almost coming up to the third week of August 2020. Made a cup of coffee this morning, and I'm out at that peak of the mountain out in Eastern Oregon. Pretty cool spot up here that I was able to get to. I was looking around on the map. And I was able to find some spots that were old lookout towers like I guess they were like old like fire lookout towers for when there would be lightning strikes or other starts of fires for forest fires in the area. I have driven to a couple of them before, seven in Northern California. I'll talk about those in a few. But yeah, it's cool that you can find where these cabins are here if you look around. And I guess many of them now I use this as lookout towers for the fire department or federal forest department or whatever it would be. But now, many of them have been kind of retrofitted to be overnight cabins that you can or other people in public can rent out and get for like a night or two nights or, or a part of a week or something is pretty cool. I guess they book pretty far out in advance. But it's pretty cool. So, yeah, I was looking around at some of those. And I've been on a trip for a couple of days now, driving around in some BLM and national forest land. It's out here in Eastern Oregon. And there's a lot of it, it's cool, a lot of space, a lot of open space in this part of the country. It's a bit of a difference between them between west of the Cascades and east of the Cascades. A lot of the national forest land is on the west coast. Well, yeah, I'm trying to think of it a little. But as good as I can tell, a lot of the national forest land on the west coast is mountainous with many ridges, and a lot of thick timber too, a lot of thick evergreen forests wonderful area. But it's hard to traverse that kind of terrain; many of them have had roads that are pretty well maintained, they go through some of those areas. But still, even with that, there's not a lot of open expanses and the kind of tight quarters sometimes. So it's kind of cool getting out over here in Eastern Oregon, where it sort of flattens out a bit opens up a bit. And even though there are still quite a few trees in the area that I'm looking out at, like I'm looking at, South of me here, miles and miles and miles of forest land, and mountains that go out 20 miles, 30 miles or so. But it's cool. It goes out for a while. But there are changes in the land to the lookout. Like I was saying, I made it at the top of the peak of a mountain here. So I can see out to the east over here, I look over, and I see like a few ridges, a few bluffs, and it seems like it goes on forever. But it's pretty cool. And this area here, looking out west to me here, I can see the lights of one of the cities last night that's out here, or you know, one of the small towns it's in the area, he can kind of see the little dots of t
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 152 Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow
Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow Audio Fixed Sighting big Sandhill Cranes in the mountains. Rockhounding on public land. Traveling forest service roads. Finding dispersed camp sites. Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Sandhill Cranes In A High Desert Meadow Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.comor you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast 152 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Sandhill Crane _2 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded for the second week of August 2020. I'm out on a camping trip right now, and I'm in the back of my truck on the tailgate at a campsite in the Fremont winnaman National Forest in South Central Oregon. Pretty sure that's about where it would be. Maybe it's still Central Oregon. I think it's, it's still in the mountain area before you drop into the Great Basin, near the location that I was for the last podcast when I was talking about hanging out near that cabin, near a meadow. And since then, I've been driving kind of around through these Forest Service roads, checking out different campsites that are laid out in some areas. A lot of areas up here, I think. I think what I was looking at my watch, and it says we're about 4900 feet. I think it was about 5200 feet near maybe the higher parts that I was at. But yeah, this is pretty high up here. I think it's a little snow on the ground in a spot a while back when I was driving a little shady spot that and get it been warmed up, which is weird to see in August. Not much snow out here, though, you know, by any means. So I think I was up here in the springtime in a different area kind of further down and lower and elevation. And I think it was early April. And I could get away ways up the mountain, but I think I got snowed out really quickly before it before you really even break into, you know, the Forest Service roads that are up here. Even the more well-traveled ones just weren't maintained through the winter. These are gravel roads out here. It's like a cinder cone that's cashed up and then spread across the roads, or I think further to the west. They're still using gravel. I think I crossed over from Klamath County, now into Lake County. As I've been making my way, I think on the map app that I've got that onyx off-road app that I've been using a lot out here, it's really been a good benefit to have a road map of all these Forest Service roads and all the trails and the terrain and stuff that I'm looking around. But yeah, it really helps to kind of scan around and sees what's around you and how to get through some places. But I mean, you'll have just real tiny ATV trails. troublingly though, I think I mentioned, they're not really totally differentiated with notes on how bad each different road is. It's just a solid green line. It says you can drive on it. And it might be a well-graded gravel road. That's why like a highway, or it might be a really small and brushy like overgrown powerline road that kind of cuts along a property line. That's what I was on yesterday for about a half-hour, and I was thinking, man, I probably would have taken that main way around. If I had realized it would do this. That's the thing that gets you to because it'll be a good road for about three miles, you know, or long enough that you're like, I don't really want to turn around. An
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 151 Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest
Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest Thunder in the high desert mountains, photographing a meadow in the evening, camping in the rain. Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Summer Thunderstorm Over Fremont Winema National Forest Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.comor you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast 151 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown summer thunderstorm_1 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Be sure you guys are tuning in for the first week of August 2020. I'm out on a camping trip right now; I'm deep in the middle of the Fremont National Forest, where I've been driving around for a good part of the day. And it's not; it's not really high desert out here. I think it's still mostly like smaller pine trees. And then I think just a little further east if I were to drive where you would start to drop into the area, that would be like the Great Basin, I think that area that was the Inland Sea back during the Pleistocene period before the end of the last ice age. And that's where you get like on eastern Oregon and then out into Nevada to I think it's like just a little east of Bend Oregon. And, and then south from there, into Nevada, and parts of Utah. I think it's like a really big, like high desert area that I think was mostly created from like an inland sea or, you know, that's, I think what they talked about the Great Basin area when you look on those, those maps, and it kinda has this, this far northern region that are up into the Chico mountains and pretty sure somewhere around there. But I think it's a pretty cool being out here. I was able to find a, like an old or at least it's on the map is like a forest service cabin, I don't think it was really in use by the Forest Service's it's not like a base, or it's not like a place where they have resources or tracks. It's just like, an old, an old built homestead almost is what it looks like out here. And it's got to, but I think it's kind of semi-managed and sort of protected by the National Forest Service out here. The roads are pretty good to get into it. And then it opens up into a big meadow. It's probably. I don't know, six or seven acres or so. And then there's like big fencing around it made out of the small, like log pines that they dropped. And then they'd put together these like a-frames and then stack together logs on that to make these big fences that kind of stretch around the property of the house, I guess to not have it, I don't know, trampled or whatever by but whatever out here. I think when I was walking around, I saw that there's there seems to be like some open range cattle that share the land out here. As I was walking around, I can see some signs of it. And then I could also see, and this is where I'm not really too good at. Following what I'm seeing, I'm not sure if it's like, like mule deer that are out there. Or if it's elk that are out there. I know the mule deer out here, but I'm not sure if what I was seeing was from an elk or knives seemed like it would be elk. But I'm not really sure. It's kind of cool, though. It's cool being out here in this area. I spent a good part of the day getting down here. I've been trying to make a camping trip of some sort each week here through the summer. And that's really kind of been really only one of the few
