Category Archives: Photography

Photo of the Week – Palmahim

Yesterday I drove to the beach at Palmahim before sunset to take photos. It’s not hard to get there but there is a big difference between going on your own and with me as your guide – you’ll hear and see a lot more.

A small highway <4311> takes you there, passing Nahal Soreq, the drop zone, the air force base and Kibbutz Palmahim on the way. Nahal Soreq meanders from just outside Jerusalem, the train line to Jaffa and Tel Aviv follows the same route, to the sea. Many parents who have children who have served in IDF combat units have experienced the thrill of watching their child jump from a large C-130 Hercules airplane overhead and float down onto the sand.

These enormous planes have always amazed me, the same planes employed in Operation Entebbe, a counter-terrorist hostage-rescue mission that carried 100 commandos over 2,500 miles to Uganda on July 4, 1976. I might even tell you how our group was hiking in Makhtesh Ramon up on a ridge when a Hercules flew by.

Hercules over Makhtesh Ramon

As you pass the base, notice the  Iron Dome missile systems on their platforms.

Entrance to the beach is 18 ₪ per vehicle but you can drive past the entrance and park farther along the road and walk down to the beach from there.

Palmahim is a popular beach when the weather is warmer (though our son went kite surfing). Good location for photos. In the short time that it takes the sun to drop into the Mediterranean sea there are some nice views.

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Photo of the Week – Nahal Katlav

This morning on an overcast, rainy day I went back to Nahal Katlav and took these photos. I love the colors and contortions of the strawberry trees.

Some technical details – the photos were taken with a Nikon 5300 digital SLR camera and Nikon 18-200mm lens. Clicking on the image will display it larger.

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Photographs on this website are © Shmuel Browns (unless marked otherwise) – if you are interested in buying or using one of my photos for your own project please contact me.

 

2015 Year in Review

BDHiMAs the year 2015 ends it is instructive to review what was accomplished this year. Not an easy year as we accompanied Bonna through chemotherapy, surgery, more chemo, good times, hard times, which ended when Bonna passed away in June. The light in my life, Bonna’s light is missed by many, so I have taken up photography with more passion, to capture and share the light that is so fleeting in this world.

This marks 8 years that I have been guiding and blogging. I only added 11 blog posts this year bringing the total to 309 which includes over 1200 photographs. I posted more to my Facebook page, Israel Tours.

There were 78,735 page views by 42,885 visitors this year, close to the number last year (I feel that the number of people who are interested in my blog about tours and sites in Israel has reached a limit, about 100 people viewing about 200 pages a day). Slowly I am inching my way up to a half a million page views. The total number of people who interact with my website/blog is increasing, there are currently 325 people who have subscribed to my blog directly and another 430 people on Facebook who are notified when I post a new article. I tweet when there’s something I want to share that doesn’t warrant a full post; the most recent tweets appear on the homepage.

I guided a writer for the New York Times travel section on a 3 day Herod the Great tour of archaeological sites connected to the great builder, you can read the article at NYTimes website. I again guided a group of University of Chicago students studying for a semester in Jerusalem, this time to the mystical city of Tzfat, Meron and Tiberias. The Bridges for Peace organization contacted me and used my photos in their annual pictorial calendar, this year about the Israel Trail. In July I walked Yam l’yam, a 3 day hike from the Mediterranean Sea to the Sea of Galilee, twice in consecutive weeks. In the last while I have been focusing on my photography and now offer a number of Photography Tours, here’s one example.

I’ve chosen 8 photographs from those I posted this year on my website. You can view them full size by clicking on them. This is your opportunity to vote for Photo of the year!


Here are the links to this year’s posts in case you missed some:

