the ocular adventures of andrew jorgensen
Interactive Panoramas
360 Degrees of the Baja 1000
Nov 25th
About two weeks ago I came across a post on craigslist that read “Wanted: photog for Baja 1000”. That’s about all the information included and about all the info I needed. After a quick consult with the eldest Jorgensen brother we quickly determined that this was an opportunity that could not be missed. Two emails later we had our instructions:
CONSIDER YOURSELVES TO BE HIRED.
PREPARE TO MEET ME OR ONE OF MY GUYS ON WEDNESDAY MORNING IN A TOWN CALLED OJOS NEGROS, ABOUT 25 MILES EAST OF ENSENADA.
JIM OBER, TRACKSIDE PHOTO.
Visions of Hunter S. Thompson’s coverage of the Mint 400 immediately came to mind, although our adventure turned out to be much less drug infused than Fear and Loathing. We set out Wednesday morning at dawn to meet the rest of the crew in Ojos Negros, a tiny town (if you can call it that) in central Baja, about 100 miles south of the boarder. We pulled into the Ojos Negros Motel, which appeared to be one of two functioning business in town, and sat down with Jim and a couple other seasoned race shooters over a plate of machaca and eggs. Jim has been covering the Baja 1000 for over 40 years, he knows what he is doing. We got some brief instructions, were handed a radio, and were told to follow him another 25 miles down the road to a dirt road turn off.
Jim came over the radio explaining that we were now on part of the actual Baja 1000 race course and that we would be doing a “prerun” of about a 10 mile segment. We would be looking for shooting locations, anything with a dip, bump, or jump… anything that would put the 300 plus vehicles that would run the race the next day up in the air. Another veteran shooter comes over the radio to explain the golden rule of selling off road racing photos “if they ain’t flying, they ain’t buying”.. sounds simple enough to me. Jim is barking orders over the radio while flying down some of the roughest dirt roads I have ever been on. He insists that I take perfect notes on where were are, how we got there, and exact distances from point to point so that we can find our chosen location the next morning in pitch dark before dawn. Taking notes is not easy to do while prerunning the Baja 1000…
We found our spot, a nicely graded out spectator area in the middle of the desert, with a big dirt jump built right into the middle of the race course.. this should get em flying. We were off again, back on the course to find locations for the other shooters, then back to the hotel for dinner and an early bed time. We would be up at 4am the next morning.
That’s it for now, more about our shooting day and photos will come soon. For now here are a couple panoramas from our trip.. The first is out front of our hotel in the bustling town of Ojo’s Negros, and the second is a sequence shot of the race in full action..
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360 degrees of the Mile High Music Fesival
Sep 1st

A few panoramas from the Mile High Music Festival in Denver, CO. The festival was held on the pristine green grasses of Dick’s Sporting Good Park, a sprawling soccer complex outside of the city. It was two days of good people, great music, and perfect weather. Backed by the same producers, Mile High is something like Coachella’s little brother who moved out to Colorado for the summer, started smoking reefer, and mellowed out a bit. It was my first year shooting the festival and I have to say I enjoyed it quite thoroughly. Well, as much as you can enjoy a job where you walk around a field pushing a button and watching incredible live music all day.
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Remote Mexican Beaches and Hard Drive Firmware Failures
Jun 15th
Came home from Mexico to the delight of a fully non-functional hard drive on my main work computer. After a couple days trouble shooting which eventually led to an overnight trip to the data recovery guys at i365, it has been determined that the drive is fully recoverable and I should have it back and be back up and running tomorrow afternoon. The super deluxe part? Because it was a known firmware issue with seagate drives it cost me nothing (as opposed to the $1500-$2000 estimates I was getting to recover the data).
In the mean time I have been trying to get a handle on the images and panoramas from the LIB festival, and sort through the stuff I shot in Mexico as well. Tons of great stuff from both and will be posting more soon. For now, enjoy a nice little panorama from our secluded beach…
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(If you would like to know where this is I could tell you but then I would have to kill you… For 15 years my family and their friends have been making a week long camping trip to this remote beach every summer. Not once has there been another group of people there. If you want to try your luck just head south past Hermosillo, take a right at a Gas Station/Taco Stand, then follow a series of unmarked dirt roads past a ranch and then a shrimp farm, continue on for about an hour (some parts require 4 wheel drive) and then hook a right at the wash and there you will find a beautiful remote beach to enjoy all to yourself. good luck.)
My New Office
Apr 22nd
In between 2 weekends of nonstop shooting in one of the most visually stimulating environments ever seen, I was forced to hole up and work. Having tons of post production to do on still images and panoramas we (my favorite girl, the mutt and I) decided that instead of going home and slaving away in front of the computer, we would drive another couple hours up the road and set up shop somewhere the work couldn’t get to me…
That beautiful rig your seeing comes from the great folks over at Norm’s RV, be sure to look them up when you need the comforts of home anywhere the open road takes you…
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