Friday, January 21, 2011

2011 Harbin International Ice & Snow Festival


I've written about the annual Harbin Ice Festival in 2008, 2009 and 2010. I see no reason not to continue the practice in 2011! A Reuters photographer blogs:

Imagine if you will, being given an assignment that required you to sit in your freezer for 3 days. Then, imagine multiplying that temperature by three, and you might have some idea of what it was like to photograph the 27th Harbin International Ice and Snow festival in January.




Don’t get me wrong, it was fun ... looking back on it ... but when you are dealing with minus 34 degree temperatures, it’s not always pleasant. Heat packs, for example, only feel warm once you are back inside the hotel. Useful ... NOT!




So then you try wearing lots of clothes. But try walking around on ice covered footpaths and roads, and then attempting to squat to get that slightly better angle (of perhaps a crazy man fishing while sitting in the middle of a frozen lake with the wind howling and taking the temperature to minus 40) all while impersonating the Michelin Man.




But most crazy of all is attempting to take pictures with your eyelashes sticking together (so that you can’t see) while at the same time, your beard is forming icicles on your face mask so that it gets so tight on your mouth that you can’t breathe. FUN ... did I say that already?




. . .

Finally on the night of the official opening ceremony, after sliding and slipping on the icy ground to get to a good position, wiping the layer of ice that quickly formed on the front of my lens when I stood in a hut for 5 minutes to get warm (forgetting basic physics lesson one), the fireworks exploded in the sky over the massive sculptures that were lit by neon tubes inside the ice.




The sculptures themselves are extremely impressive, the tallest standing around 50 meters high. But at the time I didn’t reflect on this at all, as my main concern was to just stop shaking while shooting at a 60th of a second.


There's more at the link. A nice collection of pictures of the 2011 Festival may be found here.

Gorgeous sculptures, aren't they? The Harbin Ice Festival is definitely on my 'I really want to see this before I die' list.

Peter

1 comment:

  1. My son toured that area of China with an orchestra, flying out on Boxing day. He has some photos up at http://www.flickr.com/photos/contrebis/. He was sorry to be too early to see the Harbin sculptures.

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