Frequently Asked Questions

General photo club help

A Mother Leads

A mother polar bear leads her two cubs across a snow-covered landscape of Churchill. What a stunning sight, indeed!! This photo was on my bucket list!

Endless observation

In this infinite beauty, the gaze gets lost. It travels through billions of worlds, fascinated, awed, sometimes frightened. For the immensity reminds us how small we are in the face of what seems to have neither beginning nor end. The odds of life appearing on Earth were so slim that no number can measure their improbability. A silent miracle, resting in the midst of infinite emptiness.

Endless observation

In this infinite beauty, the gaze gets lost. It travels through billions of worlds, fascinated, awed, sometimes frightened. For the immensity reminds us how small we are in the face of what seems to have neither beginning nor end. The odds of life appearing on Earth were so slim that no number can measure their improbability. A silent miracle, resting in the midst of infinite emptiness.

Endless observation

In this infinite beauty, the gaze gets lost. It travels through billions of worlds, fascinated, awed, sometimes frightened. For the immensity reminds us how small we are in the face of what seems to have neither beginning nor end. The odds of life appearing on Earth were so slim that no number can measure their improbability. A silent miracle, resting in the midst of infinite emptiness.

GGO 2

Somewhere Over The Rainbow

I was lucky capture this after the storm.

The look

That little buck had a longer look at me. We agreed that i would catch him later. Great moment

Feeding Time

The perfect time to be the area with a black bear (cinnamon color phase). Her black colored cubs blended in with the burnt pines that surrounded them. It made me think about how the wildlife has moved forward and adapted after the horrific fire that swept through Jasper National Park.

Quite Passage

I photographed this coyote at Vermilion Lakes on a calm winter morning. The lake was frozen and covered with fresh snow, creating a completely open, white landscape. I loved the way the coyote moved across the lake, its small form standing out against the empty expanse. I kept the composition minimal to highlight the quiet, solitary moment, just the animal, the snow, and the stillness of winter in Banff.

The Logging Trail

This is an ICM (intentional camera movement) while hiking the Logging Trail in Algonquin Park. Sometimes it was raining, and then it would snow a little, you never know what weather you may find in November in the Park.

Red Fox in Algonquin Park

I came across this Red Fox on a recent trip to Algonquin Park. She was sitting looking at me with her ears perked!

Woodpeckers

Canada Jay In Algonquin Park

While on a trip to Algonquin Park in November, we came across 6 Canada Jays on this morning. They are very friendly birds and they were flying all around us and sometimes landing on my head!

barred owlet

red foxes

swallows

Bald eagle

4 robbers

They were actually 6

GGO

Greay horned owl

Found this guy in a very unusual spot. He stared at me calmly and took after being harassed by crows.

Photo contests and competitions

A Mother Leads

A mother polar bear leads her two cubs across a snow-covered landscape of Churchill. What a stunning sight, indeed!! This photo was on my bucket list!

Endless observation

In this infinite beauty, the gaze gets lost. It travels through billions of worlds, fascinated, awed, sometimes frightened. For the immensity reminds us how small we are in the face of what seems to have neither beginning nor end. The odds of life appearing on Earth were so slim that no number can measure their improbability. A silent miracle, resting in the midst of infinite emptiness.

Endless observation

In this infinite beauty, the gaze gets lost. It travels through billions of worlds, fascinated, awed, sometimes frightened. For the immensity reminds us how small we are in the face of what seems to have neither beginning nor end. The odds of life appearing on Earth were so slim that no number can measure their improbability. A silent miracle, resting in the midst of infinite emptiness.

Endless observation

In this infinite beauty, the gaze gets lost. It travels through billions of worlds, fascinated, awed, sometimes frightened. For the immensity reminds us how small we are in the face of what seems to have neither beginning nor end. The odds of life appearing on Earth were so slim that no number can measure their improbability. A silent miracle, resting in the midst of infinite emptiness.

GGO 2

Somewhere Over The Rainbow

I was lucky capture this after the storm.

The look

That little buck had a longer look at me. We agreed that i would catch him later. Great moment

Feeding Time

The perfect time to be the area with a black bear (cinnamon color phase). Her black colored cubs blended in with the burnt pines that surrounded them. It made me think about how the wildlife has moved forward and adapted after the horrific fire that swept through Jasper National Park.

Quite Passage

I photographed this coyote at Vermilion Lakes on a calm winter morning. The lake was frozen and covered with fresh snow, creating a completely open, white landscape. I loved the way the coyote moved across the lake, its small form standing out against the empty expanse. I kept the composition minimal to highlight the quiet, solitary moment, just the animal, the snow, and the stillness of winter in Banff.

The Logging Trail

This is an ICM (intentional camera movement) while hiking the Logging Trail in Algonquin Park. Sometimes it was raining, and then it would snow a little, you never know what weather you may find in November in the Park.

Red Fox in Algonquin Park

I came across this Red Fox on a recent trip to Algonquin Park. She was sitting looking at me with her ears perked!

Woodpeckers

Canada Jay In Algonquin Park

While on a trip to Algonquin Park in November, we came across 6 Canada Jays on this morning. They are very friendly birds and they were flying all around us and sometimes landing on my head!

barred owlet

red foxes

swallows

Bald eagle

4 robbers

They were actually 6

GGO

Greay horned owl

Found this guy in a very unusual spot. He stared at me calmly and took after being harassed by crows.