  1. Off the Beaten Track #2 - Not every guide can take you “off the beaten track” but I can. Hasmonean & Herod’s palaces, Wadi Qelt/Jericho I like to drive to the palaces from the cutoff to Mitzpe Yericho on highway <1> on the ridge above Wadi Qelt, past the St. George monastery, past Herod’s fortress at Cypros to the western outskirts […]
  2. Off the Beaten Track #1 - Not every guide can take you “off the beaten track” but I can. En Prat instead of En Gedi Just upgraded my website subscription with WordPress and now I have twice as much space for photographs, blog posts and new webpages, pretty exciting and I’ve gotten rid of the random advertisements that used to appear, […]
  3. 2023 & 2024 in Review - I’ve decided to combine last year with 2023 because frankly there’s not very much to report, I had a couple of half days of guiding the whole year and the war has been even harder than Covid. I’ve been working on my photography and did get away twice, 8 days in Masai Mara reserve in […]
  4. Photographs with a drone - I have a DJI Mavic Air 2 drone and wrote a post in February 2021 about sharing a few photos taken with the drone in a post. It’s taken me 3 years but here it is. Sent the drone up to get this aerial shot of the entire Hirbet el-MInya site, the palace built by […]
  5. Dagon fortress and Monastery at Qarantal - Today we drove off road in the Judean desert to high above Jericho to get within reach of a mountain fortress called Dagon (by Josephus), then we still had to climb up and down over 3 mountains and take the “snake path” that zigzagged to the top. On the way up you can look down […]
  6. Posts on Facebook - For anyone seeing this post I would encourage you to also check my Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/IsraelToursbyShmuel/ where I share information and photos about tours and sites that I’ve visited with clients. Here’s the itinerary I put together for the client, a combination of exploring nature and archaeological sites with the opportunity for taking photographs, […]
  7. Off the Beaten Track #3 - Not every guide can take you “off the beaten track” but I can. Hisham Mosaic Floor Revealed This post is to announce the completion in 2022 of the restoration work and building of a walkway and roof over the ruins of the hammam at Hisham’s palace in Jericho at an estimated cost of $11.4 million […]
  8. Touring Israel in 16 days - Client emailed me with a list of some of the sites on their bucket list and I built the itinerary from there. √ Jerusalem (enough days to get a good feel for the city including major Jewish and Christian sites as well as Herodium √ Hula Valley and Eilat area for bird migrations  √ Negev Desert for […]
  9. Off the Beaten Track #4 - Not every guide can take you “off the beaten track” and show you things that you couldn’t have any idea that you could find in Israel. But I can. Between Covid-19 lockdowns in Israel (and we had 3) I took the opportunity to travel the country, finding new sites, refreshing familiar sites and exploring off […]
  10. Coastline series - Just when we think maybe we’re beating Covid-19 and life and tourism may return to a new normal we get hit with an oil disaster along the whole length of Israel’s Mediterranean coastline. https://www.timesofisrael.com/tarred-and-shuttered…/ Here is a reminder of how things should be. Please share this post with your friends on social media. This is […]
  11. Snow Photos of the Day - The last time it snowed in Jerusalem was February 2015 and I wrote about it here. Headed out early this morning to take photographs of the snow that had fallen overnight. Idea was to check whether Herodion was covered with snow but it quickly became apparent that there hadn’t been enough snow. Across from Herodion […]

Photographs at Dead Sea

 

August 2008 when traveling to Kathmandu with my family was the first time I ever exhibited my photographs, in a show I called “From the Lowest Place on Earth”. At 420 meters below sea level, the Dead Sea lies in a deep crack in the earth, between Israel and Jordan, part of the Great African Rift.

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In the past year the light that had accompanied me in my life was extinguished and my own light flickered. I return to the area by the Dead Sea and wrestle to capture the light. The sun works with an incredible palette of colors, emerald, turquoise, cerulean blue, ultramarine, pink and purple, yellow ochre, orange and dusty umber.

In a world that is sometimes hard to comprehend and rapidly encroaching on nature, especially in a small country like Israel I framed these photographs to capture the pristine beauty of nature. I wanted to convey the solitude you can find in the desert – a refuge through the ages for kings, prophets, Jewish sects and Byzantine monks. I find solace in the quiet and beauty of this area by the Dead Sea.

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Many of the photographs display the contrasts in the landscape – between wet and dry, water and desert; the contrast between rock and vegetation and between the broad horizontal expanse of the Dead Sea and the cliffs and mountains that rise vertically above it. In some photographs, like the one below, I put aside the landscape to capture the colors and patterns in the picture to create an abstract composition.

 

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Photo of the Week – Nahal Soreq

Early this morning we drove out of Jerusalem past Ein Karem and Sataf and followed the Soreq valley, the historical route of the train that joined Jaffa to Jerusalem. Suddenly the gauge on the car signaled that the temperature outside was 4ºC. As we looked to the right the valley was filled with mist. We pulled off the highway, parked and climbed the hill to get some elevation and take photographs.

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DSC_0108DSC_0163Then we descended into the valley and mist and got some nice closeups using a macro lens.

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Couldn’t find any spiders but saw their gossamer webs left behind.

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We did a nice hike in Nahal Katlav, from the derelict Bar Giora/Dayr-al-Shaykh train station, and I figured that the time was right to find crocus pushing up through the earth and we did.

