Caught mid-hunt. She's moving along the marble terraces of the Bahá'í Gardens in Haifa, Sony mirrorless in hand, sunglasses pushed up, already looking past the camera at whatever she's about to shoot next. The teal backpack, the white jeans, the focused lean of her posture — this is the full travel-photographer silhouette, unselfconscious and slightly impatient.
The location earns its reputation. Those pale limestone balustrades descending through manicured greenery toward the bay make almost any composition work, which is probably why everyone who visits ends up with a camera raised. What's harder to catch is a moment like this one — someone in the act of seeing, rather than just standing in front of the view.