Where the hell is Lorelle?

Featured

Like a game, Lorelle bounces around the world and the web. Here is a new listing of all the places where you can find Lorelle, and hopefully she will recover from speaking in third person soon.

Lorelle on WordPress: This is now considered my “main” site. It covers all things WordPress, blogging, web publishing, and social media.

Learning from Lorelle | Learning WordPress, blogging, social media, and web publishing: This is my teaching site where all my students go for the latest and best information on web publishing, WordPress, code, family history blogging, writing for the web, and more.

Blog Your Passion: This is a zen-like site dedicated to teaching you the basics of blogging and writing on the web. It features a simple How to Blog article series for beginners. Currently the site is in an innovative WordPress Theme called Duotone which changes the background color to complement the photograph in an article. It is used mostly by photographers so I’m pushing it beyond typical usage.

The Tech Nag: The Tech Nag is my place to expound upon the problems of technology, poor user interface, customer support, and general bitching about how miserable things are and how they can be improved.

Lorelle Writes: This is my personal online journal where I share my writings and lessons learned at various writing workshops and classes.

Family History | VanFossen, West, Anderson, Farlin, Knapp, Elwell, Disbrow and More: More than a hobby, I’m the family’s “official” genealogist and family history researcher. I share my family’s history and stories here.

I play around with many other sites, but these are currently the most active. Swing by and say hi!

Brent and Lorelle VanFossen Take Their Camera on the Road – to Israel

PRESS RELEASE
DATE: September 1999
SUBJECT: The VanFossens Change Roads

VanFossen Productions, Lorelle and Brent VanFossen
"Taking Your Camera on the Road"
www.cameraontheroad.com
lorelle@cameraontheroad.com
Tel Aviv, Israel

Tel Aviv, Israel - “I just got a job offer in Israel.” Brent’s words were greeted with a great hiss of “What?!” from his wife, Lorelle, startling the teacher and students in their Spanish language class. Whispering that they would discuss this later, neither of the two can remember the rest of the class.

After several years living full-time on the road across North America as nature photographers and writers, making their home in a 30-foot fifth wheel trailer, Brent and Lorelle VanFossen had paused along their path to restock their financial cupboards in Greensboro, North Carolina. This also gave them time to sit still while publishing their many articles and images about their travels and adventures. Brent, also a long time structural aircraft engineer, became involved in an aircraft modification program changing passenger planes into cargo planes for Airborne Express and Timco (North Carolina aircraft maintenance and repair facility). Their stay in North Carolina was only to be for six months but had turned into a year-long project which Brent was thoroughly enjoying, though they were itching to get back on the road again. Now came this surprising offer.

Brent explained that the job was part-two of the contract with Airborne Express. Since they needed more planes than Timco could compete on time, Airborne split the contract with Israel Aircraft Industries in Tel Aviv, Israel. They needed a head engineer familiar with the project to over-see the project, and they wanted Brent.

“Since we were already mobile, why not?” Lorelle agreed. Within six weeks of the offer, they negotiated the contract, quit their jobs, packed up the trailer and crossed the country to Tulsa, Oklahoma, to put the trailer and their things in storage.

“It happened so fast, our heads were spinning,” Brent admitted.

Setting up a temporary home in Tel Aviv and leaving the mobile life behind has brought some interesting challenges and changes. “The first few days in the hotel, I loved flushing the toilet,” Lorelle admits. “I knew it would be gone and I wouldn’t have to see it a second time.” Living in a recreational vehicle, sewage is stored inside the trailer and then emptied when it fills, not the most exciting jobs that trailer life has to offer. Brent says, “It was strange to walk across the room and not feel the slight motion of the trailer moving underneath my feet.”

They adjusted quickly and set up home in the center of the city near the municipality building and Rabin Square. Lorelle says, “It amazes me that we are so close to so much history. We are practically living right next door to where Itzak Rabin was assassinated. A short walk away is Jaffa, the ancient city from which Jonah set sail from to find his whale. Jerusalem, a city filled with thousands of years of history, is less than an hour drive away. It’s wonderful.”

The VanFossens will continue their nature and travel photography as they explore Israel, studying its natural subjects as well as historical manmade subjects. They are fascinated by the diversity in such a small country and are eager to learn.

As for their photography and writing? Lorelle explains, as she runs the business side of VanFossen Productions, “We’ll do the best we can from here, but we had to leave our inventory of images behind in Tulsa. We are only planning to be here for six months, maybe a year. When we get back, think of all the new stories and images we will have to share!”

"Besdies," Brent adds. "We’re going to be in the Holy Land for the millenium. That will be a story to tell!"

For more information on the adventures of the VanFossens, their photographic and written work, visit their web pages at http://www.cameraontheroad.com.

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For more information on who the VanFossens are and what are they doing as they take their camera on the road, visit their Doing Zone.

Brent and Lorelle VanFossen Present Article Series on Presenting Workshops in the PSA Journal

PRESS RELEASE
DATE: September 1998
SUBJECT: Photographic Society of America: Presenting Workshops and Programs

VanFossen Productions, Lorelle and Brent VanFossen
"Taking Your Camera on the Road"
www.cameraontheroad.com
lorelle@cameraontheroad.com
Tel Aviv, Israel

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma - You have a talent as a photographer, and now you want to share your talent with others. After all, all this camera equipment is expensive, and it is time it started paying you back. Right?

So begins a series of articles in the Photographic Society of America’s magazine, “Journal”, presented by Lorelle and Brent VanFossen, professional nature photographers and writers. The series is about how to bring your programs, be their educational or just entertainment, to the community. The VanFossens will discuss how to develop your program, how to find the right audience, creating press kits and a media campaign, how to make your program informative and educational without being dull and boring, and how to budget your expenses across a series of programs, enjoying the financial as well as psychological rewards of sharing your love for photography.

With more than 35 years of photographic experience between them, Lorelle and Brent VanFossen have been featured in a wide range of publications from annual reports and newspapers to Shutterbug, Outdoor and Nature Photography, Arriving Magazine, Doll Magazine, Trailer Life, and the Photographic Society of America’s Journal. As professional nature photographers and writers, they also live a unique lifestyle as they live “on the road”, traveling full-time around North America in their 30-foot fifth-wheel trailer. Lorelle comes from Seattle, originally, and Brent comes from Oklahoma, but they call their trailer home, wherever it is, which, at the time of this printing, seems to be still in Florida. Their plans included spending much of the winter in Florida photographing the birds in Ding Darling and Loxahatchee. Dependent upon communication via phone messages and email through the Internet, they send their articles electronically to publications as they travel.

They also teach and present programs along the way. They have a diverse repertoire of programs such as “Wild Thing, I Think I Love You” about photographing wildlife, “I Long to be Close to You” on macro photography, and their new program, “Taking Your Camera on the Road”, based upon the lessons they’ve learned living on the road.

The article series will begin this fall in the Photographic Society of America’s Journal magazine. For more information on the Journal, contact the Photographic Society of America office at 405-843-1437 or by mail at PSA Headquarters, 3000 United Founders Blvd, Suite 103, Oklahoma City, OK 73112-3940.

The VanFossens can be reached via email at lorelle@cameraontheroad.com, wherever they are.

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For more information on who the VanFossens are and what are they doing as they take their camera on the road, visit their Doing Zone.

Exclusive Interviews with Art Wolfe for International Magazines

PRESS RELEASE
DATE: August 1998
SUBJECT: Exclusive Interviews with Art Wolfe

VanFossen Productions, Lorelle and Brent VanFossen
"Taking Your Camera on the Road"
www.cameraontheroad.com
lorelle@cameraontheroad.com
Tel Aviv, Israel

USA - VanFossen Productions is eager to announce that Lorelle VanFossen will be having two exclusive interview articles published about the work of world famous nature photographer, Art Wolfe. One will be in the September issue of Shutterbug, in the United States, and the other will be in the August issue of Photo Technique, in the United Kingdom.

Having published more than 60 books, and spending about 10 months a year on the road, connecting with Art Wolfe for a personal interview was a challenge. Combined with the fact that Lorelle and Brent VanFossen, fellow nature photographers and writers, are also traveling full-time on the road and working from their 30-foot trailer, changing locations every few days or weeks, this is indeed an achievement to bring all the parties together for these two articles. While Lorelle and Brent have interviewed subjects and written about photography, nature, and travel for many years, these articles were especially difficult.

“It wasn’t easy,” Lorelle admits. “I called him when he was between trips at his home in Seattle, but while we were still moving. One interview was done while we were in Sarasota, Florida, and the next in Charleston, South Carolina, and the follow through was done from Greensboro, North Carolina. Whew! It exhausts me even to explain it.”

The Shutterbug article highlights Art Wolfe’s life achievements as an artist and photographer, how he sees the world and what motivates him to keep going, chasing the beauty in natural and ethnically diverse worlds. As a frustrated painter, he turned to photography for some quick money to help him through school, and while he longs to return to painting, always carrying a sketch book in the field, his photography took over his life, entering a world of book publishing and stock photography that is unprecedented in history. “I’m always thinking about the next book the next idea, the next location,” Wolfe admits that the fear of burnout may contribute to his driving energy and determination. “It’s that fear of not moving on to something new that gets to me. I’m very easily bored!”

The article for Photo Technique in England is another exclusive and a first look at Wolfe’s newest book, “Rainforests of the World”, a life-long obsession of his. “We must leave a legacy for future generations. We need to be wise and pass on that wisdom to our children so the rainforest, and nature, will be variable forever.” Over the years, Art made many visits to South and Central America, Africa, and Asia, also spending time closer to his home in the Pacific Northwest Olympic rainforests. “The planet is so dependent upon the rainforests for survival. I felt that I just had to tell its full story.”

Shutterbug and Photo Technique are available on newsstands. You can find out more about Lorelle and Brent VanFossen, and their life on the road, on their web site at www.cameraontheroad.com. You can also find out more about Art Wolfe on his own web site, www.artwolfe.com.

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For more information on who the VanFossens are and what are they doing as they take their camera on the road, visit their Doing Zone.

The VanFossens Hit the Road Full-Time – Taking Their Camera on the Road

Press Release
DATE: August 1, 1996
SUBJECT: The VanFossens are Taking Their Camera on the Road
Contact: Lorelle VanFossen, lorelle@cameraontheroad.com

Check our Press Releases for the most current information on our activities.

Driving the Alaska Highway, Photo by Lorelle VanFossenEverett, Washington - “You are crazy!” “You’re going to do WHAT?” “How are you going to do that?” “Wow!” “I sure wish I could do that.” “What a life! Just traveling around!” “That’s so cool.” “You’re too young.” “What about your job?” “How will you live?” “Are you kidding?”

“No, we’re not,” calmly responds Lorelle VanFossen (36), part of the husband/wife nature photography team of VanFossen Productions. “People think we’re crazy, but I think most of them are envious. It’s going to fun, but it’s not going to be easy.”

What are the VanFossens up to? They are pulling up stakes and hitting the road. They are taking their life, their business and work on the road, fitting everything into their 30 foot trailer.
Traveling a lot is not new to the Lake Stevens/Marysville, Washington native, nor to her family. Lorelle’s great grandfather worked the forests across Washington and Oregon, living in not much more than a sagging tent through summer and winter. “My father’s dad worked in the Coast Guard along the Columbia River and San Juans, raising my father in the different light houses and stations along the coast. Like the rest of my family, it’s hard for me to sit still.”

Her husband is no different. Brent (31) was born and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, but got the itch to explore early on. His family took every weekend and holiday to haul the three kids around the country. Brent eventually came to Everett to work for Boeing, falling in love with the tremendous natural wilderness in Washington. “There’s so much to explore around the Pacific Northwest, it’s like exploring the world and never leaving your backyard.”
Indeed, most weekends find this couple out in the wilds of Washington, camping in their tent. Just two years earlier, they were married in the Heart o’ the Hills Campground at the foot of Hurricane Ridge in the Olympic National Park, celebrating their union in the wilds they love.

Teaching as They Travel

“We will be teaching classes and workshops across North America as well as building up our photographic inventory,” Lorelle explains. “It just makes sense to take our business and home on the road. We can then spend more time at different places and get to know the areas better.” The couple have been working as a team teaching nature photography programs in the Puget Sound area for the past five years and are featured in many national and local magazines including Outdoor and Nature Photography Magazine and The Mountaineer Magazine.

Brent adds, “The summer was spent getting the trailer ready. We have lots of work to do customizing this thing. It’s a big step up from a two person tent.” Brent is an excellent wood worker. “Our needs are fairly specific but a challenge to fit into a 30 foot trailer. The desk has to accommodate our computer, printer, scanner and speaker system. We need to store our equipment, regulate power sources and find a place for everything we need to take with us.”

Lorelle jumps in. “The trailer will be our ‘mobile’ home and office. We’ll stay in contact with people through e-mail, as well as through traditional methods. We’ll be dependent a lot on cyberspace,” she laughs. “We’ll have a mailing address from which mail will be forwarded to us every two weeks or so, but to get to us fast – the Internet will be the way!”

Their trailer is a 1993 30-foot Fleetwood Prowler fifth wheel. It will be home and office on the road. “We won’t be tied to the trailer. We’ll still take the tent out and go places where the trailer can’t go. This gives us lots of freedom to stay one place for several days waiting for the perfect weather or photo opportunity,” said Brent.

Lorelle leans forward intently, running her fingers through her short hair. “There’s a lot of people just too scared to take off like this. They are afraid of getting hurt, attacked, broken into, breaking down, or just getting lost. It puts people right out of their comfort zone – their home. But you are more likely to get hurt, attacked, broken into and even murdered and raped in your own home or within one block of home. Since I figure the odds are smaller out on the road, there’s less to fear. Yet we’re taking our home on the road. Now I wonder how the odds work on people like us?” She laughs. “That’s why they think we’re nuts to do this. But we are still young and I know a lot of people who wait until they are retired or old and frail. It makes more sense to travel when you are young, healthy and energetic enough to do dumb things and still get away with them.”

Brent shakes his head at his vivacious wife. “It’s a serious consideration to sell everything you have and head out on the road to live. We will be transients – in style, sure, but still, moving from place to place without a home. It takes a lot of planning and budgeting to make sure we can have the money to live on and maintain our medical and personal insurance and still survive while traveling. So we are really pinching to protect ourselves and cover all the potential emergencies over the next few years. Leaving the safety of a full-time job and the benefits of insurance is really scary.”

Travel Plans

The logistics to prepare for this odyssey, even before hitting the road, are vast. They have moved into the trailer, sold most of their possessions at four garage sales, put the few remaining items into storage, sold their two other vehicles, set up mail forwarding services, permanent phone numbers and figuring out how to stay in touch while they travel, working hard to make it all come together in time to leave. “Even the simplest things become complicated,” admits Lorelle. “We have to learn how to get water, dump our sewer stuff, count wattage and amps as not to overload our electrical circuits, and all these things that no one ever told me I’d have to learn when we decided to take our camera on the road. I guess you definitely have to be a little crazy to do this. It sure helps.”

Brent and Lorelle VanFossen will be leaving the end of October, heading first for Oklahoma, then Texas, Florida, Arizona, California, Colorado, Montana, Alberta (Canada), Alaska and then to the east coast of the United States, cris-crossing the country as they visit many national parks and wildlife refuges. You can keep up with their travels at http://www.cameraontheroad.com.


