Recasting the ‘The Big Bad Wolf’​

“As we learn to listen to the land, we discover that we are not separate from it; we are part of it.” – Robin Wall Kimmerer

“Coastal Guardian”
British Columbia, 2018

Thirty years ago, I chartered a pilot to drop me off alone in the aptly named Barren Grounds, just 300 miles north of the Arctic Circle. For three months, I hiked over 600 miles on foot and canoed over 2,000 miles through the Canadian wilderness. Mostly, I wanted to test my limits and prove to myself that I could survive on my own. My outward objective, however, was to photograph tundra wolves. After weeks of fruitless searching, I spotted what seemed to be a flat, greyish rock nestled among the lupines. Heart racing, I dropped to the ground and crawled on my belly for the better part of an hour, inching closer until I was just 20 yards away. Through the tangled willows, I finally glimpsed a pair of tawny eyes, perked ears, and the silver face of a lone wolf.

“On the Rocks”
British Columbia, 2011

Since that initial solo venture, I have encountered many more wolves and even had the honor of lounging feet away from a perfectly relaxed pack. Each interaction has been an intensive course in patience as I slowly earned their trust. Wolves are shy by nature, highly cautious, and rarely approach humans. Attacks on people are so scarce that only a handful have ever been recorded across North America within the last century. Nevertheless, the archetype of the “big bad wolf” persists in fiction, film, and timeless lore. Humans, after all, love to be scared.

While most of us know that wolves do not impersonate grannies to trick children or huff and puff houses to the ground, we still carry an inherent fear fueled in part by childhood stories and legends. Fairy tales like Little Red Riding Hood seem harmless enough, but as biodiversity continues to plummet across the continent, the fictitious villain suddenly becomes a very real and convenient scapegoat.

“Sea Wolf of the Great Bear”
British Columbia, 2011
“Sea Tribe”
British Columbia, 2020

When animals like deer and other prey begin to decline in number, wolves are generally the first on the list of suspects. Somewhere between sharpening our pitchforks and pointing fingers, however, we seem to have forgotten that wolves have existed in North America for about 30,000 to 50,000 years—long before the first known arrival of humans.

Overall, the devastation wrought by roads, deforestation, mining, and drilling has inflicted far greater harm on wildlife than wolves ever have. Yet somehow, we still believe the solution to restoring nature lies in trying to control and kill it. Government-sanctioned wolf culls are still regularly implemented as a method of wildlife “management,” while corporate entities continue to push for oil dredging and copper mining. The Canadian government is leading a taxpayer-funded extermination of 4,000 wolves in British Columbia alone. Until we learn to hold our own species accountable for the true damage done to our landscapes, the same mistakes will be made again and again.

“Playtime”
British Columbia, 2011

My hope in sharing the beauty of animals like wolves is to inspire a deeper understanding and appreciation of their story. Villainizing the predators that have maintained balance within their ecosystems for millennia will only plunge us deeper into a cycle of destruction. Every animal, no matter how feared or misunderstood, contributes to the beauty of our world. Shifting our focus to addressing the broader systemic threats that truly endanger our planet is the first step to facing the truth and healing our broken relationship with nature.

Whales and the True Gift of Nature

“Those who contemplate the beauty of the earth find reserves of strength that will endure as long as life lasts.” – Rachel Carson

“Suspended Grace”
Dominica, 2019

When my parents chose to move our small family from Saskatchewan to the remote Arctic and undertake the biggest adventure of our lives, we had to let go of certain comforts. Both my mother and father came from farming families and inherited the unyielding work ethic that serves as the backbone of Canada’s heartland. Still, we found joy in the simple pleasures afforded by society—easy access to family, mild summer evenings, and the predictable cycles of the seasons. Uprooting to the Arctic meant trading the familiar for the unknown, but I quickly found that the benefits of living closer to nature far exceeded what we left behind.

Since those early years, the best gifts in my life have always come from nature. After becoming a photographer, I used my camera to get closer to our wild kin. Wolves, penguins, lynx, sharks, and even the more elusive animals like spirit bears all became subjects of my lens. In my eyes, there is no greater privilege than living each day on a planet overflowing with more species and beauty than we could ever fully grasp.

Of all the encounters I have shared with wildlife around the world, my experiences with whales, the true giants of Earth, have been some of the greatest gifts.

Like the Arctic wildlife I grew up with, such as wolves and polar bears, creatures like orcas and sperm whales inspire a mix of fear and awe in people. Despite their size and status as some of the ocean’s greatest hunters, there is no definitive record of orcas or sperm whales ever killing anyone. In fact, my own experiences have revealed their gentle nature and deep intelligence—a side that often goes unnoticed beneath the myths and misconceptions.