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 150 Comet Neowise
Comet Neowise Viewing comet Neowise during its passage in late July 2020, remembering sighting Hal Bopp in 1997. What is a great comet? Photographing the night sky with a high iso and a wide angle lens, Traveling along the John Day River, Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Comet Neowise Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.comor you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here.https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast 150 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown Comet Neowise Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys for tuning in to this episode recorded for the first week of August in 2020. And wanted to jump into a couple of the things I've been doing through the month of July and some outdoor camping and travel stuff I've been up to. I was going to run down some of that in this podcast today. I wanted to talk about a trip I made to Eastern Oregon. I think like last week before last is when I was out in this area, and I was trying to get some good observations in for comet nowise I'm not sure if any of you guys got to check that out while it was in its prime viewing section there I think that was why we had kind of like the new moon before it switched over to being gibbous moon or nearly full moon like it's been the last week or so. But I think it was around the 15th through the 25th or so of July. There are some pretty good observations to be made of comet Neo wise, and I guess after kind of reading about it a bit, it's not considered a great comet, like Hale Bopp was, or I think it was I talkie 9996 we hadn't had a great comment in a long time I've ever seen those when I was a kid though that was pretty cool. Like watching the Hale Bopp come through for it seemed like three months or something you know that you're just kind of looking at that in the low corners of the northwestern and Western skies was kind of cruising across the skyline I remember that still from like, third-fourth grade when it was coming through, and I also remember the year before that, when like straight up in the air you know like straight up in the sky at night for it was only like a week or so I was a kid you know, but I remember for that week you can see a real bright two-tailed comet those guns I think I can't remember how to pronounce I think is how you talk here. I think it's it's some Japanese name. Pretty sure. But that was a really cool one. That one I still remember really clearly I was only like, I don't know, seven or something when that like when that comic came through. But I really appreciated getting to make some observations with that one as a kid. I missed Halley's Comet, though, back in what 87, I think, was the last one if it came through. And I probably will be the few years that you know that decade or two of the age range that doesn't get to see Halley's Comet in their lifetime. So I think I was born in 88, of course. So if I make it past 100, maybe you'll see it; what is it maybe like 80 something years, so it's probably not going to come back around until I think it's like the 2017 or 2000 80s that I'd have to make it to for to see Halley's Comet again, that'd be fun, but I don't know, maybe we'll see our future. The future is at that time. But it was really cool to get to see Comet Neo wise; It was just a little below what would be the legs and feet of Ursa Major, the Big Dipper, or like the
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 149 Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape
Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Wildflowers Foxglove And Oregon Grape Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. https://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast 149 Billy Newman Photo podcast mixdown wildflowers foxglove and oregon grape Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I appreciate you checking this one out. I wanted to talk to you guys today, I think for what is today, the 12th of June 2020. A lot a lot of stuff going on right now in the world. But, in fact a bit about the ideas around media that I had around that no last podcast that I recorded. This one, I was going to get into a little bit of the outdoor stuff that I've been up to, and some of the photo editing bits that I was on and also I wanted to talk a little more about editing with a controller board. What is it called? I don't know. They, yeah, like a MIDI controller. So yeah, the first part I guess I wanted to talk about, we're heading out to the wildlife refuge area. That's out south of Corvallis. Here. The Finley Wildlife Refuge went out there for a couple days in a row to try and check outs and some of the area out there I think it's now opened up a little bit more officially I think during the first weeks of the lockdown here in Oregon, the road that was gated up, I think almost for like two months, the road that cut through to the main section of the wildlife refuge had been boarded up or not boarded up. But I think there's like a gate that cuts across the front entrance of it. Even though it's really sort of a public road that cuts through to the highway on the other side, I think it goes from Bell fountain road over to highway 99 on the other side, so you can cut all the way through but they Yeah, they closed off both ends, I think because there's a visitor center in the in the middle there. And they didn't want people coming in and congregating or I guess traveling on the trails for a period of time. So yeah, I noticed that on a couple other spots a couple of the entrances, they said that maybe I think that you couldn't enter for a while then they sort of shifted those regulations around like we I think kind of talked about on a couple of the previous podcasts and then you could walk but then you had to remain socially distanced and the rest of it. So I think yeah, it's opened. It's opened back up mostly now and has been for the last few weeks. Normally, I think the the wildlife refuges in this area open up on April 1 and then close down again on November 1. And I think that's for the migratory bird I guess seasonal patterns that they that they are in so I think it's for I think it's an area for Canadian geese to come in. And winter in. If that sounds right. I guess that's fine. Oh, so it's loaded up there in the wintertime it's loaded with birds and grains and eat grits and stuff. It's really cool to go down there and, and take some binoculars and look around a lot of Eagles late in the winter. I think that was pretty cool during like February. And in March of this year, there were a lot of bald eagles out in that area, that Willamette Valley, just sort of roaming around. But it was pretty fun to see a lot of hawks too. That was really cool. So yeah, a lot of birds in that area. But I cruise down there this last week for a couple trips to kind of hike out to a few spots now that it's a little more opened up and you ca
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 146 Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit
Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit DMV says renew your tags in July. Planting Marigolds. Gardening in May showers. Oregon State Parks reopen, Smith rock urges Portland not to visit. Smith Rock Urges Portland Not To Visit If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. 146-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. appreciate you guys tuning in. I think it's May 16. Today 2020 of everybody's doing well, and I think this accounts for like the first, the first full day after the 15th, which marks the beginning of phase one reopening here in the Oregon area. I guess a lot of other states are sort of entering into the same kind of thing with the beginning of their reopenings. And starting up. I think the start of the I think it's like a lot of retail stores. I don't know what's still restricted. I think there's still like a number of private businesses that can't really can't really get started, it seems like a lot of restaurant stuff is still kind of held back, was it gyms or something? Maybe that's the kind of held back? It seems like, it seems like a lot of places are really kind of getting going. But maybe it's like California, I keep hearing news out of there probably because, you know, there's so many people in that area that that are, you know, producing media and stuff. But I keep hearing kind of strange rules out of the lockdown that sort of continues to go on and the LA County area and along like the California coast and that area. So it's kind of interesting to see how there's such a varied approach and the way that they're they're sort of bringing stuff back. What is it like Arkansas you can have? I'm gonna have a concert, or something. I think there's a place trying to drive in concert idea sounds kind of fun, really, you know, everybody pull up in a car. It always just sounds like a good idea, I guess when there's not a pandemic going on. So there's maybe less fear than that. But But yeah, that sounds fun. Driving concert, I don't know. Or I think there's a limited seating in places for for some venues now that I think is Max, like maybe 150 people swept some places to try and some of those Midwest areas, I think maybe like Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, I think some areas over there kind of try and some, some live events stuff out. I'm not sure what it is for restaurants, and a lot of places still seems like social distancing standards are what's required. And a lot of those places I hear about restaurants operating in, like 25% capacity, and maybe 50% capacity. But even still, that just doesn't seem economically, like it's kind of work, I didn't really spend a lot of time working in restaurants. But even still, I have enough tangential experience with the restaurant industry to know that those margins aren't really wide enough, when you're making food, to if you were, if you were just supporting yourself on 100% capacity before all this, there's really not a good reason that that you're going to support your business on 25% capacity for the next foreseeable future. I mean, gosh, like, it just seems like you're gonna operate at a loss for six months, or more, I don't know if anybody can really handle that, especially after a big dip like this, you know, it's not going to be a better economic time after this for for a lot of those kinds of industries, or you know, just so there's like a rate limit on the amount of customers that you can have at any given time. So that seems to be a problem. I don't know how they're really going to handle that. They don't know, there's venues and stuff to try to come back, it seems like there's a lot of people just trying to do it to, to try and jump back in and be the first people competing again. So I guess in that s
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 145 Oregon Public Land Reopenings
Oregon Public Land Reopenings Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 145 Oregon Public Land Reopenings 15 degree sleeping bags. Down vs synthetic. Fishing for Trout on a bridge. Morning light, easy light. Oregon public land. National forest land open. Trailheads begin to reopen. If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. 145-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown.txt Hello, thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded on May 11, 2020. How's it going? Thanks for checking this one. I finished up that camping trip I was doing up the mountain Creek there in the Cascades a couple days ago. What was that like Wednesday, I think it was like maybe like Tuesday, Tuesday night to Wednesday morning. I think that was the super moon that was coming up that night. If I remember right, and that was pretty cool. It was cool to see the full moon up there. And they always talk about the Super Moon, which is kind of a, I don't know, it's a little bit of a misnomer. But it's, it's cool to see to that thing to talk about happening every six months or so. Really, it's just kind of the oscillation of a bit of the eccentricities in the orbit of the moon that make it I think about 25,000 miles closer than its maximum, and then maybe about 25,000 miles further away. And it's distant maximum. But I think it's really only like a little bit of a sliver larger than it normally would be. If you notice though, it's a thing I learned way back. And I think that they show it at a scene in Apollo 13. But if you put your hand all the way out and you put your thumb up at all times, you're able to cover the entire Full Moon, just with your thumbnail. It's pretty wild, man, you can always like visualize the moon is being this really big thing in the sky. And really a lot of the time it's, it's just as big as your thumbnail it at arm's reach, which is kind of a trip. But it was kind of it was cool to see the supermoon that night was really bright, it was cool to kind of watch around and kind of LIGO was illuminating the forest and the trees and the mountains and stuff around me. That was kind of nice to see. Cold that night, though. Man, I tell you so have a 15 degree sleeping bag. And that's great. 15 degrees is fine. But envision degrees really is more than adequate for most circumstances that I ended up being in during the summertime. Where it's done, I was just not too big of a concern about how cold it gets. But when is this 15 degrees really means you're going to be comfortable down to somewhere around 35 degrees, but anywhere under 30 degrees is a pretty uncomfortable experience, I think it means you're going to stay alive. That until it's about 15 degrees. So if it were me again, buying something for maybe I don't know, a more heavy three season camping experience most of the time, probably a lot of the nights out that I do. Even though I like to go at all times a year, it seems like the majority of nights I go out or during the summer months or you know during like pretty fair weather seasons. But if I were going to buy again, which I'm going to try and get like a two or three sleeping bag system going, if I was going to buy again, I probably get a zero degree or maybe a negative 15 degree. And I could really use the warm because man, what I noticed is even if it was just a little bit down to what would have been probably, maybe, I don't know, 29 or something like that it was you know, as a bit below freezing. Who knows how cold it really was, it was only like an elevation of 2500 feet and it was a canyon. I thought it was a clear night, but I thought it would be relatively sheltered. And yeah, it was a lot of it was a lot of ice on my window when I woke up. And it was a cold, cold night to sit through too. So. So yeah, that 15 degree bag
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 144 Creek Camp
Creek Camp Spring Camping on National Forest land during lockdown. Finding the snow line. Low Bridge! Creek Camp If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. 144-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded on May 6, 2020. How's it going? Thanks a lot for tuning into this episode, I'm catching up on sun, national forest land right now about cold Creek in an area, kind of outside of where I'm living in Oregon. And it's gone pretty well, we're having a good day, I'm just here by myself. So I'm doing a solo camping trip. It's the first solo night out I've done this year, and I'm excited to be doing it. I think it's gonna be kind of cool. It's been fun. So far too. It's been, it's been pretty mellow. I'm out here at my campsite, I got my recording gear, rigged up and I'm at the tailgate of my truck, and made a fire earlier in the fire rank. And it's a pretty clear night, pretty mellow weather seems kind of cold up here. It's sort of a mountain. And I think it's close-ish to the snow level. But still a few. It's still a bit above me, I drove up to it earlier. So earlier, when I was coming in, I left at about noon today. And I took off and drove to town up into the forest and then up kind of on this meandering Forest Service road. And you think right now that you know, maybe a lot of stuff would be empty or or you're not in a lot of use. But really, when I got out here, I noticed a good bit of traffic, it's a nice day, it's May, it's may 6. So I bet people are kind of getting out and and just kind of given the environment that we're in right now where people don't get to, or you know, that are just kind of stuck at home or they didn't they're not at work or something, they're probably the for the first time, you know, a lot of free time for a lot of these people do. So it seems like this area here. As soon as I got to the region that you could camp, it was full of campers, I was noticing that when I was coming up. So there's an area where I think you have to go at 17 miles up the road before you hit the area where you can begin just camping on the side of the road. And I think that's that's probably the spot where the national forest land begins. And before that, I think you're in a region of BLM land that structured out below there as you get kind of closer down toward the highway. And so this further out, made it through the BLM land, that's I guess there's no camping, I think you can do like a lot of day-use area stuff out there a couple campgrounds a past just sort of like Forest Service campgrounds, or BLM campgrounds but sort of a more organized, pull out with the bathroom, those were closed, or you know, there's like I think one of them at least I saw the picnic area had remained open for day you stuff that you know, you just kind of walked down to the river or something. There was a number of people out by the lake earlier down in the area, I was lower down on the mountain side. And then as I kind of had come up here into the hills, most of this road had been paved. So it's a pretty commonly used road. And I think I think it goes pretty well, I think it goes all the way through. So if it were clear, you could get from here, or from the side that I was on, I guess it would be kind of the South, the southwest side to the northeast side of the corner of the forest and kind of pop out on the other side of the highway. And when I was driving through earlier, I'd gone just a bit further than where I am now. And I traveled up uphill a bit more and it kind of started getting windy. And then I started noticing a little bit of snow in the shade your spots the the north facing slopes and stuff. And then after a little bit further, it was pretty crazy. It was i
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 143 Lockdown
