Introduction:
Stream Publishing is based in
Surrey and was created in 2008 and have twice won the prestigious PPA
(Professional Publisher’s Association) Customer Magazine of the Year Award for
Independent Publishers. One of these
awards was for Vauxhall’s V Magazine; this magazine is published twice annually
and sent to new car and van customers for three years from the date of purchase
of their vehicle, and has a circulation of 370,000. Each issue of this magazine concentrates on a
theme, with the resourceful issue, the connected issue, the happy issue and the
secrets issue being recent examples.
Toward the end of October 2016
I was contacted by Stream Publishing who were putting together their latest V Magazine,
with the theme based on the new issue.
As a part of this magazine Vauxhall wanted to showcase their new Mokka X,
which is a rugged 4x4 SUV lifestyle vehicle, and as Calf Top had just been recognised
as Britain’s newest mountain they wanted to do a photo shoot with the vehicle beside
Calf Top and run a back story on how it was measured and reclassified as Britain’s
newest mountain.
Photo Shoot:
Arranging to meet in
Kendal in early November I made my way up the motorway in grey weather arriving
in the late afternoon and settling myself into the Premier Inn for the evening.
There had been extensive
communication leading up to this forthcoming meeting, some of it based on the
Mokka X being photographed on the hill, and other aspects concentrating on
getting the Stream Publishing crew to the summit of Calf Top, both were
dependent upon the weather with photographic opportunity for the vehicle ideally
based lower on the hill either in the valley to the east or on a track that
emerges on the western side of the hill.
Any outdoor photo shoot
is dependent upon the weather and as I headed down for breakfast early the
following morning the streets of Kendal were bathed in grey skies, thankfully the
forecast of rain had not yet materialised.
One by one the crew from
Stream Publishing arrived; with Kevin Ingles the Art Director and Tim Gibson
the Journalist introducing themselves, with the third member of the crew being Wayne
Lennon, an independent Photographer. We considered
our options and decided that the Premier Inn’s sausages were the main priority
and that finishing breakfast before venturing outside was the order of the day.
Once breakfast was
finished we headed out, waiting in the car park was the Mokka X looking
resplendent and ready for its fifteen minutes of fame, with it sharing its impending
limelight with Calf Top; which is an unobtrusive looking hill that due to the perseverance
of independent surveyors and the remodelling of Britain by Ordnance Survey with
the adoption of OSGM15 resulting in the increase of accurately known heights,
had now been reclassified to 2,000ft mountain status.
The Mokka X with (L-R) Tim Gibson (Journalist), Wayne Lennon (Photographer) and Kevin Ingles (Art Director). |
We headed toward Barbon,
a small village in the South Lakeland district of Cumbria and which has been
designated a part of the Yorkshire Dales National Park since 1st
August 2016. Kevin led the way with
Wayne in his vehicle, having reckied the ground the day before, whilst I sat
next to Tim in the Mokka X with an mp3 recorder already switched on ready to interview
me on the way. This can sometimes be disconcerting
but Tim had a light hearted and friendly manner which helped proceedings whizz
along.
Barbon is situated on
the south-western periphery of Calf Top with the 538m map heighted summit of
Castle Knott between the village and the mountain top. As we drew up in the village the cloud was low
on the hill and therefore Kevin directed us through the village toward a paved
lane leading to a track which would take us up the south-western slopes of Castle
Knott. This would at least give Wayne
opportunity to photograph the immediate surrounds and gain an unobstructed view
below the cloud base. On the way we
checked the route of the public footpath leading toward the south-western ridge
with Richard Pedley who was out on a quad bike with his sheepdog.
Heading for the hill |
Richard Pedley and sheepdog |
Realising that the
afternoon forecast was not good and as the murk preceding darkness would fall
before 4.00pm and therefore time to reach the summit and photograph proceedings
was limited, Kevin instructed that the back story photo shoot should take place
on a slight rocky top overlooking the River Lune in the valley below which was to
our west, and that the main photo shoot with the Mokka X would take place in the
eastern valley on the narrow country lane that follows the course of the Barkin
Beck with Calf Top looming above in the murk to the west.
Wayne assembling the drone |
Reaching the small rocky
top I was asked to assemble the Trimble on its tripod and smile appropriately
as Wayne launched his drone for aerial views of proceedings. Kevin instructed Wayne to take photos from a
number of angles with the small rock outcrop proving an ideal vantage point
considering how murky it must have been higher on the summit of Calf Top.
Wayne and the drone ready to fly high and photograh proceedings |
Murky conditions in the Yorkshire Dales |
Happy that Wayne had
gathered suitable photographs showing the Trimble and its attentive surveyor,
Kevin now wanted to concentrate on the Mokka X; therefore we headed down the
hill back on the track and narrow paved lane to the awaiting cars before
driving up the eastern valley to find a suitable spot to start the photo shoot
for the Mokka X.
The next couple of hours
proved fun and insightful watching a professional Photographer and an Art Director
collaborate finding suitable places and backdrops to photograph the Mokka X,
which was being cared for attentively with every speck of mud quickly wiped off
and each panel polished. During this
process the weather closed in and the first specks of forecast rain started to
fall as light drizzle.
With Tim at the controls
the Mokka X was taken on a slippery off-road route contouring on and then up steep
green tracks; always with Kevin in attendance and Wayne being directed where
photographs needed to be taken. I tried keeping
myself on the periphery as although I had now fulfilled the back story shoot I
still wanted to experience the remainder of the main shoot.
The Mokka X being put through its photographic paces |
Once Tim had driven the
Mokka X down beside one of the small tributaries of the Barkin Beck and
positioned it with an expanse of autumnal hillside and rusted bracket as a
backdrop, Wayne took the last series of photographs before the weather
worsened.
The Mokka X |
With all equipment accounted
for and packed away Kevin instructed an end to the photo shoot until later in
the afternoon and off we went to the Barbon Inn for a well-deserved lunchtime
meal.
Lunch time stop; the Barbon Inn |
After lunch Kevin, Tim
and Wayne wanted to get a few shots of the village before heading toward The
Ryebeck to meet their new chef; Chris Lee.
This elegant country house hotel and its new chef were to form the third
segment in the next V Magazine under the theme of the new issue.
Postscript:
It had been an extremely
enjoyable experience meeting the crew from Stream Publishing and I thank them
for their interest in mountain surveying and putting me at ease during the back
story photo shoot.
The Vauxhall V Magazine duly
arrived in the post with its themed issue based on all things new and on
pages 16 – 25 is Tim’s excellent article entitled Peak Performance, with Calf Top
and the Trimble taking centre stage on pages 18 – 23 for their fifteen minutes
of fame.
Myrddyn Phillips (August
2017)
No comments:
Post a Comment