I am currently in Kyushu for a few weeks on a private photography workshop/tour with a client who joined my Hokkaido Winter Wonderland Wildlife Landscape Photo Adventure, and he has extended his tour experience to include Kyushu. This is his second time in less than a year to visit Japan, and each time, he visits he spends nearly a month photographing as much of the country as he can. He’s a brilliant landscape photographer, and Hokkaido represents his first wildlife photography experience. Rather than him having to pay tens of thousands of dollars for new super-telephoto lenses and a new tripod and gimbal head, I have enough gear for two or three photographers, and I am more than happy to share my gear with my clients who would benefit from my inventory or any services I can provide to enrich their photography experience on my photo workshops. Before the tour, my client/friend and I were joking, and he said he was going to use his 14 - 24 mm lens while everyone else in the group would be using super-telephoto lenses up to 1000 mm. Ha ha ha!
The initial plan was to experience more of winter wonderland Hokkaido and drive back to Tokyo. Our route would have begun in Kushiro, then onto Furano for more winter wonderland Hokkaido landscape photography, then Biei, the Blue Pond Lake, Rumoi, along the coast to Otaru, then Iwanai, the Niseko area to visit with my friends from down under, and finally to Hakodate to catch the car ferry to Aomori. Once we made the main island Honshu, our goal was to take in all of the Sea of Japan all the way to Ishikawa, Kanazawa, then to Tokyo. On the way, we intended to make stops for photo ops in Aomori, Akita, Yamagata, beautiful Niigata, Sado Island, and Toyama.