Lockdown Photography during lockdown... I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet and Guaranty RV. My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places. If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. 143-Billy-Newman-Photo-podcast_mixdown Hey, what's going on? Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast recorded. I think, What is it now? May 1, 2020. Wow, the way we went through the year, I hope everybody's doing good through the coronavirus pandemic that's been going on and going over the whole world now; it's pretty crazy. Here in Oregon, fortunately, it's maybe a little lighter, though, there's kind of the social dynamics that have changed pretty recently, or, you know, over the last 45 days has been a lot of businesses that are closed, you know, with the lockdowns and stuff and a lot of people not really getting out or moving around and really been the same for me. So I figured I should be doing some podcasting, which sounds like a good time. But yeah, I wanted to talk a little bit about some public land stuff that I've been doing, which has always been kind of fun. And there's still a little bit of stuff that you can do even with during a time like, like right now. Where there's the state lockdowns, I'm not sure which state you're in or how it is. There's different regulations in each of the states. And really, some of them are actually more flexible than they had been prior to this. But there's really still a lot of land access on public lands through the western states. And I think through a lot of the states through the the east to hear a lot about the beach closures and some of these populated city areas. But that's not really the same across the United States in every capacity. Now there's parks that are closed parks are a different type of land management. Then your your public lands like BLM, or national forest land, national parks are closed. State Parks are closed state forests are closed. But really in a lot of places, there's public access to a lot of waterways, and a lot of land and forest areas that would be out in the western United States. I'm not sure quite what it is in California, they might have they might have gone through and done more specific closures here. In Oregon, as I looked up the US, fish and wildlife, I, their site, they had some COVID related information and they were instructing that bear season is still in fact starting April 15. turkey season is in effect, General hunting is in effect. fishing season is in effect fishing was close to out of state fishers. So I guess you couldn't come in from another state. Maybe Washington is what they're thinking about. They also closed the Columbia River to all fishing, I think because Washington is closed, all fishing shoot. So I don't know what Washington's rules are, they might have more more strict land access than what we've got here. But as it goes, you can go out in Oregon to public lands and walk around or hike or camp as long as you're kind of doing the social distancing stuff. Now there is an issue with I think the governor here in Oregon had instructed that people are not to use trailheads. That had been I suppose mistaken for not to use trails, but apparently by instruction of one of the directo
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 142 Smith Rock Camping
Smith Rock Camping by Billy Newman Link Blog https://billynewmanphoto.com/posts Podcast https://billynewmanphoto.com/podcast/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About http://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 142 Smith Rock Camping If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 142 Hey, what's going on? This is Billy Newman and you're listening to the Billy Newman photo podcast. Appreciate you guys checking it out again. I wanted to touch into the day and talk about a trip that I just just finished up going on out to have to Central Oregon over to the high desert area in Eastern Oregon, I guess it's Eastern Oregon kind of over near the bend area. We went up to Smith rock this last week and did some camping out over there. Had a great time is it's pretty nice but we did the the hike over there at Smith rock and I guess I wanted to do just to kind of show podcast about the area over by blacksmith rock some of the hiking that you can do and some of the the trip and photo stuff that we were working on over there. But yeah, I had a great time and over to Smith rock took off for a pretty quick, easy weekend trip. You know what's great about living here in Oregon on like the I five corridor is you can just kind of jump over to Eastern Oregon over over the cascade pass, which is definitely tracking a drive. It's different than just being on the freeway. But it's pretty cool. Yeah, jumping over the highways and getting over kind of into the backcountry in the Cascades and then heading over over the past and then down into the high desert area of Eastern Oregon over there. So yeah, with three sisters headed over to Tara bond, and then went into the Smith rock State Park area. Really, man. The thing I guess I should say is Yeah, Smith rock is just world-class camping or hiking area. You really can't camp there. I guess you can kind of camp out in an attempt you can kind of bivouac there. I guess some of the rock climbers do that. But there's also like another spot the area we can to is this campground called skull hollow, which is about maybe five miles away or so it's really not too far of a drive but yeah, hop in the car, go around the mountain. And then on the backside of that you can you can hang out and set up a camp I think it's there we were at was probably, I guess, I guess it's BLM maybe it's like state forest or something stuff. But it was dispersed camping areas. So you can kind of drive up this road, pull out on the side and kind of walk your tent over and you know just a couple of feet and set it up, hang out there is all free. And you know, you're just sitting out there in the, in the scrub of the sagebrush and on some lumpy ground. And I think there's like open-range cattle that walk through there to other times we can't there in the past. I think Marina and I had been there maybe years ago, and we had camped just a couple spots from the place that we were this weekend. We put up the tent, hung out there had the car park there and then that morning, we woke up in the tent, we could hear like a bunch of big footsteps around and sounds and animals and we were thinking, oh man, that's weird. And we hands up the screen on the tent looked outside and we were surrounded by cows. So yeah, the cows the cows just kind of walkthrough in their little group during the night or during the morning and ended up in the acreage around where
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Get Out There | 11 Suunto Core Watch Review
Billy Newman Marina Hansen Suunto Core Truck Canopy- Floor storage Get Out There | 11 Suunto Core Watch Review —————————————————————— Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Website Billy Newman Photo – http://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRxCs7sDRYcJoNls364dnPA Facebook Page – https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter – https://twitter.com/billynewman Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/billynewmanphoto Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ Website Billy Newman Photo – http://billynewmanphoto.com/ About  –  http://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ Get Out There Podcast Feed http://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/getoutthere Media Tech Podcast Feed http://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/media-tech-podcast The Night Sky Podcast Feed http://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/thenightskypodcast Billy Newman Photo Podcast Feed http://billynewmanphoto.com/feed/podcast/billynewmanphotopodcast Ebook Working With Film (2013) http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Working_With_Film.pdf Ebook Western Overland Excursion (2012) http://billynewmanphoto.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Western-Overland-Excursion-E-book-0812.pdf

Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment
Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment Investing in a raft. The cost of frame, oars, and raft for professional and private whitewater outfitting. How to spend 30K at Sotar and NRS. Billy Newman Robert Biscarret Get Out There | 10 Rafting Equipment If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Get-out-there-10-Outfitting-Raft-Equipment_otter.ai Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. And I'm here today with Robert Vickery. Robert, how are you doing? Hey, doing well, Billy, how you doing? Doing good, man. Thanks a lot for doing Episode 10 of the podcast. It's pretty cool. Yeah, no, I'm excited, man. What is it? What episode is it? Episode 10. Now, Episode 10. Yeah, moving into double-digit. So sets. That's a big. That's our first milestone. It's great, man. That's right. But But yeah, definitely. Daddy at the beginning, it'll be cool. I think it'd be cool to see like, what what we kind of build on or like how the show kind of grows or evolves over the next few months as we put it together a little bit more. Yeah. Interesting. I like you know, the more we do it, the more it evolves. And I am kind of curious, these things. Like when you do stuff like this, whether it's any type of project, when you work with somebody, it always evolves in some different way that reflects personalities. And it's always fun. Yeah, I want to grow it a bit. And I want to try and make it like a little bit unique or, you know, just so it's kind of kind of interesting to us at least. But I like it being honest. And being about like some of the cool