LORD HOWE ISLAND 5D6N PHOTOGRAPHY WALKAll levels welcome, from beginner to professionalDepartures: 7th May 2018 & 5th November 2018 Price: from $2460 AUD per person, twin share World Heritage-listed Lord Howe Island is one of the best walking destinations in Australia. With scenic beauty, biodiversity and rare flora and fauna, everywhere you look on Lord Howe there are amazing colours and textures. The light can be bright to showcase the range of blues in the water, it can be soft to provide subtle tonal contrast in the landscape, and it can be saturated. 
There are many opportunities for you to see the sunrise and sunset over water every day. Best of all, this picturesque island could be best seen through the lens atop the spectacular twin peaks known as Mount Lidgbird and Mount Gower which is Lord Howe's Everest at 875 metres high. A Typical DayEach day starts with a leisurely breakfast followed by a chat about the photography focus for the day. It could be colour, light or composition. Then you head off for the walk, the location of which isn’t determined until the day. It could be a stroll through the forest to capture the dappled light of the rainforest, or a hike to a peak to photograph the vast scenic views, or a walk across the ridge to remote North Bay for a snorkel and a chance to photograph sea birds. Mother nature and the group fitness level and interest determine where the walk will be that day. You are usually back at the lodge in time for lunch. Most afternoons are free until around 6:00pm when you congregate in the library and present your favourite photo of the day to the judges (guides and professional photographers who host the tour). The days’ winner is announced just before dinner around 7:00pm each night. 
Accommodation6 nights boutique accommodation with ensuites at beachfront Pinetrees Lodge. 
Food & Wine Enjoy daily breakfast, afternoon tea, sunset drinks and four or five course dinners.
Other Experiences Included Guided glass bottom boat, kayaking or snorkelling trips through the southern most coral reef in the Pacific.
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