Landscapes from BC

As a first time BC visiter I (Stef) was asked constantly ‘how do you like it, are you enjoying it?’ and my answer to everyone was, ‘my little city brain can’t comprehend all of this (insert hand motion gesturing to the surrounding area)’. And the funny part is that everyone understood what I meant! I never realized that I hadn’t been around mountains until the first time we were in France, driving in Provence through mountains. Suddenly I was like, ‘wtf is all of this, these aren’t just big hills!?’ and BC very much felt like that but x1000. Being a city gal who’s countryside experience is just going up to the cottage for a handful of weeks a year, having the easiest access to waterfronts, to beautiful scenery, to be able to simply say ‘let’s watch the sunset from the top of the mountain tonight’ and to only put a minimal amount of effort to get there (some spots even in peoples backyard?!) was really astonishing to me!

So of course we had to document it. We’re always on the fence about what gear to bring, if any, when we travel. A couple of years ago we invested in a Fuji X100V to be our dedicated every day / travel camera; it’s light and compact, great quality, and still allows you to shoot in manual mode. Our biggest hang up about having cameras when we travel is that our serious gear is big, is heavy, is clunky, and no one wants to be lugging that around all day, but the Fuji is so slim it easily fits in a sling bag that it feels like there is no excuse to not have it on us at all times.

Since we were doing a couple of actual shoots in BC we did bring our serious gear (a whole packed Pelican, actually) so some of these photos are actually taken with a Nikon Z6II, some with a Fuji X100V.

Click the photos below to enlarge through