stuff that we remember about. About our trips in the outdoor stuff that we've done. We need Intro music. Oh, yeah. No, I want to I want to work on our sound design. Yeah. And again, just like Slayer. Oh, yeah. That's, that's the the grand outdoors sound. It's exactly what nature sounds like. A babbling brook? Sounds like Yeah. I was thinking about it. This week, I wanted to talk to you about some of the raft experience that you'd had. Yeah, on the road river, and probably how to apply a lot of that rafting experience outside of that to just other rivers and other experiences more more in general about like the equipment use of rafting and of doing like, well probably do a multi-day trips, but I was also thinking about people who are interested in doing like smaller trips. And you you, you tell me, I was thinking about it in this way of sort of like three different categories of if you were going to be like a like a bigger trip, like what you would think about for like setting up a raft chip for for like a guide company or an outfitter, what you're looking at there as a guide, or maybe like what you did to rig a raft and have it set up and like what kind of equipment that was or probably what kind of expands to or what kind of investment it is to get into that level a raft and then maybe like what it's like for someone that was going to set up a private trip. And we're trying to figure out the difference between like the the public commercial side of rafting. Yeah, what it would be like for a hobbyist like for what you did, picking up your your first draft and trailer and frame. I want to think about that a little bit. And then there's also kind of the other end to have, we use what you and I used to be of people that would like pick up a day rental, or pick up, like, you know, whate

Get Out There | 09 Overland Truck Travel
Overland Truck Travel Overland truck travel. Vehicles for 4x4 off road #vanlife. Tools for backcountry overland driving. How to use a HiJack... or is it a come-along. Billy Newman Robert Biscarret If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ Get-out-there-09-overland-truck-travel Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here today with Robert Busker at Robert. How are you doing? Here? What's going on Billy, thanks for doing another podcast, man. It's great. episode eight. Here we are. Yeah, man. I think this is episode nine. isn't really we did that yeah, I think we're moving. Oh, you're right. You're right. Because you did that. Yeah, we got through that one last week too. Yeah, I can't really count that well, so yeah, it's hard to get the first 10 numbers and straight to man, but I but no, it's great. I'm really glad we got we got this one. Coming together again. today. It's gonna be cool. And yeah, man. What's your overtime? That's that's the first hurdle. That's it, man. so to speak. No, it's good. I'm glad that we've, we've got we've got through a handful of these. And yeah, it's fun, man. It's cool. Putting together a handful of them. But this week, I wanted to talk about some of the past truck travel stuff that we've done. And I think you're the guy who's inspired me to get a truck at first man, I got a truck gotta have a truck. Strangely, though, most most of my road trip travel has been a Camry and the old camera, man. But that camera was legendary. It was legit. It was absolutely legendary. But for today's episode, we're thinking about doing was kind of breaking down a couple of the stories in the past we had about doing some overland stuff. Some overland, like travel, if you can call it overland. I don't know. That's like a heavy word. I think that's a modern world. Right? Like this term. I've seen that around like overland where people get a lot of that. Yeah, it seems to be kind of the trendy sort of rich guy word to say for Whelan. Going but in Landrover Madden, or for four-wheel or something, you take that Overlanding overland excursion? Oh, yeah, it's always that but, but I think that's kind of a funny part of it. But I see like a ton of that stuff. I got into that, like, I got into that stuff back in 2011. Like the overland travel Have you ever seen like the magazine overland journal? Is that inactive? I think so. Yeah, I don't know. It's like sort of a niche. It's a niche category. Like this whole thing. So it's where it's like that thing. You'd never find it unless you looked for it. But it's kind of it's interesting. There's tons of stuff out there like that, but that's one of the first ones that I ran into. And that's like, that's when I had like the Camry and I was back in college and stuff and you know, that's when I first really wanted to get because I couldn't get a Landrover from the 70s I really wanted to get like a roof rack and a top box. I was I was like set on that because if I could get that that was like that was like my that was my version of making like a Camry into an overland vehicle you know cuz I'm going to get into this but I'm 20 and I've got 138 bucks so with that Yeah, but that was a part of it. So yeah, I remember setting up like like setting up the car that the roof the rooftop or the top box you know, man those are those are like super handy like and that was g

Get Out There | 08 Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert
Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert Spring camping in the Oregon / Nevada high desert. Rabbit hunting in Oregon Billy Newman Robert Biscarret Get Out There | 08 Spring Camping In The Oregon High Desert Produced by Billy Newman and Marina Hansen Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/

Get Out There | 07 Camping In The Rabbit Hills
Camping In The Rabbit Hills Eastern Oregon camping in the rabbit hills recorded live on the road. Billy Newman Robert Biscarret Guest: Marina Hansen Get Out There | 07 Camping In The Rabbit Hills Gear that I work with Professional film stock I work with https://imaging.kodakalaris.com/photographers-photo-printing/film/color I keep my camera in a Lowepro camera bag https://www.lowepro.com/us-en/magnum-400-aw-lp36054-pww/ When I am photographing landscape images I use a Manfrotto tripod https://www.manfrotto.com/us-en/057-carbon-fiber-4-section-geared-tripod-mt057c4-g/ A lot of my film portfolio was created with the Nikon N80 and Nikon F4 https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/f4.htm https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n80.htm The Nikon D2H and Nikon D3 were used to create many of the digital images on this site https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond3 https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond2h Two lenses I am using all the time are the 50mm f1.8 and the 17-40mm f4 https://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/5018daf.htm https://www.kenrockwell.com/canon/lenses/17-40mm.htm Some astrophotography and documentary video work was created with the Sony A7r https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-a7r I am currently taking photographs with a Canon 5D https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canon-eos-5d-mark-iii If you’re looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. I am Billy Newman, a photographer and creative director that has served clients in the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii for 10 years. I am an author, digital publisher, and Oregon travel guide. I have worked with businesses and individuals to create a portfolio of commercial photography. The images have been placed within billboard, print, and digital campaigns including Travel Oregon, Airbnb, Chevrolet, and Guaranty RV. My photographs often incorporate outdoor landscape environments with strong elements of light, weather, and sky. Through my work, I have published several books of photographs that further explore my connection to natural places. Link Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ Get-out-there-07-Rabbit-Hills-Camping-trip_otter.ai.txt Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast via is Billy new and I'm here today with Robert Vickery. How you doing, Robert? How you doing? I'm doing well. We're in a truck right now we're also here with Marina Hanson. Hey, how are you? I'm good. Thanks for having me on your show, guys. We're doing a truck podcast as we were driving up a mountain road in Eastern Oregon near plush. And the rabbit hills, right, correct. Yeah. So today's Saturday, we've been here. Robert, you got here. I got here Thursday on Thursday afternoon early. Sorry about that. Yeah, it was it was a nice drive. And I got here the weather was nice. I kind of drove around for a bit. Kind of looking for somewhere to camp. Ended up heading up this, this kind of grassy knoll area and found a pretty remote spot. Anyway, set up camp. Nice day. went out for an evening rabbit hunt. No luck. And the weather's pretty nice, though, right? Yeah, the weather is really pretty nice. I mean, that's like, I couldn't ask for a better day for this time of year. Yeah, for this time of year. Same thing that it's really pretty nice. But so I go out for that rabbit hunt. And I come back. And as I'm coming back, it's getting like pretty windy, though. And whatever. It's dark. I decided I'm gonna go to bed because it's pretty cold o

Get Out There | 06 Fishing The Alsea River
