May Central Vietnam photography Tour

Portrait with the Mitakon lens 35mm on Xt2
Early morning fishing activity in Vietnam
Vietnamese woman portrait
Vietnamese man coming back from the rice fields
Fisherman attending his net on the river in Vietnam
street photo of a market in Vietnam
Man in a lagoon near Hue in Vietnam
A travel photography review in hoi an

This was a photography tour I had been waiting for a long time, a special "advanced photographers only" photography workshop around my adoptive city of Hoi An, Vietnam. For the occasion I had Drew Hopper co-leading the tour with me. The idea is to run workshops focusing on merging Travel and Street photography to create more compelling images. May is one of the best months in terms of weather and human activity in central Vietnam, so I knew it would be a very special tour.Because it was an "advanced photographers only" thing, most of the participants were returning students that I had previously met on other tours. Four of them were actually attending this 3-day workshop for the second, third and even fourth time! Others had joined our photography tours in other countries. What it meant was that I knew most participants' levels in photography, plus I knew they were chilled out. Like, very chilled out. Running a photography workshop with easy going people usually helps the workshop itself, allowing me more time to teach and not solving people's requests.  After a hilarious welcome dinner (blame the participants!) we started day one very early, as we needed to reach a more remote fishing village in the South of Hoi An. A very special photography workshop means very special locations. Of course, we were blessed with the perfect weather through the whole tour, offering us the most stunning sunrises of the year. It is also one of the hottest time of the year, which is fine as there is no way we take photos in the middle of the day. The place was extremely busy with fishing activity, and the first couple of hours on that beach were really wild. A great way to bring the new participants up to date with the craziness of our locations and the pace of the workshop! In order to alternate with open space, we walked through the village and went to visit some people I had met in the last months. People in this area are very keen to invite us into their homes as they never meet foreigners. It is still a very untouched place that I am keeping for these types of workshops. Back to Hoi An town, and after a well-deserved coffee break (only our second coffee for the day!) we focused the workshop on the street side, applying techniques allowing us to shoot in harsh light. Of course, we didn't last long walking the streets at 11 am with the summer heat and went for an early lunch, allowing us a good break before starting again at 3 pm. For that afternoon I wasn't going to allow us to visit a location too close to Hoi An so we headed South again, as I knew the area would be very busy with the rice harvests. We spent the afternoon in a tiny village surrounded by fields, meeting locals working in the fields. Everyone was so keen to get to know the "crazy" foreigners walking in their muddy fields that it made the interactions very easy. Around sunset time we moved towards the riverside, hoping to capture sunset reflections. Of course, after finding a huge herd of ducks I lost most of the group. Apparently, ducks have the same effect as puppies and it creates a vacuum sucking all my students into an abyss of animal love. After a little bit of night photography in Hoi An and an awesome "manual" dinner (rolling our own food is so much more fun!), we headed back to our hotel. At least some did. Others were thirsty, still. Day two, blessed once again with an incredible sunrise. Fishing nets and a busy market was at our program, which once again didn't disappoint anyone. This market is one of my favourite around Hoi An and allows us to really work on the light and how to capture a brief moment. Coupling these photography techniques with the street inspiration that Drew brought to the group ensured very interesting results from everyone. Back to Hoi An and after a well-deserved break, we met for lunch before departing for the lagoons in the North. To my favourite part of the tour now: the lagoons located between Danang and Hue offer such incredible photo opportunities if you know where to go and if you get there at the right time of the day. And that meant another early start on Sunday! This is one of the toughest early starts I do on any tours as we are blessed with having an amazing local restaurant not far from our hotel, where food is spicy (Hue style) and beer is cheap. Very cheap! Anywho, I think this picture from that last morning will talk for itself. My plan is to buy a piece of land over there and wake up with that view every day for the rest of my life! Sunday afternoon was our final photo review and as you can imagine, the photos displayed were just amazing. It had been a very creative and fun weekend and there are no others ways I want to run my photography tours. Thank you so much to the group, you have been wicked all the way! 

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Myanmar photography tour 2017 recap