Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.04.2013, Blaðsíða 10

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.04.2013, Blaðsíða 10
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca 10 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • April 15 2013 For quite a while now, Rúnolfur Hauksson has been gracing the Lögberg- Heimskringla Facebook page with his stunning photographs of Iceland. We felt so very lucky when he gave permission for us to use them, and they quickly became one of the favourite features on the page. People liked them, people shared them, and people commented on them. I considered myself even luckier when Ronni, as he calls himself, agreed to do an email interview with me for this newspaper. Rúnolfur lives in the small town of Höfn in the south-east of Iceland. He loves living there, and shares his home with his wife Svanný and his two beloved dogs, seven-year-old Balto, half Siberian Husky and half Border Collie and Labrador Kavú. Speaking about his dogs seems to bring life to his words on paper, and his love of them shines through. About Balto, Ronni said “many people are afraid of him and think he is a wolf. But this is the most loving dog I have had.” In fact, Balto has become so famous that Rúnolfur brings him along everywhere he can, and has had to take him on trips just to show him to tourists. Both dogs appear from time to time in Ronni’s photographs. A recent Facebook posting by a fellow photographer showed Rúnolfur crawling out on to the ice to pull Balto out of the freezing water, where he had fallen through. Concern on the Internet was immediately apparent, for Ronni of course, but maybe even more so for Balto. When asked what had led him to being a photographer, Rúnolfur couldn’t honestly say. He loved being outside with his dog and his camera. It is as simple as that. In 2007 he began to take pictures when he bought a small camera. He does not usually have to go far to find the subjects of his amazing photos. “Sometimes I just walk 200- 300 metres and take photos of the sunset here in Höfn,” Ronni said. However, sometimes he drives to the icy lakes that exist in Austur Skaftafellssýslur, and then his journeys can be up to 240 kilometres. He never plans anything, he just goes out and shoots a few frames if the light is good. “I know Austur- Skaftafellssýsla so well, so I do not have to look for scenes. I just have to decide what I want to take photos of when I go out,” Ronni added. Perhaps his most popular and well-known photographs are those of the aurora borealis. Rúnolfur started hunting the lights four years ago. I asked him how he could gauge when the “lights” would be best. When he started he was “mostly using a website from Alaska to see when the lights would show up.” It was not always successful. “Too bad for me, because sometimes I drove to Jökulsárlón when this website was promising good lights and was out for eight to nine hours and did not see any lights,” he stated. However, two years ago Ronni was able to download a program from the Internet which gives him four hours advance notice of the appearance of the aurora “and it has not failed so far,” Ronni added. Where are the best places to go to photograph the aurora, I wanted to know. Rúnolfur´s answer was “here we have so many amazing places to have as motifs – Hvalsnes, Stokksnes, all the glaciers and ice lagoons.” He makes his beloved area of Iceland seem like something from a dream, and indeed his photographs prove it. I fully admit to knowing almost nothing about camera equipment. However, Ronni willingly helped me out by explaining the equipment he uses to produce his wonderful images. “My camera is an Olympus E3. It is getting old, but it still works. It is a really good camera for everyday use, but one of the worst you can get for the aurora.” I find this hard to imagine, somehow. But the photographer continued on to say “I have a few lenses like 12-60mm Oly, 18-180mm Oly and 70-300mm Oly.” This description is, unfortunately, all Greek to me, but I am sure that to knowledgeable photographers it will make perfect sense. “When I am shooting the aurora, I use a tripod and my camera is on manual. The settings are f2,8 ISO 400 to 800 with exposure time from 2 seconds up to 40 seconds,” Ronni added. Whatever equipment he uses, and whatever method, this man is producing some of the most beautiful images of the aurora I have ever seen in my life. Rúnolfur has done other work in the past, of course. He recently posted an old video on Facebook of himself as a captain at a company named Jökulsárlón. During his employment there, he took over 80,000 passengers out to the lagoon. What kind of man is this amazing photographer? From a story he told me, I concluded that he is the type of person who stands his ground and stands up for his beliefs in what is morally right. He has done this in the past, even if it meant difficult consequences for him. In other words Rúnolfur Hauksson comes across as a man of honour. Ronni was born in Höfn, Hornafjörður in 1960. His parents were Haukur Rúnolfsson and Ásdis Jónatansdóttir. He is the second youngest of five children. I asked Rúnolfur if he sells his photographs. He responded that he has sold a few. He has a few photos on http://fineartamerica.com and http://www.imagekind.com He also has uploaded some of his pictures to Flickr, and they can be found at http://www.flickr. com/ronnihauks However, if anybody is ever interested in purchasing any of his images, the best thing to do would be to email him directly at ronnihauks@simnet.is Ronni has other dreams for the future as well. “It is my dream to take people on photo tours in my area, hunting for the aurora and taking photos of amazing landscapes.” I know that I would go on such a tour with Rúnolfur Hauksson, and feel very fortunate to do so. Personally, I will be watching to see if his dream comes true. Judy Sólveig Wilson Nanaimo, BC R ú n o l f u R H au k s s o n This aurora is at Kirkjusandur and you can see the mountain Brunnhorn with three peaks. Next to it is Kambhorn, which is close to Rúnolfur’s home town Höfn. PHotos © rúnoLfur HAuksson The old boat is at Hafnartangi under the mountain Kambhorn, near Höfn.

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