Naples Canals Long Beach

I was near the Naples canals in Long Beach recently, and decided to walk around and snap some photos. The cloud cover dampened my motivation at first, but the images turned out better than expected—and the experience reminded me just how special this little corner of Southern California really is.

The Naples canals in Long Beach are one of those places many locals drive past without ever truly exploring on foot. Tucked into the Naples Island neighborhood in eastern Long Beach, the canals are a network of scenic waterways. They wind between custom homes, manicured lawns, and private docks loaded with sailboats and kayaks. It feels like a quieter, more intimate Venice—without the crowds.

Walking the paths that line the canals, you get a genuine sense of community. Residents wave from their patios. Dogs are welcome in the area and can be seen exploring the paved sidewalks and bridges around the canals. On the overcast morning of my visit, it held a moody silver sheen. In hindsight, this gave the photos a calm and timeless quality I hadn't anticipated. Sometimes flat light is the right light.

Developed in the early 1900s as part of a real estate project meant to bring the charm of Naples, Italy, to Southern California, the Naples canals in Long Beach form a unique neighborhood set on a man-made island surrounded by Alamitos Bay. Looping through the island like quiet streets of water, the three main canals—Naples Canal, Rivo Alto Canal, and Grand Canal—invite exploration. Many homes date back decades, each carrying a distinct architectural character. Whether Spanish Colonial Revival or mid-century modern, every stretch of the walk offers something new to see.

As the morning wore on, the cloud cover began to break. When I completed my loop around the island and returned to my car, patches of blue opened up overhead. Seeing that, I felt invited to keep exploring. From Naples, I drove west along the Long Beach waterfront with my windows down and savored the ocean breeze. A city that knows how to live close to the water gave off a casual energy. Relaxed and beautiful, the beach areas near Belmont Shore and Bluff Park drew families, cyclists, and joggers, all sharing the same sun-warmed stretch of coast.

If you’ve never visited the Naples canals in Long Beach, it’s worth putting on your list. According to MapQuest, visitors can explore the Naples Canals by strolling along the public walkway or choosing to travel by boat, kayak, or paddleboard. Bring a camera, even if the sky looks questionable. The canals photograph beautifully under almost any conditions.

Long Beach tends to live in the shadow of its flashier neighbors—Los Angeles to the north and Laguna Beach to the south. Spots like the Naples canals are a reminder that it holds its own quiet magic. Sometimes the best discoveries are the ones hiding in plain sight.

Looking west along Rivo Alto Canal

Naples Canals Long Beach

Tag Name Data
Title Naples Canals Long Beach
Image Description Naples Canals Long Beach
Keywords alamitos bay, boat, canal, long beach, naples, naples canals
Copyright Copyright ExpertPhoto.com All Rights Reserved
Artist ExpertPhoto.com
Make Canon
Camera Model Name Canon EOS R
Lens Model EF24-70mm f/2.8L II USM
Focal Length 24.00mm
Shutter Speed Value 1/400 second
Aperture Value 8.00
ISO 100
Date/Time Original Sunday June 18, 2023 01:35pm
City Long Beach
State California
Country United States
Location Naples
GPS Altitude 6.67289997 meters (21.9 feet) above sea level
GPS Latitude 33.7555386666667
GPS Longitude -118.123421649997
Map Google Map Link

How Much Is That Doggie In The Window

Black and white photography is quite simple. All you need is black, and white. Correct? No, it is not that simple, it is not often in everyday life that you come across scenes that have absolute white, and absolute black in the same scene. This photo is a shot of my dog looking out the window. I knew that this would be perfect for black and white. I think it works pretty well. Just keep in mind as you shoot with either black and white film, or with black and white in mind that they call it black and white not gray and grayer.

Dog In The Window

Dog In The Window

Tag Name Data
Title Dog In The Window
Image Description A small dog looks out a window.
Keywords black and white, dog, silhouette, window
Copyright Copyright ExpertPhoto.com All Rights Reserved
Artist ExpertPhoto.com
Make Canon
Camera Model Name Canon EOS R
Lens Model EF50mm f/1.2L USM
Focal Length 50.00mm
Shutter Speed Value 1/800 second
Aperture Value 4.00
ISO 800
Date/Time Original Saturday August 05, 2023 06:24pm

SmugMug Meta Keywords

SmugMug Meta Keywords: A Great Service With SEO Limitations

I've been a photographer for years, and like many of us, I started my online portfolio journey with SmugMug. It's a polished, reliable platform with beautiful gallery templates, solid storage, and a passionate community behind it. If you're looking for a hassle-free way to showcase your work, SmugMug genuinely delivers. But there's one area where I kept running into a wall — SEO, and specifically, meta keywords and per-page search optimization.

