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Workshop with Keith Lazelle
Nature Photography Workshop at the Cedar River Watershed Education Center
Led by: Keith Lazelle (http://www.keithlazelle.com/) August 28--10 am to 4:30 pm. Renowned Washington nature photographer, Keith Lazelle, will lead this one-day workshop at the Cedar River Watershed Education Center (North Bend area). Two hours of classroom time will be followed by a 4- 5 hour field trip into the (protected) Cedar River Watershed's pristine areas to photograph places rarely seen by human eyes. Participants should bring their own camera equipment, a lunch/drink, weather-appropriate clothing, and comfortable shoes. Cost: $50. Adults only. Call (206) 233-1515 (press option 4) or email to register. |
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Workshop with Keith Lazelle
In article , David Kirschtel
wrote: Nature Photography Workshop at the Cedar River Watershed Education Center Led by: Keith Lazelle (http://www.keithlazelle.com/) Never heard of him. But I've been through North Bend many times. |
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Workshop with Keith Lazelle
On 8/4/04 6:42 PM, in article ,
"Randall Ainsworth" wrote: In article , David Kirschtel wrote: Nature Photography Workshop at the Cedar River Watershed Education Center Led by: Keith Lazelle (http://www.keithlazelle.com/) Never heard of him. But I've been through North Bend many times. Keith is a highly accomplished photographer. I believe his website speaks for itself. Myself and others in the photography ecosystem here in Washington hold a high regard for his work and contributions to Washington's environmental concerns. My personal opinion is he is a rising star whose dedication clearly sets a positive example for others. I wouldn't be surprised if he doesn't move into true national exposure in the near future. $50 for a full day seminar with Keith, including access to the Cedar River Watershed is a bargain. Access into this watershed is highly restricted. You can thank Keith for creating the opportunity to go into this area for a price that is probably less than you would pay for permitting, gas and time spent getting the permission. This is an opportunity one otherwise would not be able to secure without many hours of red tape, permitting, etc. As far as North Bend...I've been there many times to shoot. There are some very nice locations to work with once one learns a bit about the area and uses something besides I-90 rest stops for their nature photography. Rick Ellsbury Bellevue, WA |
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Workshop with Keith Lazelle
In article , Information
wrote: Keith is a highly accomplished photographer. I believe his website speaks for itself. Myself and others in the photography ecosystem here in Washington hold a high regard for his work and contributions to Washington's environmental concerns. My personal opinion is he is a rising star whose dedication clearly sets a positive example for others. I wouldn't be surprised if he doesn't move into true national exposure in the near future. $50 for a full day seminar with Keith, including access to the Cedar River Watershed is a bargain. Access into this watershed is highly restricted. You can thank Keith for creating the opportunity to go into this area for a price that is probably less than you would pay for permitting, gas and time spent getting the permission. This is an opportunity one otherwise would not be able to secure without many hours of red tape, permitting, etc. As far as North Bend...I've been there many times to shoot. There are some very nice locations to work with once one learns a bit about the area and uses something besides I-90 rest stops for their nature photography. Oh, a photog/greener. Just what the world needs... |
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Workshop with Keith Lazelle
"Information" wrote
Keith is a highly accomplished photographer. I believe his website speaks for itself. Myself and others in the photography ecosystem here in Washington hold a high regard for his work and contributions to Washington's environmental concerns. $50 for a full day seminar with Keith, including access to the Cedar River Watershed is a bargain. Access into this watershed is highly restricted. And how does an extra group of people tramping around and disturbing it for their narcissistic gratification do any good to this watershed? If you want to 'preserve' it, stay the F**K OUT! -- Nicholas O. Lindan, Cleveland, Ohio Consulting Engineer: Electronics; Informatics; Photonics. Remove spaces etc. to reply: n o lindan at net com dot com psst.. want to buy an f-stop timer? nolindan.com/da/fstop/ |
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Workshop with Keith Lazelle
Information wrote in message ...
On 8/4/04 6:42 PM, in article , "Randall Ainsworth" wrote: In article , David Kirschtel wrote: Nature Photography Workshop at the Cedar River Watershed Education Center Led by: Keith Lazelle (http://www.keithlazelle.com/) Never heard of him. But I've been through North Bend many times. Keith is a highly accomplished photographer. I believe his website speaks for itself..... $50 for a full day seminar with Keith, including access to the Cedar River... Rick Ellsbury Bellevue, WA I don't know Keith, but you should notice the e-mail contact is a City of Seattle address. The Cedar Watershed is owned by the City Water Department for the regional water supply, and the watershed is closed to all but a handful of federal, state, and local agencies, and public tours. It's a restored pristine area, see: http://www.ci.seattle.wa.us/util/Abo...shed/index.asp --Scott-- |
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Workshop with Keith Lazelle
In article , Scott M.
Knowles wrote: I don't know Keith, but you should notice the e-mail contact is a City of Seattle address. The Cedar Watershed is owned by the City Water Department for the regional water supply, and the watershed is closed to all but a handful of federal, state, and local agencies, and public tours. It's a restored pristine area, see: He lives in Quilcene according to his Web site. Quilcene is up the coast from me a couple of hours...basically the middle of nowhere. I'd be surprised if they even had dial-up access. |
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Workshop with Keith Lazelle
snip
Keith is a highly accomplished photographer. I believe his website speaks for itself..... $50 for a full day seminar with Keith, including access to the Cedar River... Rick Ellsbury Bellevue, WA I don't know Keith, but you should notice the e-mail contact is a City of Seattle address. The Cedar Watershed is owned by the City Water Department for the regional water supply, and the watershed is closed to all but a handful of federal, state, and local agencies, and public tours. It's a restored pristine area, see: http://www.ci.seattle.wa.us/util/Abo...urces_&_Treatm ent/Cedar_River_Watershed/index.asp --Scott-- More information located here...part of the education outreach program. http://www.actionstudio.org/public/p...fm?pageID=3323 If you do plan to move to Quilcene and need ISP service, the following link will be of use. I noticed they have ISDN service for a fair price. http://usa01.net/isp/Quilcene/pricelist.html ISDN can actually (and often does) perform better than entry level DSL because of DSL architecture and regulations which allow telecom ISP's to vary the service speed they deliver. I monitor my ISP and find they fudge on service speed about 20 % of the time. If one is running web site maintenance and support, dial-up, DSL or ISDN are preferred over cable due to the exclusion of access to IP addresses on your node. Course, if your in the outback, you can go with satellite, solar array, wind power to have really nice high speed access. I suppose this isn't topical to nature photography, unless you want to build a photo web site and maintain it. http://www.actionstudio.org/public/p...fm?pageID=3323 Rick Ellsbury |
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Workshop with Keith Lazelle
More information located here...part of the education outreach program.
http://www.actionstudio.org/public/p...fm?pageID=3323 Ahhhh...Friends of the Watershed. I've seen enough of these "friends of" groups. We've got one around here that should be more accurately named NIMBY. Well, you greeners go out there and hug some trees and have a real fine time becoming one with nature. Just stay up there in the Seattle area. |
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In article , Scott M.
Knowles wrote: I don't know Keith, but you should notice the e-mail contact is a City of Seattle address. The Cedar Watershed is owned by the City Water Department for the regional water supply, and the watershed is closed to all but a handful of federal, state, and local agencies, and public tours. It's a restored pristine area, see: He lives in Quilcene according to his Web site. Quilcene is up the coast from me a couple of hours...basically the middle of nowhere. I'd be surprised if they even had dial-up access. |
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