1. How did you get started in nature photography?
While in grad school in the US, I worked full-time at the Missouri Botanical Garden as public exhibits coordinator. One of my duties was to source rainforest photographs for a large exhibit space attached to the Climatron®, the geodesic dome that is home to the Garden's sizable tropical plant collection. I became interested in the types of photos I saw, and when I returned to Costa Rica to do my doctoral research (on the politics of ecotourism), I took a Canon Elan 7 camera plus some lenses with me and tacked a couple of photography days onto each of my research field trips.
I sold some photos to Lonely Planet and bought new gear (remember the Canon 30D, the first Canon DSLR?!). I sold a few more pictures, bought more gear, sold a few more, and the nature photography addiction was too strong to overcome. After working in conservation in Costa Rica for a couple of years, I decided to start my photo tour company, Foto Verde Tours, and to dedicate myself full-time to photo tours and my own photography for stock and prints.
I always admire photographs that present nature in a different artistic way and done in-camera. Frans Lanting's rainforest work was a big inspiration in the early days, and today I really like French nature photographer Vincent Munier's photography from northern Europe.
That's a tough call but these days it's probably Canon's new 70-300 mm f4-5.6 L IS zoom lens. I find it great for semi-closeup work, telephoto landscapes, nature abstracts, and environmental wildlife portraits. It's the perfect lens for multiple-flash hummingbird photography, but that's not exactly walk-around photography. :-)
The cloud forests of Costa Rica, hands-down. These forests boast an incredible biodiversity, and the often misty conditions and lush vegetation give a kind of enchanted forest effect that's just amazing. Plus cloud forests are cool, so you don't sweat like you do in the lowland rainforest!
Definitely, because I'm not a bird photographer. I shoot landscapes, macro, and non-bird wildlife just as much as I do birds, and I'm equally happy photographing a forest interior, a tree frog, a mushroom, a toucan, or a monkey.
The most rewarding part of leading workshops is knowing that you've gotten people to just the right place, at just the right time, and with just the right equipment and techniques. Rainforest photography is quite different in many ways than nature photography in other habitats, and I love when clients write to tell me how they employed a technique from one of my Costa Rica workshops in their backyard at home or on the next trip they took to Africa or Alaska or wherever.
The most challenging part of leading workshops is getting people to slow down a bit and really work their subjects. This is understandable of course because there are so many new and different photo opportunities in Costa Rica that first-time visitors tend to get excited!
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Greg Basco is a resident Costa Rican professional photographer and environmentalist who enjoys a working relationship with Canon.He is a Veolia Environment Wildlife Photographer of the Year and Nature's Best Windland Smith Rice prizewinner, and his photos have been published by National Geographic and other magazines and have been used in many books, public exhibits, calendars, and other projects. Greg's latest work in progress is a coffee table book of artistic photos from the rainforest.
In addition to his own photography, Greg truly enjoys working with tour clients to help them improve their photography and capture great photos of their own in the challenging habitats of Costa Rica. Indeed, he liked it so much that a few years ago he founded Foto Verde Tours, Costa Rica's first and only travel company specializing in photographic tourism. Greg has been working for the past few years with NatureScapes co-founder Greg Downing to run hummingbird photography workshops in Costa Rica. Check out Greg's website at www.deepgreenphotography.com.

