SmugMug Is Good. Really.

Let me be clear: I'm not here to bash SmugMug. The platform does a lot of things right. Upload quality is excellent, the interface is clean, and your photos are protected behind a reputable CDN. Customer support is responsive, and the pricing is reasonable for what you get. For photographers who want to focus entirely on shooting rather than web development, SmugMug is a smart choice.

But the moment I started thinking about search engine visibility — really digging into how each gallery page, each photo collection, each category was being indexed — I realized SmugMug wasn't built with granular SEO control in mind.

The Meta Keywords Problem

Here's the issue I kept bumping into: SmugMug gives you limited ability to customize meta tags on a per-page basis. Meta keywords, meta descriptions, and page-level title tags are either pulled automatically from your gallery names and captions or handled globally across your site. If you're running a photography business and want a specific gallery — say, "Autumn Engagement Session in Riverside" — to rank for targeted long-tail keywords, you'll quickly discover the platform doesn't give you the surgical control you need.

I found myself fighting the system. I'd optimize my captions, stuff keywords into gallery descriptions, and cross my fingers. Sometimes it worked. Often it didn't. The underlying architecture just wasn't designed for the kind of per-page SEO customization that modern search visibility demands.

If You Want Real Control, Build Your Own

This frustration is exactly what pushed me to build my own photography website from scratch. Yes, it took more time. Yes, there was a learning curve. But the payoff has been worth every hour.

When you own your own site, you control everything — the title tag on every single page, unique meta descriptions, structured data markup, canonical URLs, image alt text strategies, and yes, meta keywords for whatever they're still worth. I can create a landing page for every niche I shoot in and optimize it independently without fighting platform restrictions.

My organic search traffic climbed noticeably within a few months of switching. More importantly, I stopped feeling like a tenant working around a landlord's rules.

The Bottom Line

SmugMug is a genuinely good service, and for many photographers, it's the right answer. But if SEO is a priority for your photography business — if you want each page to work hard for you in search results — you'll eventually hit its ceiling. Building my own site gave me the freedom that SmugMug couldn't offer. For me, that made all the difference.

I still use SmugMug

What I built was a web system where I control SEO, but I then direct the user to SmugMug. In addition, I publish to this blog with links to my SmugMug. Problem solved. I still love SmugMug. They are a great site that does exactly what it was built to do.

Leonard Knight Salvation Mountain

I met Leonard Knight several times a few years before his death in 2014. He allowed me to shoot a few portraits of him. He struck me as a generous and caring individual. All he wanted to do was show me his mountain and let me know that Jesus loved me. If you have never been to Salvation Mountain, then I encourage you to visit. It is amazing what this man built. I don’t know what kind of condition it is in today. Hopefully someone is keeping it in good shape.

Tag Name Data
Title Leonard Knight Salvation Mountain
Keywords Leonard Knight, niland, salton sea, salvation mountain, slab city
Copyright ©ExpertPhoto.com All Rights Reserved
Artist ExpertPhoto.com
Make Canon
Camera Model Name Canon EOS 5D Mark II
Lens Model EF50mm f/1.4 USM
Focal Length 50.00mm
Shutter Speed Value 1/1600 second
Aperture Value 4.00
ISO 100
Date/Time Original Wednesday December 30, 2009 02:08pm
City Calipatria
State California
Country United States
Location Salvation Mountain
GPS Altitude 2 meters (6.6 feet) above sea level
GPS Latitude 33.25422
GPS Longitude -115.47336
Map Google Map Link

Right Down the Middle

This is looking northwest down Washington in Old Town Murrieta. I was on my way up to the Santa Rosa Plateau, and drove across Washington street. I saw the Highway 395 marking on the street and thought it would be interesting to take a photo looking right down the middle of the road.

Washington Avenue Murrieta

Looking northwest down Washington in Old Town Murrieta

Tag Name Data
Title Washington Avenue Murrieta
Image Description Looking northwest down Washington Avenue in Murrieta. Note the historic US 395 sign painted on the street.
Keywords historic downtown murrieta, historic us 395, murrieta, old town murrieta, street, trees, washington avenue
Copyright Copyright ExpertPhoto.com All Rights Reserved
Artist ExpertPhoto.com
Make Canon
Camera Model Name Canon EOS R
Lens Model RF24-105mm F4 L IS USM
Focal Length 24.00mm
Shutter Speed Value 1/160 second
Aperture Value 14.00
ISO 250
Date/Time Original Sunday July 09, 2023 10:54am
City Murrieta
State California
Country United States
GPS Altitude 330 meters (1082.7 feet) above sea level
GPS Latitude 33.5510723333333
GPS Longitude -117.211383433353
Map Google Map Link