Mudgee Sunrise

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Mudgee Sunrise

Postby radar on Tue Jun 13, 2006 10:40 am

Hi,

we had a great time in Mudgee, even if rained most of the day on Saturday. Just a quick PP to show that we did have one nice morning and that was Monday. It was very chilly, -2C. This one taken with the sun rising, you may be able to see some of the mist starting to lift off the pond.

Image

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C&C welcome.

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Postby terminator on Tue Jun 13, 2006 10:47 am

Nice shot. Sure looks cold there...
I would probably have tried to leave a bit more of the foreground bush visible if possible instead of chopping it off.
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Postby huynhie on Tue Jun 13, 2006 10:53 am

Great shot Andre.

This must have been taken on Monday, because the other days definately didn't look like this when I woke up in Mudgee. :D
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Postby stubbsy on Tue Jun 13, 2006 11:00 am

Nice André. Of course that's way too early to have been out of bed on such a cold day :wink: :)

You can see a smidge of blank grey/black where you rotated this to straightn that pesky horizon in the top left and right top side corners so a recrop is needed. I'd also be tempted to push the sat a little or the colour temp a touch too.
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Postby huynhie on Tue Jun 13, 2006 11:06 am

You've got very shrps eyes there Peter. I did not notice the crop lines on the edge of the pic. :wink:
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Postby radar on Tue Jun 13, 2006 11:07 am

stubbsy wrote:Nice André. Of course that's way too early to have been out of bed on such a cold day :wink: :)


I agree, it was way too cold to be up and about!!

You can see a smidge of blank grey/black where you rotated this to straightn that pesky horizon in the top left and right top side corners so a recrop is needed. I'd also be tempted to push the sat a little or the colour temp a touch too.


Oops :oops: :oops:, I'll fix that and try with the saturation changes. Thanks Peter.

Terminator, I've got one with a bit more foreground, but because the bank of the pond was basically at water level, I was losing the top of the trees in the reflection. However, I'll get it PP and see which one comes out better.

Andrew, certainly was Monday :-)

thanks,

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Postby radar on Tue Jun 13, 2006 2:14 pm

Okay,

fixed the rotation blip and increased the saturation. Not taking into account the rotation crop oversight in the first one, does this one work better with the increased saturation?

Image

thanks,

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Postby wendellt on Tue Jun 13, 2006 2:50 pm

Andre

beautiful the colours are fantastic, reminds me of the loire valley

could you try one where the house is centred by re-cropping?
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Postby Geoff on Tue Jun 13, 2006 3:10 pm

Andre - VERY nice touch up :)
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Postby stubbsy on Tue Jun 13, 2006 3:28 pm

I think the new version is better, but then I'd have to say that wouldn't I. :wink:
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Postby belle on Tue Jun 13, 2006 5:05 pm

Has my Dad been painting the trees red in Mudgee as well?! :shock:
Nice shot and the second edit is better imo, where in Mudgee was this taken?
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Postby radar on Tue Jun 13, 2006 5:12 pm

Hi Belle,

belle wrote:Has my Dad been painting the trees red in Mudgee as well?! :shock:


If he was up that early on Monday morning, he probably was :D

Nice shot and the second edit is better imo, where in Mudgee was this taken?


At the Evanslea B&B not far from the yellow house.

It was great to meet your family, it was easy to spot your Dad. We had all three of them with us at dinner on Sunday.

thanks for letting them know we were coming,

Cheers,

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Postby johnd on Tue Jun 13, 2006 8:43 pm

Nice, real nice.
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Postby birddog114 on Tue Jun 13, 2006 9:32 pm

Nice one Radar!

On the way back to Sydney at the early hours on Monday, I spotted lot of photogenic scenes along the road to Lithgow.

Will return to Mudgee one day in the near future.
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Postby radar on Wed Jun 14, 2006 10:19 am

Hi Birddog,

birddog114 wrote:On the way back to Sydney at the early hours on Monday, I spotted lot of photogenic scenes along the road to Lithgow.

Will return to Mudgee one day in the near future.


Fully agree, it is a beautiful region. At dinner time, Sheryl was mentionning Turon Gates. It is about 80kms south of Mudgee, beautiful cabins that can sleep up to 8. It is in a beautiful bush setting, close to get to Dunn's Swamp that we didn't get to go due to weather and also Hill End, etc, etc. As you say, lots more to explore.

http://www.turongates.com/index.html

Nothing wrong also being based in Mudgee, nice restaurants, vineyards, ... :-)

Cheers,

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edit: add link to Turon Gates
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Postby birddog114 on Wed Jun 14, 2006 10:54 am

radar wrote:Hi Birddog,

birddog114 wrote:On the way back to Sydney at the early hours on Monday, I spotted lot of photogenic scenes along the road to Lithgow.