Winter steelhead fishing on the Alsea river. Navigating public lands. Mountian travel on forest service roads. Billy Newman Robert Biscarret Get-out-there-06-Fishing-The-Alsea-River_otter.ai Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the equipment that we brought with us, or like some of the breakdown that we had and the gear that we'd bring when we were backpacking. Or when we're doing other stuff. I wanted to break that that idea down with you a little bit. Yeah, I mean, it's it's pretty important it can make or break a trip kind of depending on what you have or don't have. Yeah, I've definitely miss packed before. Oh, yeah. So Oh, God, Robert. Oh, I was just gonna I was just gonna say you tend to overpack or under pack. Let's see, I think well, so I guess I've gone for backpacking. Originally, I was overpack. Now, it's probably still overpack, but I've gotten it. I've gotten a pretty tight when I'm in shape for it. I do an okay job. But what I noticed there was when you like you accidentally or you just mishap and don't bring something that you really needed, like the way it's always been for me is like a sleeping pad, or something like that. Like it's like that thing where it goes from like, it's like 30% less of a comfortable trip just because of that one thing that you don't have. Yeah, weighs so little. Yeah, you have you have everything else in association with it. But you don't have that one piece that I think that's happened a couple times before, like, I don't know, it's probably happening with like my stove, or food or something like that. Like we talked about Tabasco on our last chip. Yeah, that that just one ingredient. This would be rad. See, I'm I'm the opposite. I always tend to overpack I, like I, I go overkill. I just start getting into that mindset of like, Well, okay, what if I had to make a splint? Well, okay, well, I need rope. Okay. What if I had to do that? And I just get into all these, you know, hypotheticals and then reacting for every situation I could think of, I've backed through way too many hypotheticals. Yeah. But you know, what's funny is, you do all that planning. And then the one thing that would happen would be the only thing you didn't compensate for. It's really true. Sometimes that's, that's a real part of the compensation about the outdoors, you get, like, you can plan for a lot of hypotheticals. And I want to break this down with you to later probably, but like the idea of like, equipment that you bring, versus risk, like, How likely is that risk to happen, that you need the equipment? There's probably some different experiences we've had around that. But it's just kind of like a weird idea of how much how much effort goes into preventing certain types of things. When maybe like, a lot of that stuff can be handled with like a Leatherman, I guess, if you think or like, yeah, some some Swiss Army knife. Yeah, exactly. orbit, like some level of good bass gear, it seems like that's the thing that I've gotten the most comfortable about in the last, I don't know, a couple times a backpacking or like the longer times that we've done backpacking, when you get like, a little bit more focused in on just the few things that you need to do for that five day period, that you're going to be there. Because that's a really, that's the big thing. And the, it's weird how you noticed this, the longer that you go out, the less you you finally realize, the less you need to bring at all. Like, if you go for 80 days, you almost need to bring nothing but if you're going for three days, you seem like in your mind, you need to bring everything. Yeah, that's that's funny, you bring that up, because that's exactly how that works. Isn't that like, I don't, I don't know if it's like the the complex of like, you just can't, you just can't really foresee 80 days in the future. So you just you kind of give up, you're like, well, I can't even plan for this, you know, yeah, I'll just bring my minimalist stuff. Or where I'm three days, you're kind of thinking like, well, this might happen. This might happen. day three, okay, this, I'll need this. Yeah, you're trying to navigate every corner in every maneuver of this future map of circumstances tha

Get Out There | 05 Backpacking Stoves and Backcountry Water Filters
Backpacking equipment conversations | Gear to pack for backcountry travel | Camp stoves and water filters How to source inexpensive jackets and layers. Billy Newman Robert Biscarret Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Hey, Billy. I'm doing well. How about you? I'm doing good, man. Thanks for calling in doing Episode Five. We got we got the feed started. We got a couple episodes up. It's kind of fun. Thanks for doing the podcast. Yeah, we're moving right along. We're getting a couple in for the little bit of time that we've been doing it, but so we finished up a conversation. In Episode Four, we talked about some of our experiences backpacking, like I was talking about the wallflowers you're talking about that King range chip you had. And I know at the end of it, we spoke, we just kind of come up to that idea where we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the equipment that we brought with us, or like some of the breakdown that we had and the gear that we'd bring when we were backpacking. Or when we're doing other stuff. I wanted to break that that idea down with you a little bit. Yeah, I mean, it's it's pretty important it can make or break a trip kind of depending on what you have or don't have. Yeah, I've definitely miss packed before. Oh, yeah. So Oh, God, Robert. Oh, I was just gonna I was just gonna say you tend to overpack or under pack. Let's see, I think well, so I guess I've gone for backpacking. Originally, I was overpack. Now, it's probably still overpack, but I've gotten it. I've gotten a pretty tight when I'm in shape for it. I do an okay job. But what I noticed there was when you like you accidentally or you just mishap and don't bring something that you really needed, like the way it's always been for me is like a sleeping pad, or something like that. Like it's like that thing where it goes from like, it's like 30% less of a comfortable trip just because of that one thing that you don't have. Yeah, weighs so little. Yeah, you have you have everything else in association with it. But you don't have that one piece that I think that's happened a couple times before, like, I don't know, it's probably happening with like my stove, or food or something like that. Like we talked about Tabasco on our last chip. Yeah, that that just one ingredient. This would be rad. See, I'm I'm the opposite. I always tend to overpack I, like I, I go overkill. I just start getting into that mindset of like, Well, okay, what if I had to make a splint? Well, okay, well, I need rope. Okay. What if I had to do that? And I just get into all these, you know, hypotheticals and then reacting for every situation I could think of, I've backed through way too many hypotheticals. Yeah. But you know, what's funny is, you do all that planning. And then the one thing that would happen would be the only thing you didn't compensate for. It's really true. Sometimes that's, that's a real part of the compensation about the outdoors, you get, like, you can plan for a lot of hypotheticals. And I want to break this down with you to later probably, but like the idea of like, equipment that you bring, versus risk, like, How likely is that risk to happen, that you need the equipment? There's probably some different experiences we've had around that. But it's just kind of like a weird idea of how much how much effort goes into preventing certain types of things. When maybe like, a lot of that stuff can be handled with like a Leatherman, I guess, if you think or like, yeah, some some Swiss Army knife. Yeah, exactly. orbit, like some level of good bass gear, it seems like that's the thing that I've gotten the most comfortable about in the last, I don't know, a couple times a backpacking or like the longer times that we've done backpacking, when you get like, a little bit more focused in on just the few things that you need to do for that five day period, that you're going to be there. Because that's a really, that's the big thing. And the, it's weird how you noticed this, the longer that you go out, the less you you finally realize, the less you need to bring at all. Like, if you go for 80 days, you almost need to bring nothing but if you're going for three days, you seem like in your mind, you need to bring everything. Yeah, that's that's funny, you bring that up, because that's exactly how that works. Isn't that like, I don't, I don't know if it's like the the complex of like, you just can't, you just can't really foresee 80 days in the future. So you just you kind of give up, you're like, well, I can't even plan for this, you know, yeah, I'll just bring my minimalist stuff. Or where I'm three days, you're kind of thinking like, well, this might happen. This might happen. day three, okay, this, I'll need this. Yeah, you're trying to navigate every corner in every maneuver of this future map of circumstances that you mig

Get Out There | 04 Backpacking The Wallowa Mountains and King Range
