#19 Time for a hike

Somewhere on the Eifel Trail, Germany

Two minutes in and I’m already snapping photos like tomorrow isn’t a thing – chasing the last scraps of morning light. 

The Eifel trail goes on for days, but this little stretch feels infinite, wild, and icreadibly beautiful. If you need a place to remember that the world isn’t all screens and schedules, Eifel’s waiting.

#18 Hidden Swim Spot

Hidden Swim Spot

Found a secret lake in Belgium.

Big enough to swim in. Clear water.

Hidden spots all around.

Wild and free.

Out there, you can actually chill.

Try that in the Netherlands and you’ll understand why ducks would rather pay rent than share a pond with humans.

#17 Summer is dead. Autunm is here!

Autumn Is Here

Now comes the season photographers live for. Forests on fire with color. Mornings covered in fog. Lakes turning into mirrors begging to be shot.

Don’t wait. The colors vanish fast, and winter’s already breathing down your neck.

Grab your camera. Get outside. Capture it before it’s gone.

#16 Drifting

The car ate the miles, but he didn’t move. Eyes fixed on the passing landscape, mind drifting far beyond the road.

#15 Before Sunrise in Einighausen

Before Sunrise in Einighausen

It took me 2 minutes and 45 seconds to get out the door at 6:30 a.m.

No shower. No coffee. Just clothes, bike, water and keys.

While some people were getting ready for work, I was pedaling toward Limbricht, chasing silence.

This shot happened just before sunrise.

#14 Hunters Hut

Hunters Hut - Eifel National Park

A shot from yesterday’s hike in the Eifel National Park in Germany.

#12 The Simplicity

Ten years back, this is what we had for time-lapses.

An egg timer.

Not a slick app. Not some AI auto-edit.

A literal kitchen tool strapped to a camera.

I’d stand there, freezing on a street corner, waiting for the world to crawl across the frame.

And that’s what made it beautiful: the simplicity.

#11 The Quiet Reminder

Show up now, because the “now” evaporates while you plan for later.

He is now 7, taking care of his younger brother. If you have kids, you know what I’m talking about.

#10 The Real Gift

Goose walking into a sunrise

Buying a new equipment is not gonna make you better photographer. 

The ability to notice light cutting through the trees. To see compositions that the rest of the world walks right past. 

That’s the gift.

Yes, better equipment helps but it doesn’t do much if it’s collecting dust on your shelve. 

Go out and use what you’ve got. 

Train yourself to see. 

Notice!

#09 Berry Shot

The fastest way to ruin a shoot? Walk in expecting the light to be perfect, the model to nail every pose, and the camera to behave like a Swiss watch.

Guess what? It never happens!

Well, sometimes… But the second you drop the expectations… 

BOOM! 

The shot shows up. 

The real moment captured. 

So stop clutching your precious idea of ‘perfect.’ Let the frame surprise you. That’s where the good stuff lives.

#08 Bad Conditions Turned Perfect

See, anyone can shoot when conditions are perfect. 

But the ones who grow are the ones who turn misfortune into their best frame. 

So, the first step in becoming more than just some schmuck with a camera is to stop waiting for perfect conditions and start shooting the ugly, the hard, the impossible.

Because that’s where the real photographs… and the real photographers… are born.

#07 Personal

Lightroom Presets

When the light is trash. When the subject won’t cooperate. When the gear fails, the rain pours, and you’re left cursing the sky.

That’s where you learn. 

That’s where you become more than just a shutter-clicker.

Because if you can wrestle a photograph out of those brutal conditions… every easy shot after that feels like stealing candy from a baby.

One way to do that is by using Lightroom presets. 

Want mine?

Comment “Lightroom” and I’ll send you my favorites.

#06 Moments Last Forever

The best journeys are measured not in miles but in moments captured along the way.

#05 Deer

The second you stop trying to force the shot, the picture shows up. The magic happens.

Great photographs don’t need control. They need you to notice.

So loosen your grip. 

Let go.