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2025 CNPA PHOTO WEEKEND

South Carolina Low Country

Hosted by CNPA Low Country Region


Thursday, April 24 - Sunday, April 27


Cost of Weekend: $100.00 per person (does not include hotel or entrance fees for select locations). 

You must register for the weekend, your hotel stay, and each outing separately!

REGISTER FOR PHOTO WEEKEND HERE

VIEW AND REGISTER FOR OUTINGS HERE

The event will begin Thursday night with registration and an overview of the weekend as well as a chance to meet with your guides. Participants have their choice of a variety of outings on Friday and Saturday led by members from the Low Country Region. The weekend will wrap up on Sunday with a photo critique and contest.

• Maximum participants for this event: 60   • Maximum participants per outing: 15

Attendees can select from a variety of morning, afternoon and evening outings for both Friday and Saturday.  Both days will offer the same outing options. Each outing has a maximum number of participants for each excursion.

PLEASE remember to book your outings when you book for the photo weekend and hotel.

(Note: Ticks will be active during this time of the year. Appropriate bug and tick repellant is highly recommended for outings!) 

Photo Weekend Schedule

Summary of the weekends itinerary.

Please refer to the outings tab for more details on excursions.

Thursday, April 24th:

6:00pm – 7:00pm: Registration

7:00pm – 9:0pm: Welcome, weekend overview and meet your guides.

Friday, April 25th:


All Day: Your choice of various outings (see separate tab for details and registration).

Saturday, April 26th:

All Day: Your choice of various outings (see separate tab for details and registration).

7:00pm – 9:00pm: Images due for Sunday's contest.

Sunday, April 27th:

9:00am: Photo critique and contest.

10:00am: Photo weekend ends.


"Few regions in the United States pack in as much history, culture, and natural beauty as the Low Country—a 200-mile stretch of coastal South Carolina and Georgia.

A pungent, slightly salty smell permeates the air of the Low Country. Its source is the area's pluff mud: the dark marsh soil left behind after the tide recedes. That smell—and term—is one of the Low Country's many distinctive qualities.

Other features that tend to leave lasting impressions on visitors include the wide, flat expanses of marsh grass, the shrill songs of tree frogs and katydids, the silhouettes of live oak trees, their long, arching limbs shrouded in silvery clumps of Spanish moss. Then there's the seemingly omnipresent water—tidal marshes, rivers, estuaries, and the Atlantic Ocean—often with at least one shrimp boat trawling."     

- National Geographic



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