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29 Mar 2026

Catching the Sydney light rail

 

Another rainy day shot taken a few weeks ago in Sydney

Seventy years ago Sydney had one of the biggest tram networks of any city in the world.Then in a spectacular own goal it was all ripped up. Not a single line was left. Melbourne on the other hand retained its huge network and expanded it. Now it has the biggest tram network of any city in the world.

Sydney has realised the error of its ways and is building a light rail system but construction is very costly, very disruptive and slow. The good news is that it proving very popular. A case of better late than never.

26 Mar 2026

Keeping cool

 

We are only 10 days from when the clocks go back for the end of Summer Time but it's still very warm and humid and summery here.

It's been a very hot and long summer and Holly with her thick fur coat will be very glad when it is cooler again. She likes to go into the spare bedroom and lie on her back under the ceiling fan with her tummy exposed to sleep-as she was doing this morning when I took the photo.

20 Mar 2026

The man in black



 A previously unseen photo from my Lightroom library. Taken late June in Paris with my Leica X1.

The EXIF data says it was taken at 3.39pm but that seems very unlikely as no Parisien cafe would be that empty at that time. More likely the time in the camera was still set on Sydney time so the time in Paris would be 7.39 am  but as it was a Thursday I have no explanation as to why the cafe was so empty with just the man in black enjoying his cafe.


15 Mar 2026

F1 Flashback

 I've been a follower of F1 since I was 12 years of age.That's a very long time. I am very fortunate in that I've seen nearly all of the great drivers of the modern era race. Moss, Stewart, Clark, Brabham, Senna, Schumacher etc,etc. 

In the early years I was a very committed fan and I have been a reader/subscriber to the British magazine, Motor Sport, for over 60 years. 

My enthusiasm diminished over the years but has been rekindled in the last 8 years primarily due the Drive to Survive-the Netflix series. 

I loved the early years of F1 but much to my surprise I am really interested in the current F1 scene and in particular the technology of the current 2026 cars.

I know that the whole F1 scene is not like the old days but change is inevitable and I find the current cars and drivers extraordinary. I am also amazed at the huge following F1 is now enjoying across the world. Seeing the packed stands at qualifying for the Chinese GP yesterday really makes the point.

Here are two photos from my library. Compare them with today.


 

Firstly Pedro Rodriguez in a BRM P163 at the 1968 British GP at Brands Hatch. He qualified 13th and retired due to a crash on lap 58. Not a good day for him. No sponsorship allowed back then although given their lack of form I doubt if BRM would have attracted many sponsors back then even if it had been allowed.

The photo was taken at Kidney Bend with my Leica 3A and just a 50mm Elmar lens. My brother and I and friends were standing against the paling fence-no Armco then-and I lent over and shot the cars. It's a crop but not that big a crop. I don't have any other technical details. 

The second photo is a favourite of mine.Taken during practice for the 1981 Italian F1 GP on a very hot Saturday afternoon at Monza. Quite how I was lucky enough to be strolling down the pit lane that afternoon is a story in itself. I had my Olympus OM2 and just one 36 exposure cassette of Kodachrome. 

The photo shows the cars of the Talbot-Ligier team, sponsored by Gitanes cigarettes, being worked on outside their pit. What a total contrast to today's scene. It really could not be more different.The car nearest the camera was driven by Patrick Tambay who qualified 15th and retired on the 22nd lap with a puncture.


 

8 Mar 2026

From a train

 

On the train returning from my trip to Sydney -see story below- I took this photo through the train window. At the time the train was running beside Brisbane Water and I shot it with Q3 43 on the macro setting with the aperture at f16 for maximum depth of field and at 1/4000sec to the freeze the speed.

This photo made me wish that I had taken more photos from trains. With so many amazing train journeys I have missed so many great shots because I feared that reflections off the window glass would ruin them.

 Back in 2010 I was on a wonderful rural train in Italy and I did take just one shot out of the window. I never really looked at it because of the reflections. I discarded it as junk but forgot to delete it. Now it lives- using Lightroom's new AI reflections removal tool where with just one click the reflections are gone. Very impressive. All those shots I did not take could have been saved but here's the one that has been -thanks to AI.

 Taken with a Canon G9 at 1/800th sec f4.0 ISO 80