Sperm whales, in particular, have garnered a reputation fueled in part by works of fiction, stories, and legends. Of all my encounters with whales, however, swimming with a pod off the coast of Dominica proved to be one of the most wholesome and eye-opening experiences of my life. Free-diving with a snorkel, I was able to get fairly close to a group dozing vertically in the water column. Sperm whales spend most of their time deep below the surface until they finally come up to breathe and rest, suspended with their heads pointed skyward.

The shoot was going well, with the matriarch and her group fully aware and comfortable with my presence. However, as I drifted up to catch my breath, I suddenly caught the attention of the youngest member in the group—a little calf affectionately dubbed “Ariel” by locals.

Evidently bored from napping with her mom, Ariel made a beeline straight for me, and I suddenly found myself staring down a 20-foot baby whale charging at full speed. I braced myself as she opened her thankfully toothless mouth, and the next thing I knew, she was happily gumming my camera housing like an overgrown toddler. Years of experience around large, unpredictable wildlife allowed me to calmly backtrack until I could take a breath. Far from the sea monster that haunted Captain Ahab and his crew, Ariel was a bubbly, curious, and surprisingly gentle little whale.

“Ariel”
Ariel, the baby sperm whale, emits a playful stream of bubbles as she barrels past me.

Looking back on my life, I realize that those early years of following in the footsteps of bears and foxes gave me the chance to connect even more deeply with Earth’s wildest creatures—like Ariel and her pod. The more time we spend immersed in nature, the more the world opens up to us with new experiences. Beyond any luxury or comfort that the fast pace of modern society can provide, nature offers us true connection.

And that, I believe, is the greatest gift of all.

The Sand Dunes of Lençóis​​ Maranhenses

“… and then, I have nature and art and poetry, and if that is not enough, what is enough?”
​- Vincent van Gogh

“River of Dreams”
Lençóis Maranhenses, Brazil, 2024

Most of my images focus on either close portraits of wildlife or compositions that tie them to the heart of their wild habitats. However, every so often I come across a landscape so vast and moving that it is nearly impossible to pass up the chance to explore it with my camera. Such was the case for the Lençóis Maranhenses National Park, a 600-square-mile mosaic of interlacing river systems, crystal lagoons, and endless stretches of undulating sand dunes gleaming under a relentless sun. What was meant to be a curious pit stop on my way to Patagonia turned into a soul-fueling artistic sojourn into one of the world’s most unique ecosystems.

Situated in the northeast corner of Brazil, the national park and recently-declared World Heritage Site is characterized by white sand dunes interspersed seasonally with rain-filled lagoons.  Over 40 miles of beach dotted with fishing villages define the park’s eastern border, which slopes into the open expanse of the Atlantic. Winding, tannin-coloured river systems snake through the white dunes toward the sea and scattered pools of turquoise and jade embellish the textured canvas. To the west, the patchwork of desert and wetland give way to cerrado (grasslands) and forest before receding into agricultural lands.

Overwhelmed by the sheer scale of the park’s beauty, I decided the only way to fully appreciate its grandeur was from a bird’s eye view.

Up until recently, shooting aerials required climbing into a cramped Ultralight or Cessna with the door removed. However, with the age of drones and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), the creative opportunities have expanded beyond the horizon. Keeping the drone low enough to pick up on the faintest details while still filling the frame with the full expanse of the mural below, I allowed my lens to roam freely over the terrain.

Every shift in the wind swept the everchanging canvas in a new direction, toppling delicate sandy peaks and stirring the glassy, blue-green waters. Veins of red, deep brown, and rust refracted across the landscape, dyed from tannins leaching into the waters from decaying vegetation. Weaving like a giant snake through the coastal lowlands was the long body of the Black River, its inky waters carving through the dunes to join the Parnaíba River in the northeast. It was almost too beautiful to look at directly. Each change in angle or altitude revealed another natural masterpiece latticing the crust of the Earth from horizon to horizon, leaving me dizzy from the effort of trying to frame it. 

For thousands of years, humans have sought to replicate what they see in nature through every imaginable medium. Evidence of this can be found at sites such as the famous Chauvet Cave in France, which features animal paintings from the Aurignacian period, roughly 30,000 years ago. Artists across time and space, from the Upper Paleolithic to the Renaissance, have devoted their lives to studying nature’s handiwork, struggling to capture every detail in its proper place. Even with the advanced technology of my digital camera, I still feel that I can never quite do her beauty justice. How can an image capture the full depth of something as vast as our planet and as minuscule as the structure of a cell’s nucleus?

Nature’s artistry permeates all life on Earth in a way we can never truly translate into a print — but it has been the greatest privilege of my life to try.

Upcoming Release: The Herd

With gratitude and hope for the future, 

Caught in a Snowstorm with a Wild Puma​​

“The tiger will see you a hundred times before you see him once.”
​John Vaillant

Petaka “Queen of Patagonia”
Patagonia, Chile, 2024

For the last 30 years, I have lived among the highest density of cougars in the world on Vancouver Island and have only ever seen a fleeting glimpse of one cat.

Powerful, flexible muscles, padded paws, and carefully calculated movements allow big cats like cougars or pumas to move camouflaged throughout their habitats—nature’s perfect hunters. Each time I walk my dogs or bike, I can never shake the feeling of feline eyes watching my every move, and I have dreamed of the day I might finally meet them.

When I had the chance to photograph the famed pumas of Chilean Patagonia, my expectations were reserved even as I felt anticipation build.

After a rocky start to the trip involving a lost passport and a pitstop at a Brazilian embassy, I finally arrived in Chile. The lodge where I stayed was a converted estancia on the outskirts of Torres del Paine National Park, complete with still-functional farming and livestock equipment. With the increase in visitors to the region, lured by the pristine peaks of the nearby park, ecotourism has become a booming industry. The owners of the estancia are among those who have chosen to live in harmony with the very animals once deemed a threat to livestock. Their lively staff of locals still proudly carry the values of gaucho culture rooted in honesty, hard work, and generosity. 

A young puma peers around its mother in Patagonia, Chile.
Feline Bonds
A young puma peers around its mother in Patagonia, Chile.
A large female puma rests on the savanna or pampas of Patagonia in Chile.
“Empress of the Andes”
A large female puma rests on the savanna or pampas of Patagonia in Chile.

Among the lodge’s employees was a reputed guide and puma expert named Rodrigo, who knew the cats of the area like family. Following Rodrigo’s lead, I set out deep into the heart of puma country, where cultivated land gave way to striking rock formations, snow-fed lakes, and miles upon miles of grassland or pampas. The further we trekked, the higher the granite peaks of the Andes rose before us. There, in the shadow of the mountains, we came across our first puma; a female of near-celebrity status known as Petaka and her two kittens.

Petaka’s serene, commanding presence and complete indifference to humans have made her something of a legend among those who visit the mountains of Torres del Paine and its surrounding region. Unlike in neighboring Argentina, pumas in Chile are considered a protected species, and hunting them is mostly prohibited. As a result, some of the pumas within the area have adjusted to going about their lives in the presence of people, ignoring them entirely. Nothing could make me happier than letting the quiet hours pass in the company of a wild animal who is nothing but calm, relaxed, and content.

I had the privilege of watching Petaka care for her kittens while I sat nearby, silently overcome with emotion as the little family tumbled in the grass together.

Shortly after meeting Petaka and getting to know more of the resident pumas in the park, the mountain weather suddenly turned, as it often does. The winds picked up, and the first few flakes of snow fell before the storm finally settled over the land, drawing the world in close and muffling all sound. I sought shelter in the mountainside caves to hunker down and wait out the blizzard. Not long after finding a decent refuge, a large cat suddenly appeared out of the snow and settled just feet away to keep dry. Instinctively, I held my breath, trying to keep my lens still against the excitement rising in my chest.

We sat in perfect silence as snowdrifts blanketed the willow thickets below—two unlikely companions trapped in a snowstorm. The cat never once acknowledged my presence and kept its eyes trained on the environment. It was only when the weather finally cleared and my friend crept away over the fresh canvas that I allowed the dam of emotions to break. When we give nature the space to recover and thrive, we become witnesses to the full depth of life on Earth as it was always meant to be experienced: wild, raw, and beyond all imagination. 

I could never have asked for a greater gift than that fleeting moment of camaraderie with a wild animal in one of the most breathtaking ecosystems on the planet.

With gratitude and hope for the future, 

Hundreds of Sharks on a Grouper Moon

“When you see a shark underwater, you should say, ‘How lucky I am to see this beautiful animal in his environment.”

Eugenie Clark
‘Prism and Blues’
There is no such thing as “learning to live” with sharks and other wildlife. We live because of them. or more specifically, because of the vital role they have served within our ocean for millennia.

Waking up well before the sun and climbing up to the deck of the SeaLegacy 1 had become an ingrained part of daily life since we made the Pacific crossing from Mexico to Tahiti. The only thing different about this particular morning was the palpable excitement building in the air as the crew, and I prepared for our most anticipated dive of the trip. With the full moon filling the starry sky overhead, we pulled on our masks and slipped down into the pitch-black depths.

At first, the world around us was deceptively quiet. It would not be long, however, before the waters began to churn, signalling the official start of one of the greatest spectacles in the ocean. 

‘In the Shallows”
A blacktip reef shark glides over the shallow coral heads, creating rippling reflections in the mirror surface with its dorsal and tail.

Located roughly 700 nautical miles north of Papeete, the Fakarava atoll is known for its crystal clear lagoons, idyllic beaches, and coral reefs teeming with life. Countless species of fish and birds, as well as sharks, sea turtles, and even manta rays, patrol the reefs in relative peace through most of the year. However, the story changes in the warmer months when thousands of resident grouper begin to congregate for the annual spawning.

Over the course of a few weeks, more and more fish appear – the females heavy with eggs and the males patiently waiting for their chance to fertilize them. They make their way to the mouth of the channel between the atoll’s lagoon and the open sea, an area of about 10 x 30 nautical miles. Every six hours, the deep, clear water of the ocean rushes into the lagoon and then, for another six hours, rushes out. The ebb and flow of the currents help flush nutrients out into the sea and provide the perfect chance to disperse the groupers’ eggs. When the tide finally reaches its highest point around the time of the full moon, the stage is officially set, and spawning can begin. Following closely in the wake of the fish, however, is a fleet of hundreds of sharks roving like motorcycle gangs over the reefs. 

‘Tiger Rising’
A large female tiger shark lifts her great head towards the sun-streamed surface of The Bahamas while a handful of remoras hitch a ride. Seeing sharks on a dive is a healthy sign that the ecosystem is in balance.

My team and I had positioned ourselves where we had the clearest vantage point at the edge of the atoll. As we descended along the drop-off at the mouth of the channel, we started to see thousands of groupers positioned along the coral heads. They seemed to know that as long as they kept perfectly still, their camouflage would keep them safe from passing predators. Each grouper had its own coral head and their big eyes would slowly turn to follow the progress of the prowling sharks. Every once in a while, the silence would be shattered by a loud crunch echoing through the depths, and suddenly, the waters would be filled with the twisting and thrashing of hundreds of sharks.  

Finally, at about 100 feet below the surface, the females began to release their eggs and the waters around us exploded in a frenzy. Every time a female grouper would rise in the current to deliver another cloud of eggs, dozens of males would follow her and douse them with milt. All at once, thousands of groupers took their cue, racing to perpetuate the cycle of life before evading the swift descent of hundreds of sharks in a spectacular show that only nature could orchestrate. The scene was at once breathtaking and heart-wrenching – and it was over in the blink of an eye. 

So many of the vital cycles we witness within nature can appear incredibly chaotic and even violent to us humans, so much so that it leaves us questioning their purpose. What we do not always see, however, is the hundreds of millennia it took for an ecosystem to reach its precarious state of equilibrium. Every tiny detail, from the mottling of the grouper’s scales to how each and every egg is either fertilized or consumed by another organism, contributes somehow to that balance. Even predators like sharks have their own role to play, distributing valuable nutrients across the reef. 

At the end of the day, there is no such thing as “learning to live” with sharks and other wildlife. We live because of them. Or more specifically, because of the vital role they have served within our ocean long before humans ever cast the first net to fish its waters. My hope in capturing the wonder, drama, and beauty of places like Fakarava is to help inspire local efforts to protect these wild and vital ecosystems for future generations. 

With gratitude and hope for the future, 

Lifelong Ohana

E hele me ka pu’olo
​A Hawaiian proverb meaning, “Make every person, place or condition better than before, always.”

‘Pipeline Poetry
Only the best can take on the infamous Pipeline of North Shore Oahu, where the full force of the ocean’s power meets a hidden layer of jagged reef. Yet surfing pro, Kalani Chapman somehow managed to make the ride look effortless as he soared along the waves.

Everywhere my partner Cristina and I went in Hawai’i, we were given the same advice; “Whatever you do, do not go to the end of the road on the West side of Oahu.”

So naturally, that became our destination. As a photographer and storyteller, almost always, the gold lies at the end of forbidden locations.

​With the rental car packed full of expensive camera gear and a National Geographic deadline looming overhead, the two of us set out to photograph one of the last major holdouts of Hawaiian culture. We expected the due and deserved suspicion, wariness, and even hostility that so many people had warned us about. What we had not anticipated was the generosity, warmth, and unrivalled hospitality from what would become our lifelong ohana.

‘Below the Storm‘​
Cristina Mittermeier plunges deep beneath a monster wave, looking completely in her element. No matter the weather, there is sanctuary to be found beneath the surface of our great ocean

Where the tourists dare not go …

Mornings on the western shores of Oahu begin before the sun’s light crests the horizon, with surfers gathering on the shores. By the time they hit the water and head to the takeoff zone, the rest of the island begins to stir. Coffee is poured, music blares and cars brave the one poorly patched road to deliver locals to their various jobs and kids to school. The makeshift tent communities clamour to life, and roosters can be heard crowing down the beach where Cristina and I sat in the shade with Brian Keaulana — a celebrity-status surfer, stuntman, and member of one of the most respected families in Hawai’i.

Mākaha is where surfboard shapers continue to pass on the tradition of their craft, stubbornly standing against the mass production of factories spitting boards out every minute. Wayfinders are learning to read the stars as their ancestors once did, and surfing is much more than a lifestyle or sport. It’s in your blood. Much of the community is made up of Polynesian descendants and highly respected watermen and women whose ties to the land and sea-run deeper than words could ever describe.

With Brian’s help, Cristina and I were lucky to meet some of the heroes on the island. We spent time with Brian’s daughter Ha’a Keaulana, a surfing prodigy and granddaughter of the legendary Buffalo Keaulana. Her daily surfing regimen included carrying a 50-pound boulder underwater while her fellow surfers clung to her waist in a train. We also met the traditional tattoo artist Sulu’ape Keone Nunes who taught us the meaning behind each design and how Hawaiians proudly wear their stories on their skin.

The more we uncovered about the community’s history, the more we understood why it was guarded with such ferocity against outsiders.

‘Rock Runner’
Surfer Ha’a Keaulana, daughter of Brian Keaulana and granddaughter of legendary Buffalo Keaulana, trains by sprinting across the seafloor for a full minute with a 50-pound boulder in tow. 

By the time Hawaii was officially annexed in 1898, only 40,000 Hawaiians remained, their communities decimated largely by diseases and bloody conflicts. Over the past century, they kept the fragile ties to their ancestors and lands carefully guarded, passing them onto each new generation. The Mākaha communities in particular have weathered their fair share of rough times. Addiction, violence, and homelessness continue to tear many families apart. Still, at the heart of the story is a people deeply tied to the ebb and flow of the sea. They may seem guarded, but only because what they have is very much worth protecting.

When Cristina and I left the island many weeks later, we returned home teary-eyed and promised our new family we would return someday.  ​Just last week, we finally had the chance to fulfill that promise.

As Cristina and I drove over the bridge and approached the famous beach, it was as if we were crossing back in time. The coastline was still teeming with local surfers and beachgoers, music carrying down the golden shores. I had just been saying to Cristina how amazing it was that, in the past, the locals seemed to know when we were around, and they always protected a parking spot for us. As the words were coming out of my mouth, Moki, a dear friend of ours and local resident, walked out onto the road and pointed at his baby stroller guarding a space for our car. Here we were, ten years later, and they were still saving a spot for us. We could barely get out of our car as we were greeted with Alohas, hugs, laughs and endless smiles, all under the familiar lifeguard station of 47B. 

You will never find more caring and compassionate people in all the Pacific. To have the courage and strength of heart to remain generous even through hardship, to ensure everyone has a parking spot and shady place to sit — that is the aloha spirit.

Mahalo,

Icy Landscapes

‘Ice Waterfall’
To me, this image encapsulates the confluence of art, storytelling, and conservation and has found a place in homes worldwide. The dark clouds, ice falls, and the vast Nordaustlandet ice cap tell the story of a vanishing Arctic. Ice Waterfall continues to champion polar regions and has been used by notable figures like Al Gore. It played a pivotal role as the gatefold opening spread in National Geographic’s “Cool It” Issue in 2015 and graced the cover of Pearl Jam’s “Gigaton” album. Whether viewed on a small screen or displayed as a 60-by-90-inch art print in a gallery, the photograph remains undiminished—a timeless piece with an urgent call to action.

A land of ice is a realm of constant transformation, with new patterns and structures emerging through the clash of natural forces. During one of my earlier expeditions to the remote shores of the last continent, I observed a particularly delicate ice arch and diligently adjusted my camera. After finally settling on a composition, framing the delicate arch between two towering spires of ice, a rumble echoed across the water. Within seconds, the entire structure gave way and plunged into the sea, crackling like thunder and generating a cascade of waves. One of the most spectacular displays of nature’s artistry, carved by tumultuous seas, long winters, and raging winds, vanished before my eyes.

For those of you who have been sharing in my journey, you are probably already aware of (and likely share) my deep fascination with our planet’s polar regions. My love for the icy landscapes of the far north and south took root at the age of four when my family moved to Baffin Island. That was when I first began to see the world through the ever-changing lens of ice.

Despite our remoteness, I felt intimately connected to the vast, untamed world surrounding me.

Ours was one of the few non-Inuit households in our community, and those formative years were spent navigating a frozen realm. Guided by the elders, I learned to track animals through the snow, avoid treacherous ice, and endure extreme cold—skills that would ultimately lead to my role as a National Geographic photographer. My life’s trajectory has been irreversibly shaped by ice and the warmth of Inuit culture, which is why places like the Arctic and Antarctic regions will always be a favourite subject of mine.

When photographing ice, the creative possibilities are limitless. Light bends, refracts, and scatters through frozen crystals in surprising ways, crafting intricate patterns and textures. You could be photographing the same iceberg from the same vantage point, yet every click of the shutter yields a different image. These ever-shifting conditions present their challenges; an overcast sky, for example, can obscure details, turning a looming iceberg into a featureless mass against a dull horizon. Nonetheless, I’ve always found a peculiar sense of freedom within the environmental constraints of our planet’s icy kingdoms. They urge us to explore creative paths we might never have traversed otherwise, resulting in more compelling images and often a better story behind the frame.

A land of ice is a realm of constant transformation, with new patterns and structures emerging through the clash of natural forces. During one of my earlier expeditions to the remote shores of the last continent, I observed a particularly delicate ice arch and diligently adjusted my camera. After finally settling on a composition, framing the delicate arch between two towering spires of ice, a rumble echoed across the water. Within seconds, the entire structure gave way and plunged into the sea, crackling like thunder and generating a cascade of waves. One of the most spectacular displays of nature’s artistry, carved by tumultuous seas, long winters, and raging winds, vanished before my eyes.

‘The Last Stand’
I hurried to capture the delicate arch before it plunged into the sea below. The beauty of Antarctica is as fragile as it is captivating.

I learned early in life that, even in the heart of a polar winter, there’s a hidden reservoir of life beneath the snow and the icy seas. Animals like seals, polar bears, and certain species of seabirds have not only adapted to the capricious and unforgiving nature of the frozen world; they rely on its ebb and flow for raising their young, hunting for food, and finding mates. Somewhere in their evolutionary journey, the harshest aspects of their habitat became the source of their survival and resilience. Sadly, this is also what renders their polar ecosystems so fragile. With diminishing ice in the Arctic and Antarctic seas, the future of some of Earth’s most iconic animals becomes increasingly uncertain.

Over the decades, I have witnessed the Arctic, my childhood home and the first place where I truly belonged, evolve before my eyes.

Despite the growing pressures of a warming world, I still feel we can change our course and protect our fellow wildlife – especially with the support of readers like you who share my love for the natural world.

We are in this together, and we will solve this together.

With gratitude and hope for a better future,

Delta Rising

What is a human being? Who are we, and why are we here? Those are just some of the basic questions I have wrestled with my whole life.

When I first flew over the Colorado River Delta in a two-seater plane, thousands of miles from where I grew up in Canada’s far north, I had no idea what to expect. I honestly believed that looking down from 10,000 feet, it would look like these little fingers coming out of the river. When I actually set eyes on it, I saw it was five miles of sheer beauty, a landscape on a scale so vast and wide that at first I didn’t know how to photograph it.

The task before me was to find a way to make beautiful and different images of a scene that almost literally took the breath away while conveying the message of life and renewal.

When I turned nine, my parents trusted me to operate a snowmobile alone, and I ventured out on what was the beginning of a lifetime of exploration. To be cut loose at that age allowed me the opportunity to connect intimately with wild animals and their vast habitats. I slowly began to understand the weave of this great fabric of life, and it was illuminating – I fell in love.

My pilot Rodrigo and I started honing in at different altitudes, anywhere from 200 feet to 1,000 feet, and everywhere. The lower we flew, the more it felt like we were flying through this three-dimensional canvas of poetry and art. To see these patterns was to be reminded of the tree of life, a quilted mosaic of silt and sediment — veins, capillaries, and branches woven intricately together, the lungs of the Earth.

I was momentarily lost trying to figure out a way to turn these patterns of life into photographic moments that could live on people’s walls.

It is beautiful, but this is a terrible beauty. For the story of the Colorado River since the 1950s has been a story of how an overburdened river no longer reaches the sea. It is a journey that starts high in the Rocky Mountains and winds through seven US states, over 1,500 miles of alpine forests, red rock canyons and desert floodplains to northwest Mexico, where it once emptied into the Sea of Cortez.

It is a journey that starts high in the Rocky Mountains and winds through seven US states, over 1,500 miles of alpine forests, red rock canyons, and desert floodplains to northwest Mexico, where it empties into the Sea of Cortez.

The region is experiencing the worst drought in 1,200 years, but that is only part of the story. The Colorado River is also a story of how human population and heavy industry have denuded, drained, and decayed one of the natural world’s great waterways.

And yet, now, today, depending on when the drought finally ends, there is hope.

Water began flowing here once again just a few years ago, the result of an unprecedented binational restoration effort involving conservation groups, the US and Mexican governments, and Mexicali Valley communities. Those efforts have provided new hope for the future.

With gratitude,

Golden Bond

Simplicity in nature is often the most beautiful simplicity of all. What is simple always interests me. Every year, during the annual salmon run, brown bears emerge from the mists in the glacial peaks that ring southwestern Alaska’s wild coastline and riverine valleys. They’re there for one of the most spectacular, eye-filling — and ecologically vital — wildlife migrations in all of nature: the annual salmon run, in which 30 million salmon fight their way upstream to their natal streams. It’s an awe-inspiring sight, unforgettable in its own way.

The sockeye come first, then the pink salmon followed by coho, then the chum, and finally, the chinook. The migration encompasses five months in all, from late May through the middle of October, and it’s prime feeding time for bears. This is the time of year when bears have to store fat and nutritional value for the long, cold winter months ahead. In the fall, hyperphagia kicks in and these bears eat practically non-stop, gorging on hundreds of thousands of calories daily.

The migration encompasses five months in all, from late May through the middle of October, and it’s prime feeding time for bears. This is the time of year when bears have to store fat and nutritional value for the long, cold winter months ahead. In the fall, hyperphagia kicks in and these bears eat practically non-stop, gorging on hundreds of thousands of calories daily.

Every bear has its own favorite feeding ground – and habits. Alpha males can weigh as much as 1,500 pounds (680 kg), so it’s no surprise that they’re the first ones to grab the prime fishing spots along the river.

Their sheer bulk and muscle mass allow them to wade into the middle of the rushing stream and just stand there, braced against the current as they gorge themselves on whatever fish happens to come their way.

Younger bears are quick and agile and often retreat into tall stands of grass.

Next, come the younger males and females, known as subordinates. They’re not always wise, but they’re smart: They know enough to keep out of the way of the larger, more aggressive males. And then there are the mothers and cubs. During the seasonal salmon runs, mother bears must be alert, attentive, and focused at every minute to provide for their family while keeping them safe.

This is a sight that always gladdens my heart. These mothers are wise beyond words. They have to be, because they have the added responsibility of looking not only after themselves but their cubs as well.

Young cubs especially, are virtually defenseless and rely on their mothers for everything. Bringing her cubs to the river’s edge is perhaps the riskiest palace of all for a mother and her cubs.

Mother bears face many challenges, but perhaps the most imposing of these is infanticide. Nature is not always pretty, and infanticide — in which male bears kill cubs, sometimes even their own — is a fact of life in the wild. No one really knows why, though there are theories based on scientific research and observation over the years, everything from reducing competition for scarce food resources to sexual selection to cubs as a source of food.

None of that matters to a mother bear, of course. What matters is that male bears, especially the large, dominant alpha males, will kill cubs, given the chance, and the mother’s responsibility is to do what she can to protect her young.

This little cub was still drinking its mother’s milk. At only five to six months old, it had already started acquiring a taste for grass, which is also rich in protein.

One early evening in late August, at the midpoint of the salmon run, I was standing on a serene, pristine stretch of riverbank when I sensed some movement above me. I heard a slight rustling, as if something big were moving around. I could hear salmon splashing in the river nearby; otherwise, the scene was quiet and eerily gentle. A handful of larger bears were fishing upstream, focused on grabbing an easy meal.

And then, suddenly, I sense it — something in the underbrush just above me, about eight feet away.

It was a mother and her cub. They poked their heads out of the bush; the cub could have been no more than eight months old. I slowed my breathing and avoided direct eye contact. I embraced a body position and body language of humility, almost as if I was apologizing for being on the river.

I didn’t have my telephoto lens with me, just my wide-angle zoom.

Ears up, eyes alert, the mother stepped out of the brush into the open. She didn’t give me even so much as a glance; to her, it was as if I wasn’t even there. Her attention was transfixed on this one large male feeding on fish just upstream, in his favorite fishing spot. He seemed oblivious to her presence — mine, too — but that didn’t stop her from looking, listening … learning.

The ocean waters I work to protect provide a vital home for the salmon that return to their natal streams in the never-ending cycle of life.

Everything slows down in moments like that. You calm your nerves, steady your hands as much as you can, and move very, very slowly and gently. I always teach my field assistants to move around the bears as if they are doing Tai Chi … even when they are in a rush to move or change a lens; Tai Chi. Every motion needs to be smooth, slow and studied.

I gently and very calmly raised the camera to my eye, desperate not to break the spell, and managed two quick captures and never for a second thought that I had captured the perfection of the moment. As it happened, one of those two captures has become one of the most pleasing images I have ever taken. I love it.

There is nothing like being in a situation where an animal like this accepts you into its presence and dictates the rules. She knew I was there. Her cub knew I was there. They knew I was not a threat. The real threat was the big male up the river. I just happened to be there, in one of those chance intersections of luck, timing, and happenstance, to capture this moment just as the last light of day was fading behind the mountains.

Thank you for sharing this journey with me,

Dawn Patrol

‘Dawn Patrol’
We had spent weeks looking for orcas, but it was worth every minute once we found them.

There are few things more humbling in this world than to witness a 12,000-pound dolphin explode out of the water.

There are moments so exquisite that it is near impossible not to become immersed in them. You appreciate these moments, because you never quite know when they might happen.

On this occasion, we had spent weeks following orcas in Norway, and we were coming up short more often than not.

The days were dark. The sun rarely, if ever, climbed above the horizon, and that was on a good day. We would see a pink glow in the evening — and by evening, I mean high noon.

The rest of the time, it was dark. It was cold. It was moody. And when we would see the black fin of an orca against the dark sky, slicing through the water, the conditions were almost always rough.

Then, one morning, as we were following a pod of orcas, something wonderful happened.

The group was away from us, in the distance. At first, it seemed as if nothing was happening. We could see there were a few big males in the group, but aside from that everything appeared to be quiet.

Orcas found in Norway are not like orcas found in British Columbian waters. BC orcas are aerobatic; they breach all the time. Orcas of Norway are rarely, if ever, seen leaping out of the water.

And yet, without warning, something suddenly triggered them. They were still distant, but it was clear that something was happening — had happened. Something that excited them. They were in a feeding frenzy. We came alive, our senses suddenly alert and active, as if flicked on by a switch. We accelerated the boat, careful to keep the same distance between our boat and the pod. We were pacing along at about 20 knots because we were trying to match the speed of this unrivalled athletic spectacle. Things were coming together. The conditions were calm — for once — and the water was cooperating. We kept our cameras steady. Then this one huge male started to porpoise with furious speed and power. It seemed as if explosions of water were streaming off his body with each leap.

Norweigan orcas are far less likely to breach the surface than those in British Columbia, but they are often seen spyhopping.

The light is almost always low in these kinds of situations. You have to make a tricky calculation, and do it quickly. You want a shutter speed that is fast enough to freeze a snapshot in time, otherwise the action will be blurred. Luckily, on this occasion, there was just enough light. The sky had turned pink, with hints of orange against a pink hue, with towering mountains forming a natural backdrop on the horizon.

And this enormous male orca — 12,000 pounds, 25 feet long, with a six-foot-tall dorsal fin and pectoral fins the size of a car hood — was porpoising along with such force that it was hard to put the camera to my eye without losing sight of the whole image.

With single-lens reflex cameras, it was always hard to tell I was getting the shot or not. I was shooting at ten frames a second, which means that ten times every second I was blind because the mirror has to lift, the shutter has to rise, and the image is exposed. Essentially, I had no clue if I had captured the shot or not.

It was one of those occasions when, after it is over — a split second that passes by in the blink of an eye — I was able to sit down quietly in the back of the boat, safe in the knowledge that I likely did get the shot.

In the past, I would have worried that this shot was not going to be sharp, with all this low, moody light and such an explosion of speed.

Somehow my friend Goran, who was driving the boat that day, had paced us perfectly. Everything came together. Sitting in the back of the boat, I held up my camera so I could see the back, with the picture on my LCD screen, and I immediately saw that the whole package was there. It was beautiful. The water splashing off the eye of the orca, running down its body — the light, the mood, the color . . . perfect.

At the time, I thought there was no way I would be able to zoom in on the eye of the orca. There was no way it would be sharp. And yet, when I tapped that button, I saw that the eye was sharp. The whole image was sharp. I scrolled down and up, up and down, just waiting for that mistake that told me I had failed somehow. It never came.

These are the gifts of nature that transform the beauty of the natural world into your camera. You realize, in that moment of clarity and epiphany, that you have captured this perfect little bottle of light and time that will live on forever.

Thank you for sharing this journey with me,

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