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Photo Tours to Exotic DestinationsAdventure Travel Trips With Award-Winning Photographer
Visiting picture perfect destinations with a professional photographer combines learning how to take better pictures with adventure travel to exotic locales.
Dennis Cox is one of the best travel photographers on the planet. You've seen his photos on the covers of travel magazines, in travel brochures, and in calendars. He combines two of his favorite things -- traveling the world and photographing what he sees -- by leading photo exploration tours to some of the world's most desirable adventure destinations. How many times have you arrived at a fabulous spot and the light is in the wrong place for the photo you want to take? Or there's not enough light? That doesn't happen on photo tours, which are scheduled so visits to specific sites and attractions are timed for when the light is picture perfect. The 2007 schedule includes China, which he has visited a couple of dozen times since starting these tours in 1981. The trip in April includes Suzhou's gardens and Grand Canal, the ancient water town of Xitang, where part of Mission Impossible III was filmed, Xian with it's famous terra cotta army, and the ancient walled city of Pingyao. In June, the photo tour is to Turkey. The popular annual itinerary includes Istanbul and its fabulous Blue Mosque, Kayseri, Cappadocia, Konya, Antalya, , Kusadasi, the ruins of Ephesus, Izmir, Pergamum, Assos, and Troy. In August and September, photo explorers will travel from South Africa to Namibia, with photo stops at the Cape Cross seal colony, a visit to the Himba people, and two days on a private wildlife safari in Etosha. Other trips in 2007 are to Burma and Vietnam. We've been wanting to visit these places forever. We've been wanting to take better photographs equally as long. This is the way to do both.
The copyright of the article Photo Tours to Exotic Destinations in Adventure Travel is owned by Evelyn Kanter. Permission to republish Photo Tours to Exotic Destinations in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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