Yam l’yam – Hiking Sea to Sea (3 days)

During the heat wave of July I walked yam l’yam from the Mediterranean Sea to the Sea of Galilee twice in 2 consecutive weeks so I have been initiated. We did it as a 3 day hike, walking about 20+ km per day, 1) Achziv to Maalot Tarshiha, 2) to Meron and 3) to Karei Deshe. Those who have heard of yam l’yam think it’s a cool concept, you walk across the whole country (that’s how small Israel is). In fact, each day is a great hike. Together the 3 days are more than the sum of their parts, enabling you to experience a cross-section of northern Israel. Each day hike is different, challenging in its own way, with varying topography, vegetation and accompanying history. This post is to document parts of the hike with photos, so that you, dear readers, will see something of what we experienced. I invite you to consider this amazing hike on your next visit.

Sea at Achziv

Sea at Achziv

Amitai carving watermelon

Amitai carving watermelon

Day 1: According to tradition we began yam l’yam by touching the water. The earlier you can start the better (especially in the summer, this year the temperature in July when we did the hike was in the 90ºs). The trail goes under highway <4> by the monument to the Night of the Bridges, an operation carried out by the Haganah and Palmach on the night of June 16-17,1946 in British Mandate Palestine to destroy 11 bridges linking the country to its neighbors, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Egypt that the British army used as transportation routes. The operations were carried out successfully, without injuries, except for the railway bridge at Nahal Keziv which failed (14 soldiers were killed, 5 injured).

The route continues parallel to the nahal beside the fields of Kibbutz Gesher HaZiv. The kibbutz had harvested their watermelons but there were some left behind and we found a good one that Amitai carved and served. The kibbutz also had fields of sunflowers and forage crops that had been harvested and were drying in bales in the field – the scene reminded me of scenes of Tuscany.

Galilee like Tuscany

Galilee like Tuscany

Field of sunflowers

Field of sunflowers

From there you pick up the green trail that runs along Nahal Keziv and follow it through dappled woods and streams.

Forest, Achziv

Sumsum enjoying

Sumsum one tired but happy dog

If you keep your eyes open you’ll see all kinds of plants and animals.

Farther along the trail you’ll see the ruins of Montfort Castle, a Crusader fortress that was originally built as a farming estate by the French De Milly family. The name derives from the two French words mont (a mountain) and fort (strong). When the estate was sold in 1220 to the German Teutonic Knights they fortified it as their headquarters and called it accordingly Starkenberg, the same meaning in German.

Montfort

Montfort Castle

From here we reached Ein Tamir and this was where we stopped for lunch and a dip in the pool.

Boys relaxing

Everyone relaxing

Lunch break

Forest

Cascading watersClose to the end of day 1 we reached this waterfall and after cooling down we hiked uphill to the town of Maalot-Tarshiha. The city was established in 1963 through a municipal merger of the Arab town of Tarshiha and the Jewish development town of Ma’alot. Tarshiha is believed to have been built on the site of a Canaanite settlement, Haki, dating back to the 2nd-3rd millennium BCE. Excavations of a 4th-century burial cave in the village unearthed a cross and a piece of glass engraved with a menorah.

Day 2: Early morning we took a lift to the trailhead to rejoin Nahal Keziv at the intersection of highway <89> with <8944>. The challenge on day 2 is the climb up Mount Neria and over Mount Meron, the highest peak in Israel (proper) at 1208 meters above sea level (except for the Hermon that soars to 2814 meters).
Yam l'yam day 2

Katlav, Nahal Amud

Katlav, Nahal Amud

When you reach the peak of Mount Neria the view is breath-taking and these lines may come to mind.

There is much beauty in the world                           יש בעולם הרבה דברים יפים
Trees and flowers and people and scenery             עצים ופרחים ואנשים ונופים
And if you open your eyes                                              ומי שיש לו עיניים פקוחות
You’ll see every day                                                                           רואה יום יום
A hundred incredible things, at least.                       מאה דברים נפלאים לפחות
                 Leah Goldberg                                                         לאה גולדברג

Day 3: Rejoin the trail and enter Upper Nahal Amud just past Meron. The trail is part of the Israel Trail and runs north-south to the Sea of Galilee at about 200 meters below sea level.

Pine Forest, Meron

Pine Forest, Meron

This is one of the pools where you can go in to cool off.

Pool, Upper Nahal Amud

Sehvi Pool, Upper Nahal Amud

And finally the Kinneret, the Sea of Galilee. According to tradition we ended by touching the water (and then enjoying a dip).

Sea of Galilee