Chris Worfolk's Blog


Leeds Restaurant Guide launches

August 19th, 2013 | Food, News

leeds-restaurant-guide

Today, I’m proud to announce the launch of the Leeds Restaurant Guide. It is, in our opinion, the finest guide to restaurants in Leeds city centre that has ever been created. Years of relentless eating, reviewing and indexing have come together to provide a complete guide to where to eat in Leeds.

  • 188 restaurants and food pubs reviewed
  • Covers every restaurant we could find in Leeds city centre
  • Five star rating system
  • Unbiased, independent, consistent

The book will be made available in e-book format through all major retailers – Amazon, Apple, Barnes & Noble, Ingram, Kobo, Google Play, OverDrive (Waterstones), Sony, WH Smith and Gardner’s (Tesco). It is also available online at LeedsRestaurantGuide.com. At a later date, it will be made available in print also.

It will be priced at a very reasonable £3.99. The exact time listings will appear on each retailer can’t be determined, so follow me on Twitter for updates.

I would like to say a big thank you to everyone who helped with the book, especially Elina for her eating and proof reading, Gijsbert for his feedback and advice, and James, Norm and Michelle for their proof reading.

Leeds Restaurant Guide arrives tomorrow

August 18th, 2013 | News

leeds-restaurant-guide-small Tomorrow, Worfolk Media will launch its first publication, the Leeds Restaurant Guide. This is a comprehensive review of all 188 restaurants and food pubs in the city centre. The book will be available initially in e-book format, and later in print, as well as being online.

The book will be made available through all major retailers and full details will be announced in our full launch announcement at 9am tomorrow morning. Check back here for those details.

For updates on Twitter, follow @chrisworfolk.

Helsinki Zoo photos

August 17th, 2013 | Photos

IMG_6884

Owls are such posers.

IMG_6970

This photo was really dark, but trusting my histogram, when I brought it into Photoshop the detail came out far better than I was expecting.

IMG_6984

An otter staring at his own reflection.

IMG_7073

This lion was sleeping right next to the fence, then woke up and stuck his head up just long enough for me to take a photo.

IMG_7238

This was through glass, but luckily it didn’t get in the way of his eyes.

IMG_6825

This was just a gull, but I took this photo after it had just snatched some food and flown off with it.

IMG_6544 IMG_6571 IMG_6616 IMG_6618 IMG_6630 IMG_6663 IMG_6842 IMG_6846 IMG_6901 IMG_6952 IMG_6964 IMG_6993 IMG_7042 IMG_7058 IMG_7071 IMG_7109 IMG_7138 IMG_7160 IMG_7166 IMG_7182 IMG_7235 IMG_7295

Bears!

August 16th, 2013 | Photos

Helsinki Zoo has some wonderful bears.

IMG_6672

IMG_6720

IMG_6748

IMG_6756

IMG_6763

Back button focusing

August 15th, 2013 | Photos

A feature that many sports photographers like to take advantage of is back button focusing. I was trying this out at Yorkshire Wildlife Park recently and it has its advantages. The idea is that you can use a button on the back of your camera to focus, rather than have the camera focus when you press the shutter button half way down.

The advantage of this is that you can focus when you want to, and then not worry about the camera re-focusing if you take your finger of the shutter button.

For example, I often press the button half way down to get my focus, then re-compose the shot because I don’t want my focal point to be right in the middle of the frame, then take the photo. This means I have to keep my finger on it the whole time, and need to re-do these actions if I want to take additional shots. With back button focusing, I focus using the button, then point the camera somewhere else and take as many shots as I like.

Some cameras let you re-assign the exposure lock button, but your higher end DSLRs will have an “AF-ON” button you can use to activate the auto-focus without having to re-assign a button – useful if you use exposure lock as well. In which case, all you need to do is stop the shutter button activating the auto-focus. I’ve done a video showing you how to do this on the Canon 6D…

By the way, the video is the right way round, it’s just the thumbnail that is wrong.

Helsinki Sea Life Centre

August 14th, 2013 | Photos, Travel, Video

I wasn’t particularly impressed by the Helsinki Sea Life Centre. It had some cool animals in it, and you did get to walk through a tunnel with sharks swimming over your head, but it was fairly small and over quite quickly.

IMG_7312 IMG_7325 IMG_7352 IMG_7357 IMG_7365 IMG_7470 IMG_7498 IMG_7500 IMG_7529 IMG_7547

The first photo is a shoal of piranhas. They just sit there waiting for something to happen; it’s quite unnerving. I took a video.

Finnish Museum of Natural History

August 13th, 2013 | Photos, Travel

IMG_7587

A dolphin skeleton. They don’t feel much likes the clowns of the sea when you see how many teeth they have.

IMG_7601

Every single diorama in this museum depicted one animal eating another.

IMG_7606 IMG_7607 IMG_7608

The history of life exhibit finished by talking about modern times – including a chainsaw, skateboard, first aid kit and mobile phone.

IMG_7613

Roughly translated, this means “an exhibition on animal poo”.

Why Straight Pride is very offensive

August 12th, 2013 | Religion & Politics, Thoughts

Straight Pride UK promotes the idea of having a straight pride, alongside a gay pride. Fine, no problem with that. Not sure I see the point, as situations where I feel discriminated against as a heterosexual are reasonably infrequent, but each to their own.

In fact, their wording starts off quite nicely.

There is nothing right with being homosexual, there is nothing right with being bisexual, and there is nothing wrong with being heterosexual

But then it says this.

being proud to be of natural orientation

To me, that implies that being homosexual is not a natural orientation. Which is where I start to take issue with it. Any sexual orientation you are born with is a natural orientation.

And if it is natural, why should we be proud of it? Sure, it’s great being straight. The majority of people in our society are straight and this being straight gives me a large selection of potential partners (ideally I would be bisexual but you can’t choose how you’re born), but surely something I have no control over, and was given randomly at birth is not something I should be proud of?

Their Twitter strap line is worse.

A voice for those practising traditional lifestyles & relationships. Those who want to celebrate being of natural born orientation & traditional family values.

To call the homophobia experienced in the twentieth century traditional relationships does a rather large disservice to extensive periods of history. And what are these traditional family values they speak of? Presumably a time before martial rape was criminalised because I can’t think what else is different between a loving couple marrying and adopting today to one of fifty years ago.

Then, as you reach their aims page, you begin to suspect the entire thing might be a troll.

Heterosexuals do not have equality, homosexuals have more rights then any sector of society. They have the right to take over city streets, dress ridiculously, and parade with danger and contempt, invade hotels and B&B’s run and owned by people who object to homosexuality, and then sue them when refusal is given.

Surely it must be, because no intelligent person could believe this, could they?

Ice cream

August 12th, 2013 | Photos

ice-cream

Finland do many awesome ice cream flavours. They do some interesting ones too. Here is Elina eating a Salmiakki ice cream, and in Laitila we found a tar flavoured one.

Helsinki

August 11th, 2013 | Photos, Travel

IMG_6468

Cathedral in Helsinki harbour.

IMG_6485

Helsinki Cathedral.

IMG_6501

View of the harbour as we took the boat to the zoo.

IMG_7563

The Elina shop, were I took Elina for her check-up.

IMG_7564

They don’t seem to have KFC in Finland, but they do have SFC.

IMG_7569

The Finnish Parliament building.

IMG_7925

Finland’s coastline as we flew home.

Finally, some panoramas…

harbour-panorama

Helsinki harbour. Click for full size.

zoo-panorama

The view from the observation point at Helsinki Zoo. Click for full size.