The Mail on Sunday

SNAP out of it!

Sick of boring selfies? Then treat yourself to a photograph­y course anywhere from Cornwall to Cambodia and...

- By Simon Heptinstal­l

THE brilliant technology in smartphone­s allows us to show off our photograph­s to friends and family with confidence. And the New Year is a great time to ramp up those burgeoning skills, with a specialist holiday that will get you snapping away like a profession­al.

Whether you are capturing colourful street vendors in a Cambodian market or stormy waves crashing on to a North Devon shoreline, travelling is an inspiring way to improve your photograph­y. And the best specialist holidays offer a small group of like-minded enthusiast­s the chance to have fun while learning something new and rewarding.

At the luxury end there are worldwide experience­s, with guidance from profession­al photograph­ers, such as those offered by Creative Escapes (creative-escapes.co.uk). The firm says it will take guests – in groups up to a maximum of eight – ‘from beginner to Bailey’ while staying at highly rated boutique hotels in exotic locations.

Its ten-day holiday in March to Cambodia offers some sensationa­l photo opportunit­ies: visiting sea-gypsies who live in stilt houses above the water, tours of city markets and a helicopter flight over the famous Angkor Wat temple. Prices start from £2,680, excluding flights and meals.

Even more luxurious photo trips are available from National Geographic, the publishing empire whose magazines have a reputation for fabulous travel photograph­y.

Admittedly some of the trips are like lottery-winning fantasies, such as a 20- day luxury tour of Africa in a private jet with National Geographic photograph­er Sandesh Kadur in July – it costs a mere £66,000 per person.

More affordable options include joining a larger group with a photograph­ic guide for a five-day fullboard cruise of Mexico’s Baja peninsula from £2,110, or an eightday Rhine cruise from £ 3,149 (nationalge­ographic.com)

WHILE the everchangi­ng travel restrictio­ns may mean many of us have to stay in the UK for a while, there are still plenty of photograph­y holidays available here.

Note that the prices include the costs of getting around once you’re there, but not getting to the destinatio­n itself. You’ll also find that some trips involve walking in rugged landscapes, so ensure you have all the right kit.

Light & Land (lightandla­nd.co.uk) has highly rated guides and tutors. For example, you could spend a four- day break amid Exmoor’s babbling streams, wild ponies and rugged coasts in a small group, receiving incredible advice from l o c a l l y b a s e d a ward- wi n n i n g l andscape photograph­er Peter

Hendrie. The course costs £1,499 full- board, staying at the i vycovered riverside Exmoor White Horse Inn at Exford.

If you prefer snapping wildlife, Nature’s Images ( naturesima­ges.co.uk) offers tuition from award-winning profession­al nature photograph­ers. Its photograph­ic guide e works for BBC Wildlife and d the sensationa­l images on n its website will give you an n insight into the standard of its work, which is so high that many of its trips are booked up more than a year in advance.

A three-night trip in October to the East Midlands to see rutting red deer clashi ng antlers and fighting for supremacy sounds perfect for ambitious photograph­ers. It costs from £625 f ull- board, with accommodat­ion in a rural guesthouse. Note that, like many of these trips, single supplement­s apply.

HF Holidays (hfholidays. co.uk), Britain’s largest outdoor specialist holiday company, offers a wide choice of breaks using its own country-house bases.

Because of the boom in the popularity of photograph­y trips, it now runs more than 18 of them, which range in

SIGHTS TO BEHOLD:

The vibrant markets of Cambodia and red deer in the Peak District location from the Scottish Highlands to the Isle of Wight.

Four nights in the Highlands ( August or October) costs from £579 on a full-board basis, staying in the former loch-side home of the Bishop of Argyll. Guests will explore the mountains and waterfalls of Glen Coe, while also on the lookout for wildlife.

And a four-day holiday near St Ives in Cornwall in August, photograph­ing glorious sunsets and seabirds sitting on lobster pots, costs from £595.

An unlikely holiday operator is Jessops, the highstreet chain of photograph­y shops. It operates a series of well- organised, well- priced residentia­l holidays in five venues from Cornwall to the Lake District.

Each costs £ 600 for three days and guests learn the classic skill of capturing great sunrises and sunsets.

Because of the organisati­onal difficulti­es of various lockdowns and tier restrictio­ns, t the full dates and venues of i t s hol i days are bei ng released later this month, so check c the ‘Courses’ section of the t website soon as they are expected e t o be booked up quickly q (jessops.com).

All of these holidays emphasise the use of proper camera e q u i p ment , whi c h i s more sensitive and creative than a phone lens – but also far more expensive. But what if you are quite happy with the pictures that you take on your smartphone? Don’t worry, there are even specialist photograph­y holidays for you.

Light & Land offers a four-day holiday with two expert tutors, based at the beachside Art Deco Saunton Sands Hotel in North Devon. Prices are from £999pp.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? HOT SHOT: Learn how to capture cheetahs on an Africa tour. Top left: Britain’s photogenic landscapes
HOT SHOT: Learn how to capture cheetahs on an Africa tour. Top left: Britain’s photogenic landscapes

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom