
Foggy morning on a beach in Pacific Rim National Park, Vancouver Island.

Foggy morning on a beach in Pacific Rim National Park, Vancouver Island.

Where there are rocks there is life.

Pinhole photograph of one of my favorite old cottonwood trees at a local park. Taken this spring using a holga pinhole camera.

Looking into Paonia Reservoir on a hot summer day it seems that something is missing.

Using a standard Holga 120 pinhole camera I got some unique pinhole style lens(less) flare while photographing this cottonwood tree one afternoon. A happy accident.

Taken at a local park where bulldozers were pushing over dead trees that I normally see Kestrels perched in. Dead trees provide habitat for numerous living organisms, including fungi, mosses, lichens, invertebrates, birds, mammals, reptiles, and amphibians.

Pinhole photo of a great looking cottonwood tree taken on a windy afternoon walk.

Pinhole photo taken at a local park in the middle of the city. If you get down low in the grass and get the right perspective you actually feel out on the grasslands. Perspective is everything.

This is a pinhole photograph taken at a local park of a hole in one of my favorite trees. For me a hole in a tree precisely expresses the essence of nature.

When humans want to have fun we don’t create things that just get us from point A to point B in the shortest time we make things that wiggle and are full of surprises. To paraphrase Alan Watts the universe is wiggly so we might as well wiggle with it.
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