Aerial photographer’s hunt for salt lake ‘Easter eggs’ yields hanging photos in WA

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Scott McCook hunts “eggs” from the air, however not the normal Easter sort.

He’s spent eight years photographing the altering hues of salt lakes in WA’s Wheatbelt, hoping to seek out swimming pools of yellow and orange left behind because the water begins to evaporate.

Orange lakes surrounded by white sit in cropping land

Scott McCook has been photographing egg-like lakes for eight years. (Supplied: Scott Jon McCook)

Mr McCook found the “eggy” phenomenon when he first started photographing bigger salt lakes from helicopters and lightweight planes.

“Every now and then, I’d look beyond the lake and you’d see these little isolated round lakes,” he stated.

“They always just fascinated me.”

A black and white image of Scott McCook sitting in a helicopter

Scott McCook specialises in aerial images. (Supplied: Scott McCook)

Long drives

The Perth-based photographer stated the small lakes normally appeared in wheat and canola fields.

Green salt lakes sit in cropping land

The lakes typically begin inexperienced then turn out to be yellow and orange over time. (Supplied: Scott Jon McCook)

“They fill in winter … they start green, and then as they start to evaporate, these colours start shifting,” he stated.

Mr McCook makes use of close to real-time satellite tv for pc imagery to scope out potential areas.

Over a dozen orange lakes surrounded by white salt borders sit in farm land.

The lakes can even seem in teams. (Supplied: Scott Jon McCook)

“Once I was sort of armed with that knowledge, I was able to drive thousands and thousands of kilometres because they’re in the most random spots,” he stated.

I am addicted to egg hunting.

Hunting pure hues

The lakes’ pure colors normally transition from a “rotten egg” inexperienced to orange or yellow.

“A lot of the poached egg, fried egg ones are like that,” Mr McCook stated.

Two orange lakes bordered by tree in a paddock of crop stubble.

Scott McCook says the egg form happens as water evaporates from salt lakes. (Supplied: Scott Jon McCook)

“The surrounding part that looks like the sort of white of the egg is the area that’s already evaporated and gone white.

“And then the little space within the center is the final of the water that is left.”

Composite: A pink lake surrounded by crop land. A red red lake framed by trees and pale farm land.

Scott McCook says he often “shifts” the vibrancy of naturally occurring colours in his images. (Supplied: Scott Jon McCook)

Mr McCook occasionally edits the images to make some of the colours more vibrant, especially photos of the pink and red lakes, to make them look “like fairly little Easter eggs”.

A artistic concreter

A concreter by trade, Mr McCook pursues his passion for photography in his spare time.

“That’s the place my images stemmed from, I needed to flee the town and simply go and do panorama images,” he stated.

A close-up of a man holding a camera.

Scott McCook’s images has earned him worldwide recognition. (Supplied: Scott McCook)

But he did not inform folks about his blue-collar job when he first began promoting his photos, fearful a few perceived stigma.

“I hid that I used to be in development as a result of I felt like, within the creative circles and every little thing, you were not taken as severely,”

he stated.

“As I’ve acquired older and extra into this, I’ve realised that is a extremely foolish means to have a look at it.”

Aerial image of orange, yellow and pink salt lates surrounded by scrub land

Not all of the lakes have a definite egg form. (Supplied: Scott Jon McCook)

Mr McCook said he hoped other people would be inspired by his photos of WA’s natural beauty — from its eggy lakes to rolling fields.

“It was solely once I took up aerial images that I realised, ‘Holy cow, we’re sitting on a gold mine,'” he stated.

A egg-like salt lake surrounded by trees in the middle of a paddock

Scott McCook says he hopes others can discover inspiration in WA’s landscapes via his pictures. (Supplied: Scott Jon McCook)


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