Daves Bayou Lodge & Outfitters has been a photography and marketing client for several years. Fine hunting and a fine hunting lodge coupled with genuine southern hospitality and great food. Thats what you get with Daves Bayou Lodge & Outfitters.
They are genuinely great folks to be around and the hunting… The hunting is some of the best waterfowl hunting North Louisiana has to offer.
With such a great backdrop, it’s been a dream working with them on various projects over the last few years.
Here are just a few of the projects we’ve worked on together.
Project Portfolio
Website
When Daves Bayou Lodge & Outfitters was nearing completion of their 5 star lodge, it was time to start putting together a website to show prospective guests where they’d be staying. We began working to create and manage their online presence with a site that met their needs.
Print/Online Ads
One of the advantages of using Riverbank Products for your companies marketing is that we can produce the digital and print ads for your company, as well as provide the images needed for those ads. Using one company for all of your needs needs helps create continuity of messaging and helps develop your brand across multiple streams of marketing your business.
Social media seems to have taken over our lives. Having the right messaging on your social media channels is more critical now than ever. Riverbank Products is part of Daves Bayou’s social media management team where we help generate content and tell the Daves Bayou story through photos, video, and graphics.
The Systems Group is a leading US based manufacturer of large industrial steel mill equipment in El Dorado, Arkansas. The equipment they produce can be massive and yet must be shipped to steel mills all over the US as well as overseas.
Products that are Made in the USA and create American jobs are near and dear to our heart. Riverbank Products was tapped to help document the fabrication and transportation of these giant pieces of equipment. We were eager to get started. We have now worked with The Systems Group on multiple projects to shoot product photos and video in fabrication, during transport and in use applications.
Check out what Systems Fab & Machine has to do to ship out mega-sized Spray-Cooled equipment. In this paricual piece, the furnace sidewall was cut into parts three pieces to legally ship out on state highways before being reassembled on site.
From rodeo to jackpot barrel racing, over the last several years, we have honed our skills in the area of equine sports event photography. While there are a lot of people running around with cameras these days, if you want professional results, and want to bring professionalism to your event, there is more hiring a photographer than showing up with a camera. Riverbank Products consistently turns out some of the highest quality action photos in the Arkansas/Louisiana area.
Aside from photos, our other work through Riverbank Products primarily revolves around marketing other businesses and brands. We have helped multiple organizations produce professional content needed to build major brands including photo and video work and from print media to live streaming to TV Shows. I’d love to help you do the same.
Starting in the 2021 season, We will only be shooting barrel racing events with event promotors we’ve partnered with under contract. This helps us help you by producing more professional images and more professional events. Each contract can have additional services added to it to help better promote you and your events in a more professional manner.
If you are an event producer or rodeo committee, for some of the best, professional photos in the business, contact us and book Riverbank Products for your next event. We’ll be happy to put a package together to shoot your event and grow your business to make it a success.
Other Services
As mentioned above, we also offer web design, social media management, video production, graphic design, and other services that can be added to help further promote your events and your business. If you have any questions, let us know.
Turkey hunting has been a favorite of mine for a long time. This year I want to do it a little different.
Apex Ammunition recently introduced their newest TSS turkey loads. The new Turkey Ninja TSS turkey loads in 410 are supposed to be the baddest 410 noggin knockers ever created. I want to put them to the test this year in my Great Great Grandfather’s Winchester Model 42 410.
Apex Turkey Ninja Shotgun Pattern at 30 yds in a Winchester Model 42 in 410
As you can see, they pattern pretty good in this old 410. I shot this off hand and standing. It hit a little high and left but that’s my fault and not the gun or ammo’s. I’m impressed with the results. I still got 20 hits in a 3″ circle and 85 in a 9″ circle. If I’d actually hit the center mark, this number would have gone up significantly. Even off a little, Its a dead turkey.
This was my Great grandfather’s gun. It was made in 1941 before the war. It was passed down to my dad to squirrel hunt with as a kid. I actually dove hunted with this when I was about 6-7 years old. Such an awesome gun and I hope to take a turkey with it later this year.
A lot of people may not know this about me, but from a very young age, I grew up riding horses and going to rodeos.
It was the 1980’s and like many kids, I wanted to be a cowboy. My brother and I, we’d watch the Mesquite Championship Rodeo on TNN, The Nashville Network on saturdays. While some cowboys wear wranglers and stetsons, our clothes choices were a little different on saturday mornings. Underwear or pjs and cowboy boots were the official attire for the performances back then in the living room.
There were real horses too. I had two different horses as a kid. First was Tony. Unfortunately he coliced while we were gone one day and we came back to find him it was to late. Then I got scooter. If I knew then what I know now, I’d have paid more attention to that horse. He was a good one. My parents and family friends, David and Mary Beth Frisby were always involved with horses. But as a kid, I didn’t understand how good a horse that one was or how lucky I was to have it.
Crossett Rodeo Trail Ride – Chris and Richard on Quincy. Jim Porter on Peaches in the background August 1989Me on Tony, my first horseMe on Scooter 1990Ryan on Bullet
My brother even got in on a little action on the our friends Richard and Elizabeths pony bullet. That little booger was something. The pony was too.