With over 40 years of photographic experience between them, the husband/wife team of Brent and Lorelle VanFossen bring a unique perspective and true passion to their photography and educational presentations. “Teaching is a big part of what we do. We enjoy the hands-on work with individuals,” explains Brent VanFossen. “We love what we do with a total sense of passion and dedication. I love being outside and exploring the world, as does Lorelle, and we enjoy showing people how extraordinary it all is. When we are excited about our work, others share in that excitement.”

Feature writers with Outdoor and Nature Photography Magazine, their work has been also featured in a variety of venues including The Mountaineer, Doll Magazine, Women in Business Magazine, The Snohomish County News Tribune, The Seattle Times, Queen Anne News, and many annual reports and commercial publications. They are also popular columnists in Shutterbug, Outdoor and Nature Photography Magazine, CruiseLetter Magazine, Arriving Magazine, Compuserve’s Photography Forum and other publications. Beginning in the winter of 1996, the couple will be traveling and working on the road full time from their trailer teaching programs to clubs and groups throughout the country, possibly the only nature photographers doing so full time. For more information regarding VanFossen Productions, contact them via email at lorelle@cameraontheroad.com.

1996 Starting Life on the Road Full-time

Date: August 1, 1996
Contact: Lorelle VanFossen, (918) 492-9667, lorelle@cameraontheroad.com

Check our Press Releases for the most current information on our activities.


Driving the Alaska Highway, Photo by Lorelle VanFossenEverett, Washington - “You are crazy!” “You’re going to do WHAT?” “How are you going to do that?” “Wow!” “I sure wish I could do that.” “What a life! Just traveling around!” “That’s so cool.” “You’re too young.” “What about your job?” “How will you live?” “Are you kidding?”

“No, we’re not,” calmly responds Lorelle VanFossen (36), part of the husband/wife nature photography team of VanFossen Productions. “People think we’re crazy, but I think most of them are envious. It’s going to fun, but it’s not going to be easy.”

What are the VanFossens up to? They are pulling up stakes and hitting the road. They are taking their life, their business and work on the road, fitting everything into their 30 foot trailer.
Traveling a lot is not new to the Lake Stevens/Marysville, Washington native, nor to her family. Lorelle’s great grandfather worked the forests across Washington and Oregon, living in not much more than a sagging tent through summer and winter. “My father’s dad worked in the Coast Guard along the Columbia River and San Juans, raising my father in the different light houses and stations along the coast. Like the rest of my family, it’s hard for me to sit still.”

Her husband is no different. Brent (31) was born and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, but got the itch to explore early on. His family took every weekend and holiday to haul the three kids around the country. Brent eventually came to Everett to work for Boeing, falling in love with the tremendous natural wilderness in Washington. “There’s so much to explore around the Pacific Northwest, it’s like exploring the world and never leaving your backyard.”
Indeed, most weekends find this couple out in the wilds of Washington, camping in their tent. Just two years earlier, they were married in the Heart o’ the Hills Campground at the foot of Hurricane Ridge in the Olympic National Park, celebrating their union in the wilds they love.

Teaching as They Travel

“We will be teaching classes and workshops across North America as well as building up our photographic inventory,” Lorelle explains. “It just makes sense to take our business and home on the road. We can then spend more time at different places and get to know the areas better.” The couple have been working as a team teaching nature photography programs in the Puget Sound area for the past five years and are featured in many national and local magazines including Outdoor and Nature Photography Magazine and The Mountaineer Magazine.

Brent adds, “The summer was spent getting the trailer ready. We have lots of work to do customizing this thing. It’s a big step up from a two person tent.” Brent is an excellent wood worker. “Our needs are fairly specific but a challenge to fit into a 30 foot trailer. The desk has to accommodate our computer, printer, scanner and speaker system. We need to store our equipment, regulate power sources and find a place for everything we need to take with us.”

