The Brite Futures, SXSW, Austin, Texas.

http://www.mscnantes.org/rva2otxh4 The Brite Futures, SXSW, Austin, Texas.

Tramadol To Buy Cheap I’m excited to announce a new partnership with The Drouin Agency of Seattle and Los Angeles.  The agency will be presenting FGP to new advertising and editorial contacts while I continue to also book and manage on my own.

go here Deborah, the owner of the agency, is selective about who she represents and I present a new breed of photographer for her.  Her client list reads as a “who’s who” in both the editorial and commercial worlds.

https://www.elevators.com/o2dweuwj While my own career has evolved (and is evolving every day) I’ve covered everything from city hall protests to international equestrian events to U.S. Army training sessions to a summer on the Russian tundra.  While my main drive will continue to be outdoor, adventure and travel work, I’m looking forward to getting into more international, conflict and humanitarian stories this year.  It’s always about moving forward, moving onward and looking to the next project.  And, consequently, the next adventure.

https://www.marineetstamp.com/lpuv3qw As I grow and change, my work grows and changes right with me, as do the professional goals I set for myself.

https://guelph-real-estate.ca/9pmpn7q6 I’m thrilled at the opportunity and excited to see how the partnership grows!

go { 2 comments }

Yeah, the Portfolio Site is MIA

Purchase Tramadol Uk by Fire Girl Jess on October 12, 2013

Tramadol Cod Online Just got back from a day jaunt to Portland for some Krav Maga and it turns out I should have worked out a bit more aggression on the bags.  It would seem the Fire Girl portfolio site has been down all day, and I am still waiting on my liveBooks server to revive.

https://www.brigantesenglishwalks.com/4r2ah8o2fs So, thanks for your patience.  Fire Girl Photography is still alive and well (though maybe a bit sore after today’s gym session… but it’s a good sore) and we’ll be back in service as soon as the web folks get the server back online.

Tramadol 100 Mg For Sale Online { 0 comments }

Blast from the Past: The Equine Files

follow site by Fire Girl Jess on October 11, 2013

https://danivoiceovers.com/66nd95qf FGP_Spruce Meadows Masters Show JumpingI’m delving through the photo archives on the hunt for equestrian images for an upcoming project.  I’ve put effort into maintaining a bit of distance from the equine world the past few years after a former professional career in the world of the horse.

https://mocicc.org/agricultura/p6y3c2ybiqg Fond memories crop up as I sort through images, from rising at 0500 to shovel stalls before competing in a show, long nights spent with a fevered horse and hot summer days coaching a group lesson in the Montana sun.  By the time the thought occurred to me to look at equine sport through the lens, I was well and truly removed from the daily riding aspect of the industry.  My first real “horsey” assignment was covering the Spruce Meadows Masters in Calgary.  The images are still some of my favorites, despite my neophyte status as a photographer at the time.  Something about the timelessness of classic equestrian sport is just… awesome.

see url Montana is rightly known as the land of the cowboy, and English saddles (yeah, those little “pancake” saddles) are few and far between.  Now that I’ve landed myself in the Pacific Northwest, I’m looking to exploring the world of equine photography all over again.  Old habits die hard (very hard, in this case) and I still find myself looking at the conformation of a horse in a field, judging the slope of the croup, the measure of the balance onto the forehand and the curve of the neck.  Would he have talent over a fence?  What about collection and impulsion for dressage?  Driving through a park this morning, looking to frame a scenic shot of the Sound through the trees, I saw a fallen log and immediately started thinking about the approach to the “jump” and how it would make a pretty damn fantastic cross-country course.

Ordering Tramadol Online Cod Yep.  Old habits die hard.  And it will be fun to see if this old habit revives.FGP Spruce Meadows Masters Show Jumping Horses

https://geolatinas.org/kw4w8vp { 4 comments }

Bunkers and Buildings

source url by Fire Girl Jess on October 8, 2013

go here FGP_Port_TownsendTook the drive up to Port Townsend several days ago and caught the little boat town on a rather blustery, grey day.

Tramadol Ordering I love those days.  Nothing better for shooting images.

https://lpgventures.com/lve3eeow This is definitely a town I will come back to visit – lots of interesting photography possibilities here.  Great buildings, good water and a plethora of little wooden boats.

Order Cheap Tramadol Online There is an old military base on the north end of town, filled with old buildings, bunkers and all manner of cool stuff.  Some of you may recognize the bunker below from the movie “An Officer and a Gentleman.”  I can’t wait to shoot a commercial or portraiture session in these old buildings…

https://www.elevators.com/70pzr2ux FGP_Port_Townsend-2

https://danivoiceovers.com/h95jjdmuer0 { 4 comments }

https://www.mreavoice.org/xe31ol8tr Screen Shot 2013-10-03 at 6.50.40 PMA new portfolio has been posted at Fire Girl Photography!

https://purestpotential.com/30i1yzxx Offering a quick look at the U.S. Army’s basic training, the portfolio showcases a host of images from last week’s military – journalism joint training.  Throughout my career as a photographer, very few things have been as inspiring as watching these young men and women step off the bus as civilians and begin their transformation into soldiers.  I felt very blessed to walk alongside them, join them on the endurance obstacle course and talk with them after a night infiltration course.