Our family had a couple cows and goats and stuff at times but never any real cattle business or anything. Still, I spent many Friday/Saturday nights at sale barns with my dad and friends. Warren, Arkansas or Lewisville, Arkansas were our normal spots that I remember. I liked Lewisville the best. Any excuse to get a Burges smoked turkey sandwich is a good one no mater what. Seriously though, the Lewisville sale barn tack sale was always one of my favorite parts. They had ropes for sale and bull whips, and hot shots. What kid doesn’t want their own hot shot? Dad never let me have my own though, My brother is lucky to have had such a good dad. Saved the boys life.
As we got older, we trail rode and dabbled in a few play days and some team penning. Our priorities changed over the years though as we got more into sports and hunting and other hobbies. My family couldn’t afford to do it all. Eventually, Dad sold off our horses and saddles and we were no longer cowboys.
The appreciation for the sport of rodeo and the lifestyle never really left though. I’ve always loved horses and have great respect for the ranchers and farmers that work hard to put meat on America’s tables.
Photography History
Photography has been a hobby of mine for a while. If I look back, its been an interest since I was a kid also. I remember my mom’s camera and getting film developed. For those of you under 20, yes everything wasn’t always instant.
At 8-9 years old, I took my only photography class one summer at South Ark Community College during a kids camp they held. I don’t remember much else from the class but we shot black and white film and walked around taking pictures one day. Later the teacher developed the film and we got to see what we had done. unfortunately I had accidentally opened my camera exposing the film to sunlight and inadvertently ruining almost all of my photos I’d taken. After this misfortunate event, i kinda lost interest at that time.
In Junior High/High school I played a little basketball but was never a serious competitor. I did however spend some time filming games and running the sound and music during games. It wasn’t until after college though that my interest in photography began to further develop into a hobby of filming and photographing hunts.
Around 2006 I got my first real camera. It was a cannon rebel. I began taking pictures of mountain bike races after my short one race career as a mountain biker. I had entered one race and crashed with a severely dislocated shoulder that required surgery to put it all back together correctly. Some family friends were still racing so I got a camera and started shooting races and hunting/fishing trips as well as some landscape stuff.
I was back in the “rodeo” world.
Photography and the outdoors, Shooting, Hunting, and Fishing industries has been my main focus for several years now. What started as a hobby became a full time job as I started Riverbank Products to help design better products and promote outdoor companies.
A couple of years ago, I began shooting barrel races. The woman I was dating at the time and her daughter barrel raced and I thought barrel racing photos would be a cool thing for us to do together as a couple. That’s the primary reason I started shooting cans other than plinking tin cans with a 22. One thing leads to another though and I got pretty decent at shooting barrel racing. Like shooting sporting clays, it’s all about timing, and I love nailing a shot as much as I do dusting a clay target. Before I knew it, I was back in the “rodeo” world.
I don’t claim to be the best ranch hand that ever lived. Or an expert rider, roper or anything else. I’m far from it, but I think there is a little bit of cowboy in a lot of us. It gets in your blood. The sense of adventure and hard work is at the core of the cowboy way. Grit and determination lead the way through the adversity we face as the faith the Lord gives us and everlasting hope to keep on going.
Current Rodeo Photography
I was honored to have been selected to shoot the LRCA Finals Rodeo last fall at the Louisiana State Fair. There were other photographers in the running to shoot the event to have even been in the running was an honor. That was the largest rodeo I’ve shot to date and it was a blast. While shooting this rodeo, I had the opportunity to meet several people who encouraged me to look into PRCA rodeo photography.
I’ve since done that and I reached out to PRCA Photographer Robby Freeman. Robby invited me to come shoot the Stampede at the Ike rodeo with him in West Monroe, LA. It was a lot of fun shooting with Robby. You can view his photos from the rodeo on his website at www.twitedf.com. My photos from the same event can be found in my gallery below
Robby and I have different backgrounds and a different eye. His timing especially of rough stock is much better than mine and its’ something I’m working on. Robby is a very professional photographer with years of experience in the PRCA world and a fun guy to work with.
In an interesting twist, he used to referee my high school basketball games about the time I was getting out of horses. Its funny how God works things out and brings things together in a circle. I left horse stuff 20+ years ago for sports and other stuff. Robby was involved in the same sports I was involved with. He now has 15+ years of rodeo photography experience and now we’re both in rodeo photography.
I’m eager to shoot more barrel races later this month and looking to shoot some more rodeos.
The process of becoming a PRCA Photographer is quite involved. Just being honest, I don’t know if I’m ready for that. From an artistry in photography standpoint I can hang with most. There are some technical timing details in a few key areas of rodeo Photography that I personally feel like I need to improve before going all the way to PRCA. That’s also the thing that I like. I’m enjoying the process of learning rodeo photography. The action is fun. The sense of danger of getting run over by a bull is fun. I’m not 20 years old anymore so I don’t know how much longer I’ll be able to get in the arena but its defiantly something I’m enjoying right now.
I am actively seeking additional rodeos to shoot through the LRCA and other rodeo circuits. Would love to shoot some more events. My photos from the Stampede at the Ike are below. If I can help you in anyway, Contact us.