Get Out There | 04 Backpacking The Wallowa Mountains and King Range Backpacking stories from the Wallowa mountains in northeast Oregon. Robert talks about his experience backpacking through a thunderstorm. Billy Newman Robert Biscarret Hey, what's going on? This is Billy Newman, and I'm here with Robert Bisca. rat. We're recording the get out there podcast. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm doing good, Billy. How are you? It's cool, man. I'm doing good up here. And yeah, thanks for calling in tonight. Recording Episode Four of the get out there podcast. It's kind of cool, man. I like like doing this. It is. Yeah. It's been a great time. How are you liking this rain? Oh, man. It was kind of well, you know, as we said today, for part of it. It was all right. Like I was getting through the day. And then the last half of it was just like a ton of rain. How was it going? Man, it was a it was pretty good for us the day it's started raining pretty heavily now. I've actually been working out in, in Northern California this last week. So I mean, the weather has been a little bit different kind of getting outside of the valley. Typically a little bit more sunshine than we get here in the valley. But But yeah, now that I'm back in the valley, it's rainy. Were you were you out pass this excuse over there in that part of Northern California? Yeah, yeah. Up there in the hill area. Oh, I've been out in the hill area a couple times. Yeah. I think I went out there with Tyler once to the to the Buddhist temple. Oh, been out there before? No, as far as I knew, all that existed there was a liquor store. Well, the liquor store I mean, that's what's in Hill, but I think freeway exit, not where you would see a Buddhist temple. But no, there's, I think there's a road it's, it's whatever that first exit is once you get over the scuse. And into California, as you come back down that backside is that first exit, it might not Oak Hill, but it was right right there. Right in that area. You take that and, and you cut back West, along along the ridge of the South line of the mountains and you go back a little ways and you kind of cut up a bit. And it's like nowheresville out there. There's just like, there's like a couple like ghost town Aries out there, it looks like and like, I know, like one of those kind of short railroad sections, like where they stack up cars, something like Yeah, but then yeah, you just turn there you go up into the woods a little further and you end up at this pretty impressive Buddhist temple. Like it's been there for years. Yeah, I guess like that the Ashland hippies kind of bought it and set it up. And, you know, I was gonna say is that a hotspot like that, that weird 150 miles between readin and Ashland that nobody lives in is that just like, I think it's, it's for its tranquility. It's, it's been, it's intense. Like, you go out there, I think we've taken pictures of it before, but they like have all the Buddhist flags of flower. You know, like on the on the side of the hills that you can watch. It's got it's kind of cool. It's like a pretty impressive structure that they build out there. Like it looks like an orange a Chinese building, and then lower down. There's like these columns that are all painted red with like, you know, ornate symbols on it. And they like spin in this like, pretty big, like, drum system that goes and there's like 12 of them. And they like all spin as you go into this temple. Wow. Yeah. is a pretty heavy duty template for just out in the backcountry. Nowhere. Have you been out there much like out into some of the stuff in the skews? No, not really. I mean, you and I did kind of on point with this podcast, but we did. We did the hike up pilot rock. Oh, yeah. I was thinking about that. That is up there. Yeah, I mean, that's that's really like and I mean, other than snowboarding up on Mount Ashland. That's kind of my only experience with that area. Yeah, that's right. You know, the six keys is what I want to get into more like pilot rock is cool. I think. I think a pilot rock more as like something of Eastern Oregon or more like Table Rock. You know, when you think of Kind of, yeah, that side of it. But I remember hiking pilot rock with you. That was like, late last week of July 2008. I remember gas was 525 a gallon. Oh my God. He's like 550 a gallon when you went over to Ashland it was isn't that when Tyler hit that rock in his Camry hatchback. And oh yeah. Ended up pushing that hole in his oil pan. Or it was his transmission pan? Oh, yes. It was he was leaking transmission fluid everywhere. I remember that night there was thought that like it might be the end of the Camry and the guy now, but yeah, it was I remember that. Yeah, like the whole drive back, like loaded down with people and yeah, just I guess it dripped out over the trip. But yeah, it's too bad. I remember Dawson came with us on that. That was Dawson that that turned us on to that and for those of you that may be listening D

Get Out There | 03 Black Bears In Southern Oregon
Get Out There | 03 Black Bears In Southern Oregon Hosted by Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river. Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com get-out-there-03-3-1-2017_ Hello, and thank you for listening to this episode of The get out there podcast. My name is Billy Newman. I'm here today with Robert biskra. How you doing, Robert? Good, Billy, how you doing? I'm doing really good. Thanks a lot for doing another episode of this podcast. I think we're doing episode number three today. We are. That's pretty cool, man. Yeah, I was gonna say I wanted to talk to you about some stuff that will probably be in a few more weeks as we get into the nicer weather. But I wanted to talk to you about some of your past bear experiences. I was wondering what that was like for you, because you were doing guide stuff down on the lower Rogue River. And I know in Grants Pass really a lot of time, we didn't have a lot of bear boxes, or a lot of bear concerns about the wildlife or the wilderness right around the area of town there. I think like if you go south, into the rescues, or over into the coastal range, there's probably more stuff over there. But it was seemed always like a lot lighter than it was further south. Like when you got into California. I remember like when we went just a little bit east to like reading in the Mount Shasta area. And like up into the whiskey Lake area, there was like tons of bear boxes, it seemed like I was like a big thing that they had to protect against all the time. And it was sort of strange, because it wasn't really that much exposure for me when I was doing a lot of camping stuff in Southern Oregon or in Eastern Oregon, especially, I guess Eastern Oregon to have much exposure with like bear encounters out there. And I think it wasn't until I got into like go into the lower rogue before I even saw like the electric fences. So I was gonna ask Yeah, like, Yeah, well, what kind of stuff you had to run into when you're checking out or like when you're doing low rub trips? Well, yeah, I mean, we have plenty of barren counters down there. And I think one of the big contributors to that is just the just the amount of people that are down there all the time. I mean, the bears really, really know when people are around, you know, there's food, you know, a bunch of new smells, they have an incredible sense of smell. So you know, that traffic down there really kind of brings them into the area. And not to mention, and I could be a little off, but I'm fairly certain that the lower road Canyon, I know about 10 years ago was the highest black bear population in the lower 48. Really? Yeah. Wow. 10 years ago. Yeah. I'm Well, I mean, think about it. I mean, the road going out there to gold beach and Agnes that's a that's bear camp road. I mean, you see bear fences over there all over the place. But uh, yeah, I believe Forest Service did a study and like a flyover and found that in that Canyon, there's more bears per square mile than anywhere else in the lower 48. Wow, I wouldn't have really thought about that. But yeah, I do understand like bear, bear Creek and bear camp road. Seems like a lot of beer references. I knew that there was a lot of bear activity in Southern Oregon in the past, like if we go back 100 years or so I think 150 years there's a lot of talk about the bear population over in Oregon and over in this section of like the forested areas like a lot of the gold miners had to deal with them up in the up in the hills. And those areas I think even like in the like, what was it isn't? Isn't bear camp road. Park goldmine is you go up? Have you seen? Yeah, a lot of mining claims up there. Yeah, that's what I had seen. I knew like up on Mount Baldy in Grants Pass. There's a lot of a lot of claims in that area. And I'd heard about some bear encounters that happened up there like up by some loop and then over further into the hills like past Mount Baldy, kind of over in the Applegate area. It was like way back stuff or like, do you remember the story? We heard about this in high school? I think we went to the gravesite for this one time. But it was like this piece of local Yeah, rants past history, Laura. We went to this, the oldest gravesite in Grants Pass. It's like in this little park. Now. It's a really strange thing. But you go up and you see this tombstone. And it's from 1856, like sometime before the Civil War. And there's this tombstone that says that this man, bH Baird, died of a grizzly bear attack down by the Rogue River and what would today be River Park? Or like just the park downtown? Like, isn't that nuts? I've seen that gravesite. Yeah. Back in elementary school. We used to walk over there on Well, we went over there on a field trip one time and we had to do like, you know, like crayon transcripts, you put the piece of transfer paper on the tombstone and do and then I and so we all had to make a rub of that of

Get Out There | 02 Hunting In Eastern Oregon