Lorelle jumps in. “The trailer will be our ‘mobile’ home and office. We’ll stay in contact with people through e-mail, as well as through traditional methods. We’ll be dependent a lot on cyberspace,” she laughs. “We’ll have a mailing address from which mail will be forwarded to us every two weeks or so, but to get to us fast – the Internet will be the way!”

Their trailer is a 1993 30-foot Fleetwood Prowler fifth wheel. It will be home and office on the road. “We won’t be tied to the trailer. We’ll still take the tent out and go places where the trailer can’t go. This gives us lots of freedom to stay one place for several days waiting for the perfect weather or photo opportunity,” said Brent.

Lorelle leans forward intently, running her fingers through her short hair. “There’s a lot of people just too scared to take off like this. They are afraid of getting hurt, attacked, broken into, breaking down, or just getting lost. It puts people right out of their comfort zone – their home. But you are more likely to get hurt, attacked, broken into and even murdered and raped in your own home or within one block of home. Since I figure the odds are smaller out on the road, there’s less to fear. Yet we’re taking our home on the road. Now I wonder how the odds work on people like us?” She laughs. “That’s why they think we’re nuts to do this. But we are still young and I know a lot of people who wait until they are retired or old and frail. It makes more sense to travel when you are young, healthy and energetic enough to do dumb things and still get away with them.”

Brent shakes his head at his vivacious wife. “It’s a serious consideration to sell everything you have and head out on the road to live. We will be transients – in style, sure, but still, moving from place to place without a home. It takes a lot of planning and budgeting to make sure we can have the money to live on and maintain our medical and personal insurance and still survive while traveling. So we are really pinching to protect ourselves and cover all the potential emergencies over the next few years. Leaving the safety of a full-time job and the benefits of insurance is really scary.”

Travel Plans

The logistics to prepare for this odyssey, even before hitting the road, are vast. They have moved into the trailer, sold most of their possessions at four garage sales, put the few remaining items into storage, sold their two other vehicles, set up mail forwarding services, permanent phone numbers and figuring out how to stay in touch while they travel, working hard to make it all come together in time to leave. “Even the simplest things become complicated,” admits Lorelle. “We have to learn how to get water, dump our sewer stuff, count wattage and amps as not to overload our electrical circuits, and all these things that no one ever told me I’d have to learn when we decided to take our camera on the road. I guess you definitely have to be a little crazy to do this. It sure helps.”
Brent and Lorelle VanFossen will be leaving the end of October, heading first for Oklahoma, then Texas, Florida, Arizona, California, Colorado, Montana, Alberta (Canada), Alaska and then to the east coast of the United States, cris-crossing the country as they visit many national parks and wildlife refuges. You can keep up with their travels at http://www.cameraontheroad.com.


With over 40 years of photographic experience between them, the husband/wife team of Brent and Lorelle VanFossen bring a unique perspective and true passion to their photography and educational presentations. “Teaching is a big part of what we do. We enjoy the hands-on work with individuals,” explains Brent VanFossen. “We love what we do with a total sense of passion and dedication. I love being outside and exploring the world, as does Lorelle, and we enjoy showing people how extraordinary it all is. When we are excited about our work, others share in that excitement.”

Feature writers with Outdoor and Nature Photography Magazine, their work has been also featured in a variety of venues including The Mountaineer, Doll Magazine, Women in Business Magazine, The Snohomish County News Tribune, The Seattle Times, Queen Anne News, and many annual reports and commercial publications. They are also popular columnists in Shutterbug, Outdoor and Nature Photography Magazine, CruiseLetter Magazine, Arriving Magazine, Compuserve’s Photography Forum and other publications. Beginning in the winter of 1996, the couple will be traveling and working on the road full time from their trailer teaching programs to clubs and groups throughout the country, possibly the only nature photographers doing so full time. For more information regarding VanFossen Productions, contact them at (918) 492-9667 or email at lorelle@cameraontheroad.com.