Jun 24
Getting there
I’ve no special plans for this year’s vacation – just mountains. I started with a de-tour to Klövsjö, I wanted to check out the Fettjeåfallet waterfall. It was a sunny day so not really ideal for waterfalls, but at least I’d get to see the place. It’s a relatively short hike – about 2 km – but very rocky. But there’s also plenty to photograph along the way, and it’s this “along the way” that makes Fettjeåfallet one of the better waterfalls I’ve seen.
I had made the radical decision of taking the film camera (and the G10) on this excursion. The contrasty light in the forest is a nightmare for any camera so every time I wanted a picture I waited for a cloud to drift in. With the G10, I was able to use bracketing for HDR. And I must say I struggled a great deal with that. Every single time I’m on the field and need the bracketing function, I forget how to use it! And what kills me is that it’s not difficult, but I just can’t remember the combination of buttons to press. Because there’s that bracketing function, I can set it, I can even choose the interval… but the darn camera totally ignores my settings. So I’m missing some crucial last step in the process. Which leaves me doing manual bracketing, which takes too long, when the clouds are moving fast and thus changing the conditions of shadows and light in the composition. When I get home, I’ll have to check the manual and write down some notes and put them in the bag. I refuse to let a compact camera beat me.
But the film camera then. Not enough functions to get confused! The only custom function I need is the mirror lockup, but just in case, I carry the manual in the bag. You know, the good old days when you actually got a hardcopy of the manual. When I was walking back to the car, I was wondering why I’m not a least bit bothered about whether or not the slides will be any good. All too easy to botch the exposure in these conditions, and I didn’t even bracket. And I realised – the final picture is not that important! I’ve always said that the journey is more important than the goal, and it truly is. Good pictures are just a bonus. Sweet!
4 comments


“You know, the good old days when you actually got a hardcopy of the manual.”
I would not call it the good old days, but I still have the Dutch manual for Nikon D80 (new owner did not need it for some funny reason)
Why all the waterfalls always face North or such direction that they are on shadows? Very impressive picture, I like hugely saturated colours especially in this one.
I figured out the bracketing function on the G10. The crucial last step I was missing was pressing the “set” button, LOL! Talk about a duh moment…
I think my brain is taking this holiday thing too seriously. Total reset!
Yes I got a bit of a Njupeskär feeling with this waterfall, but it’s not as bad though – it’s facing east and the canyon is not as deep as Njupeskär, so morning light should do it. For that reason, plus the nice photo ops along the way, I would rate Fettjeåfallet better than Njupeskär.
Nice HDR, I too like the colors very much. Wonder how that would work as print though. I have almost 3cm thick hardcopy of my D700…and it contains only one language
Rane I think you’re right… the manuals for the digital cameras would probably be a bit on the heavy side. Less functions means thinner manuals, so the EOS 3 manual is no problem in the flat front compartment of my camera bag.