Will return to Mudgee one day in the near future.


Fully agree, it is a beautiful region. At dinner time, Sheryl was mentionning Turon Gates. It is about 80kms south of Mudgee, beautiful cabins that can sleep up to 8. It is in a beautiful bush setting, close to get to Dunn's Swamp that we didn't get to go due to weather and also Hill End, etc, etc. As you say, lots more to explore.


Beautiful cabin and sleep up to eight? not for me sorry!

I rather stay at a hotel or motel with individual room & facilities.

Not much bothering anybody else. :wink:
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Postby Raskill on Wed Jun 14, 2006 1:58 pm

I think I have said it before, but I know the Turon Gates, Capertee, Newnes and Glen Davis areas very well. I used to cover it all as part of my patrol. You can take a nice drive via Capertee -> Turon Gates -> Sofala -> Hill End and then back to Mudgee. Would suit a four wheel drive the best.

The areas down around Newnes are good for bushwalks, the ruins of the old Shale Oil refineries and cliff lines. You can get dropped off at Newnes and walk back to via the Glow Worm Tunnel to the Newnes Plateau, behind Lithgow. There is a great camping ground at Newnes that is in a culdasac canyon, with towering cliffs all around. It's also in the Wollemi National Park, which is pretty special.

The areas around Glen Davis/ Glen Alice are pretty similar to Newnes, but a little more open. You canfollow the old pipeline from Glen Davis to Newnes (they are in parrallel valleys), about 25 km. A nice walk, which isnt overly hard.

Be a nice place for a weekend meet maybe?
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Postby Jeff on Wed Jun 14, 2006 3:09 pm

Good idea Alan .
When can we arrange it?

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Postby Raskill on Wed Jun 14, 2006 4:58 pm

Once things settle down at home and my child is exorcised it shouldn't be a problem. I wouldn't mind getting down the valleys before winter ends, there should be a bit of water in the rivers then. Summer time is bloody hot and windy down there. We'll try to organise it. :D
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Postby radar on Wed Jun 14, 2006 5:15 pm

Raskill wrote:Once things settle down at home and my child is exorcised it shouldn't be a problem.

:shock: :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock:

I wouldn't mind getting down the valleys before winter ends, there should be a bit of water in the rivers then. Summer time is bloody hot and windy down there. We'll try to organise it. :D


Sounds like a great idea Raskill, nothing beats local knowledge. :D :D

Cheers,

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Postby LostDingo on Wed Jun 14, 2006 8:20 pm

Raskill wrote:I think I have said it before, but I know the Turon Gates, Capertee, Newnes and Glen Davis areas very well. I used to cover it all as part of my patrol. You can take a nice drive via Capertee -> Turon Gates -> Sofala -> Hill End and then back to Mudgee. Would suit a four wheel drive the best.

The areas down around Newnes are good for bushwalks, the ruins of the old Shale Oil refineries and cliff lines. You can get dropped off at Newnes and walk back to via the Glow Worm Tunnel to the Newnes Plateau, behind Lithgow. There is a great camping ground at Newnes that is in a culdasac canyon, with towering cliffs all around. It's also in the Wollemi National Park, which is pretty special.

The areas around Glen Davis/ Glen Alice are pretty similar to Newnes, but a little more open. You canfollow the old pipeline from Glen Davis to Newnes (they are in parrallel valleys), about 25 km. A nice walk, which isnt overly hard.

Be a nice place for a weekend meet maybe?


fascinating area when you come out of the glow worm tunnel....massive tree ferns and filtered light...quite magical...walk further down and eagles nest in the cliff faces....
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Postby mudder on Wed Jun 14, 2006 8:25 pm

Looks like a lovely spot with a magic outlook from the cabin, and I'm always up for a nice reflection shot :)

The extra saturation in image #2 looks good but the redness/yellowness(?) in the tree tends to look a smidge strong for me, it seems to grab my eye... Maybe if the reds/yellows were toned down a smidge in sat?
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Postby birddog114 on Wed Jun 14, 2006 8:28 pm

Raskill,
Actually, it's real good ideas.
Unfortunately, we were there and posed as tourists, we knew nothing about where to go or what to look at/ for.
End up we spent most our times at the wineries or wandered on the wet streets at Mudgee.
Hope there's another chance to come up to Mudgee or its surrounded regions.
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Postby marcotrov on Wed Jun 14, 2006 9:28 pm

Very nice image Andre. PP'ing ain't half bad either :wink:
cheers
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