photography-landscape-planning-weather-safety
ITIAN Photography Academy
Technology Simplified — Solutions That Work
Landscape Planning, Weather and Field Safety
Build a careful, repeatable plan before leaving home, reassess it at the location, and recognise when the right photographic decision is to stop, change position or return another day.
What You Will Learn
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to produce a written landscape field plan that connects photographic purpose with access, current conditions, safe movement and a reliable return.
Research the place
Confirm legal access, restrictions, local context, cultural considerations and the authority responsible for the land.
Interpret official information
Read the latest forecast, warning level, daylight and any relevant tide, swell, track or road information without treating one forecast as a guarantee.
Plan the safe return
Set an exit route, turnaround time, alternative location and communication plan before the light becomes exciting.
Make a go/no-go decision
Recognise incomplete planning, closures, warnings and worsening conditions as reasons to pause, change or cancel.
Planning Is Part of the Photograph
Good landscape work begins before the camera is unpacked. Research protects people and places while helping you arrive with a clear visual purpose.
Define the visual purpose
Write one sentence describing what you want to communicate about the place. Identify a broad view, relationship, detail and possible closing frame rather than chasing only a spectacular sky.
Confirm access and permission
Check current opening times, track or road alerts, land ownership, parking, photography restrictions and landowner permission. A previous visit does not prove current access.
Understand the place
Use reliable local sources for names, history and significance. Respect signs, closures, wāhi tapu, tikanga, wildlife and sensitive sites; do not move, climb or damage anything for a composition.
Build Plan A and Plan B
Record the intended viewpoint, safe access, return route and turnaround time. Choose a lower-risk alternative that still supports the story if conditions change.
Share the trip plan
Tell a reliable person where you are going, the route, companions, vehicle, expected return time and what to do if you are overdue. Carry appropriate ways to communicate or summon help.
Reassess on arrival
Compare actual visibility, wind, water, footing, traffic and group readiness with the plan. Turn back whenever the real location is outside it.
Weather: Read the Message, Not Just the Symbol
Check the exact destination and travel route, the issue and update times, official warnings, and the whole return period. Then compare the forecast with actual conditions.
| Information | Planning question | Photographic and safety effect |
|---|---|---|
| Rain and visibility | Will rain, mist or cloud obscure the route or return? | Atmosphere may improve, while navigation, footing and equipment protection worsen. |
| Wind and gusts | Are exposed ground, trees, cliffs or a tripod affected? | Use a sheltered legal viewpoint or cancel; do not hold an umbrella or tripod where it becomes a hazard. |
| Temperature and exposure | What happens if the session or return takes longer? | Carry warm and waterproof layers appropriate to the location, not merely the temperature at home. |
| Warning status | Is there a Watch, Orange Warning, Red Warning or official instruction? | A Watch means stay alert and reassess. For warnings, take the specified action and follow official and emergency instructions. |
| Actual conditions | Does the location match the plan right now? | The observation at the site can require an earlier turnaround even when the forecast looked acceptable. |
Daylight, Tide and the Return Journey
Arrival time is only half the plan. Calculate the entire session, pack-up and return, with a margin for slower movement and changing conditions.
Before dawn and after sunset
- Use known, legal access.
- Carry a torch independent of the phone.
- Plan the return through the darkest period.
- Do not change route merely to follow colour.
Coast and water
- Check tide, swell, waves, wind and local hazards together.
- Stay well back from wet rocks and surge channels.
- Never turn your back on the sea.
- Never allow water to cut off the exit.
Forecast limitations
Predicted tide times do not describe every wave, surge, current, river flow or weather effect. The Earth Sciences NZ forecaster does not cover the interiors of most harbours and estuaries, so its published limitations must be read.
Firm turnaround time
Choose the time to pack and leave before departure. If the best light begins after that time, the correct decision is still to leave.
Match the Plan to the Location
Coast, beach or rocks
Preserve a dry retreat route; check tide, swell, wave behaviour and local hazards; stay away from cliff bases, edges, wet rock and surge channels.
Track or conservation land
Check alerts, closures, difficulty, river or stream conditions and daylight. Follow DOC preparation and care guidance and keep the trip within the group’s ability.
Roadside or urban lookout
Park legally, remain outside live traffic lanes, do not obstruct paths, wear visible clothing where appropriate and never position equipment where drivers may be distracted.
Private or rural land
Gain permission, follow instructions for gates, livestock and biosecurity, and clarify whether location information may be published.
Remote or elevated place
Use conservative turnaround times, route information, navigation, suitable clothing, shared intentions and an appropriate emergency communication method. Consider a registered distress beacon for remote trips.
People before equipment
Secure straps and tripods, watch footing before looking through the camera, and do not risk a fall, water entry or exposure to protect gear. Equipment is replaceable; people are not.
Interactive Field Readiness Review
This educational review does not use live data and cannot declare a trip safe. It identifies incomplete checks and conservative stop conditions. Always verify current official and local information and reassess the actual location.
Practical Activity: Write Your Field Plan
Choose one accessible local place. Complete this plan before departure, then place a copy in your Module-06-Landscape-Place evidence folder.
Place and purpose
Record the correct place name, land manager or owner, visual purpose and the story you hope to explore.
Access and timing
Record parking, route, restrictions, sunrise/sunset, expected session, pack-up and firm turnaround times.
Current information
Record source, issue time and findings for weather, warnings, tide/coastal conditions, track or road alerts and local advice.
Hazards and controls
List each relevant hazard, how you will avoid or control it, and the condition that will make you stop.
Equipment and communication
List clothing, food, water, first aid, lighting, navigation, phone/backup communication, camera protection and any emergency device.
Plan B and trip contact
Name the lower-risk alternative, the person holding your intentions, expected return time and overdue action.
Official New Zealand Planning Resources
Open these services shortly before departure and again when conditions may have changed. They inform decisions; they do not guarantee safety.
MetService severe weather
Understand Watches, Orange Warnings and Red Warnings and follow current official instructions.
Read warning guidance →Earth Sciences NZ tide forecaster
Review predictions and the stated coverage limitations for open coast, harbours and estuaries.
Open tide forecaster →Surf Life Saving NZ
Learn about changing beach hazards including waves, tides, rips and holes.
Review beach hazards →DOC: Be prepared
Use the Land Safety Code to plan the trip, understand weather, pack suitably, share plans and take ways to get help.
Read DOC preparation guidance →DOC: Show respect
Respect conservation land as taonga, cultural heritage, wāhi tapu, restrictions and tikanga.
Read DOC respect guidance →Future visual demonstrations
- Reading issue and update times
- Mapping arrival, pack-up and turnaround
- Coastal retreat-route example
- Trip-intentions worksheet
- Safe tripod and bag placement
- Plan A versus Plan B
The written lesson and activities are complete without video.
Lesson 6.1 Completion Checklist
0 of 10 lesson checks completed.
Next: Composition and Stories of Place
With the field plan established, Lesson 6.2 will show you how to use viewpoint, layers, scale, light, detail and sequence to interpret the location responsibly.