Thursday, November 5, 2009

Catch-up

Wow! Its been a while since anything has appeared here. The past two months have been hectic with Alaska salmon, Seasons of Subsistence, organizing a shoot in the South Pacific and the arrival of a new family member.

So here's the catch-up!

- In September the great folks over at Geographical magazine published a spread of my work from June this year covering subsistence salmon fishing in Bristol Bay, Alaska (some tears below). Big thanks to the the Geographical team for getting this work out there.

- Right now I'm writing from my hotel room in Honolulu on my way to Micronesia to shoot a story for the next three weeks. Its gonna be a wild ride with underwater work and some aerial too. More to come on this when I can.

- September was one of those dreaded desk-job months slogging through about 8 grant proposals for a new personal project I'm working on called Seasons of Subsistence. I don't wanna say too much about here since I'm going to be announcing the project properly at the start of 2010 including the launch of a dedicated website. But last week I got news that the project has been awarded its first grant from the Alaska Humanities Forum. Massive thank you to the Forum for supporting this project. The grant will ensure the project gets the kick-start it needs including essential components like the website and some preliminary production costs. Seasons of Subsistence is a personal documentary project that explores the subsistence culture of Native Alaskans in Bristol Bay, season by season. So stay tuned for more on this at the beginning of next year!

- And finally the end of October was crazed waiting for our baby to arrive. Fashionably late at 13 days overdue, but perfectly cooked at 9lbs 7oz I'm the proud father of a baby boy called Finnley. Wow!










Monday, August 24, 2009

Postcard from Time

Back in July Time magazine published a punchy piece about Bristol Bay and Pebble Mine. They used an image of mine taken on the back-deck of the fishing vessel Curragh, captained by Daniel Blakey.

LAX Magazine Highlights Bristol Bay

Nice little piece in LAX magazine covering Bristol Bay and the clear reasons to prevent Pebble Mine, potentially North America's largest open-pit mine, from being placed slap in the middle of the world's greatest salmon habitat!

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Amazing Bubbles

A friend just sent me a link to these awesome bubble burst shots by Richard Heeks. They are incredible! How many of us can say we have seen a bubble bursting like this? No explosion, no projectile bubble remains flying into outer air. But, instead a gentle whispering of hairy bubble remains that shimmer into nothingness. Oh to see something new everyday...

(Thanks BONBI and Natalie for the intro)

Check out more of Richard's bubble work on his Flickr pages, they're awesome!

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes

We spent the last few days getting very cold and very wet. But, what a landscape! The Valley of Ten Thousands of Smokes in Katmai National Park is a visually menacing place. It dominates you from start to finish and serves as an instant reminder of our small place in nature. In 1912 Novarupta exploded some 20 cubic km of volcanic debris in the largest volcanic eruption of the 20th Century, covering the valley in 100m of ash and pumice. As the ash settled to the valley floor the existing rivers boiled and the water turned to steam. The steam found its way to the surface and gave the valley its name. Fortunately the mountains seem a little calmer these days and offer some outstanding trekking and mountaineering. I'm itching to go back!















Thursday, July 9, 2009

STORY: Back to Lewis Point

After a long day in the production room we just finished this little project. Its a photostory with some great words by Lewis Point fishers Timmy Wonhola, Anna Andrew and Moxie Andrew Jnr. Sit back, turn the pace of life down a little on your speed dial and enjoy.







Saturday, July 4, 2009

Fishin's Hot in Bristol Bay

Two helicopter rides, a big processing ship and 24 hours on a driftboat catching wild sockeye salmon. A little snapshot below.

Upcoming shootings while I'm in Alaska include a sportfishing lodge, hiking into the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes including an attempt to summit Mount Katmai and then the usual kayak trip along the Savanoski Loop.