Get Out There | 02Â Hunting In Eastern Oregon Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman Robert tells his story of deer hunting in eastern Oregon. Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com billynewmanphoto.com Get-out-there-02-hunting-cut_otter.ai Hey, what's going on? My name is Billy Newman. I'm here with Robert Vickery. How you doing, Robert? Hey, I'm good. We are recording Episode Two of the get out there podcast, podcast about the outdoors about outdoor adventure tourism is about travel. I don't know anything else, probably just that we want to talk about. But Thanks, Robert, for doing this podcast with me today. Yeah, absolutely. No, it's been cool, man. But yeah, what's been going on? It's been not a whole lot. It's been a week since we last did this. Yeah, we were talking about the lower rogue stuff on our our pilot episode. And that was a crazy story. I was thinking about that, like through the week, singing about that, like, I just kind of took it as a novelty that you were telling us about that story. But then I was kind of playing it back like, man, there's a lot of situations of different moments in that chain of events that seemed like it was going to be pretty, pretty tight to get out of. Yeah, thanks for talking about it. But yeah, Robert, if you didn't listen to last week's episode was a raft guide for a number of years on the Rogue River and lower row River. Which is pretty cool, man. I think it's a it's no small no small task. Yeah, no, it's a ton of fun. And it's, it's opened a lot of opportunities stuff to me, and you know, it's a passion So, so it's a win-win. Now that but I've known you for a while. And I know that you haven't always been on the river. In fact, I remember like when we'd go out we had the worst gear we had like, the little biomart Tahiti that you'd play with a little yellow, yellow. Yeah, we just we just try get by going down for what like hogs to go lease or something like that. We just see that thing taco in the center a few times. Yeah, it would be popping. Because we have like a 30 rack at the back sitting on top of our life jacket. You know, I remember Jeremy jumping off of his kayak onto the back of my kayak and a rapid to flip it upside, you know, and roll it over anything. Oh, this is great. This is this is these are the brilliant river people that would one day guide Yeah, you know, and you wonder how I yeah, it's it's amazing that they do. But Robert, an avid outdoorsman, has been on the river for a good bit of time skilled in that. But before that, Robert, I wanted to talk to you about some of the old experience you had learning how to hunt, or learning how to do some of those some of those other types of outdoors things like, like I was thinking about trips that my dad and I did Eastern Oregon and I wanted to ask you about yes to like, because my dad and I, I think we started going in like, I don't know what 2001 2000 or something like that. And that time we go out in the early fall, we were just campers and we just dug that time of year over in that part of the country but we would always cruise out east to Klamath Falls east to Lakeview. And we go up into the mountains over there near Warner rim and plush and heart man, that's beautiful. I dug that area super cool. But we so we've gone out there like a number of times to do like photos and camping and hiking stuff. But that time of year was also I think a bit or well there's there's a few different seasons. You could probably explain that over time. But but there's always like different groups of hunters kind of coming in through that area because it was a lot of it was a big public land out there. I think it was BLM land in that section at least. I think there was a season for antelope through that area. But I'm sure Well, you've probably seen tons of antelope out there. Yeah, tonight. Are you are you familiar with I mean, just how incredible their eyesight is? Not really no, do you know? Okay, I mean, crazy tangent, but I mean, antelope, their eyesight is the equivalent of a 10 power binocular. So I mean, imagine you're looking through 10 power binoculars and something that's what an antelope sees. So I typically like when people hunt antelope Well, I don't want to typically generalize everyone but I know there are a lot of hunters that will use like radio communication and kind of like us to people you know, over like the the radius of a mile and a half two miles. Oh, wow. And have somebody go way around and have somebody almost set up and one person tries to herd them towards said Hunter. Oh, like someone that's like stationary, or is that is that Yeah, get into the ghillie suit kind of thing. Where they're like, yeah, I mean, I don't I don't know if they're, like, you know, full on snipers status. But I mean, really close, you know, I mean, it's really, you just want to stay still in, you know, because, I mean, they just have such incredible eyesight. That's amazing

Get Out There | 01 Navigating The Lower Rogue River
Get Out There | 01 Navigating The Lower Rogue River Robert Biscarret and Billy Newman Robert tells his story of navigating the technical rapids on the lower rogue river. Get Out There Podcast billynewmanphoto.com Hey what’s going on this is Billy Newman i’m here today recording a test podcast with my friend Robert biscarrat Robert how you doing go well how are you doing doing good man i’m happy that we’re trying out this FaceTime audio call and it sounds like it’s working pretty good so we’ll try and we’ll try to work it out over time to see if it works alright but I feel the my idea is coming over to you well yeah everything is coming in loud and clear excited to do this should be fun ya know because if we can kind of get a rhythm down doing it it would be pretty easy I mean gosh man just got your phone right now is that cake but yeah we never do a podcast with you maybe about what i figured it’s just like a lot of the outdoor topic so we’re both interested in you know are just some of the other stories or camping trips that we’ve done in the past it would be cool to talk about yeah yeah I I don’t really know anything about anything outdoors related but yeah but I know like the cock oh man you know plenty I’m sure but yeah i was thinking of well you should tell us a little bit about some of the raft guide experience that you had in the past because i think i’d be kind of just thing to start to break down a little bit like see you when did you start guiding stuff uh you mean like season or what did I just start I guess just like rowing or anything like that like yeah when did you start in general yeah I started like a four years ago and you know I kind of fell into it was something I wanted to do for a long time but the opportunity really presented itself at the time it did and and wow man what an experience it’s it’s really interesting and learning that you know you take it for granted or you know you just kind of a shame that it doesn’t take much to do and then you get behind the oars and then all of a sudden it’s just really eye-opening really gain a respect for the people that are good at it yeah I can only imagine really cuz uh like I had that job down the river on the Rogue River for a while so I kinda understand the atmosphere of what’s going on down there but like even the times that you rep lemme row just for a few minutes ago my gosh I’m out of it because this is where I got a talent or if this was a skill to build definitely but suit you so you started this season you did like the day chips like the river trips of the normal the Rogue River and then out second-year eyes when you moved into the wild and scenic section it was at that first year uh you know that first year I kind of got some got some training experience down there they wanted me to come down and learn and it was really nice I I was fortunate enough to really learn from some great oarsmen but yeah so I got down there wasn’t really working down there but I was experiencing it kind of getting a vibe for what it was like and just kind of getting you know cutting my teeth down there so it was good learned a lot but you know even though you learn a lot now and really prepare you for for working down there full time and that was my second season when when I was asked to come down and do that full time and that was that was crazy man yeah I were him I had a question about that like I wanted to know about one of those first experiences of like because there’s a couple of in the Downriver section on the Rogue River there’s the wild and scenic section of the river to catch people up and that’s how long is that is that like 42 miles 35 roughly roughly River miles always vary from shit the BLM marked trail miles but yeah it read in that ballpark okay yeah something like that so there’s this the Wild and Scenic section where there’s really no development or no modern development and there’s a limited amount of rafts that go down through the section each day right yeah absolutely there’s a permit system through the BLM Bureau of Land Management and essentially what they do is they allow 120 people down per day I know that sounds like a lot but in reality I mean it’s really sparse you really don’t know very many people it can be as many votes as you like I mean it could be a hundred and twenty votes right okay but yeah but there’s a limit of 120 people John and typically you’re running two to three if you’re a private boat or provoke us as a guide company we’re running you know six people for both so right okay the kind of come consolidate a little bit yeah I don’t have that works well so I know that there’s like a couple of those features on that lower rogue section that are like pretty heavy like blossom bar and I wanted you t