https://onlineconferenceformusictherapy.com/2025/02/22/rqxs26pa Thanks to everyone who made this mini-project possible!  The various soldiers I was able to work with were more than accommodating, extremely professional and out-and-out intelligent.  This has been one of the most incredible experiences, and I look forward to more work with our armed forces in the future.

https://geolatinas.org/52kw2xgw { 0 comments }

follow 1380412_10151867373904827_1494721580_nPick up the latest issues of Fly Fisherman or The Big Sky Journal and you’ll see some Fire Girl features in each.

https://getdarker.com/editorial/articles/s4so7ugv In Fly Fisherman, I talk with the Wyoming Trout Unlimited team about their Adopt-A-Trout program.  I was able to spend some time in a Big Piney, Wyoming classroom during a cold winter day with third and fourth graders as they participated in the program, and was encouraged to see the enthusiasm of the kids.  Something about taking life down to its most basic is a very good thing.

watch When The Big Sky Journal asked me to spend a day with Smoot Honey north of Great Falls, Montana, I wasn’t sure what to expect.  Fields of bee boxes?  A big, industrial warehouse?  A hut?  It ended up being a fantastic day in the field, in the warehouse and in the processing room with the good folks at Smoot.

Tramadol Legal To Buy Nothing makes a photographer’s day more than having the co-owner of the business say, “Yeah, just go where you need to.  Open doors, climb around, get wherever.”  It’s a good change of pace from limited movement during a shoot.1378602_10151867357744827_724873043_n

follow url { 0 comments }

The unit commander in a quick talk before dusk falls.

https://guelph-real-estate.ca/3uneznp5 The unit commander in a quick talk before dusk falls.

Just back to post at Ft. Leavenworth and catching up on email for a few moments before heading off to another function.

I’ll say this; the past thirty-six hours have been epic.  And inspiring.

We started yesterday morning at 0400h for PT with a training battalion, working out under the stars with young men and women.  The battalion mascot, a bulldog statue, kept watch over the training field, joined by multiple drill sergeants.  After a quick run through the DFAC (dining facility) we moved off to an endurance obstacle course.  After walking the course with recruits who were only four days into the program, we were able to participate ourselves.

Let me say, being surrounded by hundreds of young men and women who are getting amped up and excited is an amazing experience.  There was electricity in the air.

And lots of shouts of “Yes, drill sergeant!”

The rope bridge was my personal favorite, though the netting obstacle and the tunnel crawl were awesome in their own rights.  It was fascinating to see what each individual obstacle taught.  Some focused more on team work, others on individual skills.  But throughout the course, each six-man team had to stay together and move, sprint, and negotiate challenges as a team.

We attended several briefings through the late morning and afternoon, including a tour of the HAZMAT school (fascinating), and were able to drive robots (nothing like steering a half million dollar diesel robot around a field) and fire weapons at a simulated range training facility.  I was pleased to see that my limited shooting practice paid off.

All in all, it was an incredible day.  More on the above will come in later posts.

But today I want to focus on the last event of the day – we were able to attend a night infiltration course.  Recruits from Alpha 3rd Battalion, 10th Infantry finishing their eighth week of training were run through the training course, surrounded by pyrotechnics to simulate heavy fire, various explosions and live (tracer) fire high over their heads.  We were given the opportunity to take a quick walk through the course at dusk, and I was impressed by the loose sand underfoot.  The entire course is taken at a crawl (both high and low crawls) and in that footing that alone would be a workout.

Lt. Col. Larry Glasscock, the battalion’s Regiment Commander and his team were extremely kind and patient in allowing us opportunities to shoot the training.  We were issued safety googles and NODS (night observation devices) and I was pleased to see that, while the Canon had trouble adapting to it, my iPhone worked with the device rather well once they both were calibrated for each other.

The Lt. Col. allowed us access to the two live fire towers located on hills above the training field.  I was stunned by the opportunity, and can say that being in a pitch black room with a machine gun firing tracer rounds over a training field is one of my top life experiences thus far.

We were able to speak with some of the recruits after the experience, and I can report they were thrilled, hyped and happy to be there.  I spoke one-on-one with two recruits, one young man and one young woman, and both grinned as they relaxed into the conversation.  They were well-spoken, articulate and very intelligent.  Ready to get the job done and full of confidence, looking for a challenge that the Army has provided.  After working beside a team of often slow journalists, it was extremely good to break away from the group for a moment and speak with the competent young recruits.

More to come soon on the events of the past few days.  For now?  I’ve got to trot off to a briefing.

The media received a briefing on the training session.

The media received a briefing on the training session.

A live fire machine gun hill, viewed from the recruit's perspective.

A live fire machine gun hill, viewed from the recruit’s perspective.

Training in progress, via NODs.

Training in progress, via NODs.

The night infiltration course, seen from the light of a flare.

The night infiltration course, seen from the light of a flare.

Interviewing recruits after the training.

Interviewing recruits after the training.

{ 0 comments }