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  • Macro photograph of a White-faced Meadowhawk Dragonfly.  Photograph taken in the forests of the Kawarthas region of Ontario.  This insect was quite accommodating toward the camera, staying close by and often landing upon the same spot when accidentally spooked by my movements.  He liked my camera so much that we ended the photo shoot when he alighted upon the end of my lens hood as if to taunt me, before flying off.
    White-Faced Meadowhak Dragonfly 2_MG...tif
  • Macro photograph of a White-faced Meadowhawk Dragonfly.  Photograph taken in the forests of the Kawarthas region of Ontario.  This insect was quite accommodating toward the camera, staying close by and often landing upon the same spot when accidentally spooked by my movements.  He liked my camera so much that we ended the photo shoot when he alighted upon the end of my lens hood as if to taunt me, before flying off.
    White-Faced Meadowhak Dragonfly 1_MG...tif
  • Hand-Held Macro photograph of a dragonfly clutching a stem of a plant at Greenwood Conservation Area in Ajax, Ontario.  It was a very windy afternoon and the dragonfly was holding on tight as it was being buffeted around.  Combined with the bright mid-day sun and hand-held close-up, this was a difficult shot to obtain.
    Dragonfly Crop 2.tif
  • Macro photograph of a Wasp (or Hornet), species not determined.  Photograph taken in the forests of the Kawarthas region of Ontario
    Wasp_MG_1560 (Master).tif
  • Macro photograph of a Harvestman, commonly called a Daddy Long Legs.  Species (Opiliones) related to spiders (but not a spider).  Photograph taken in the forests of the Kawarthas region of Ontario
    Daddy Longlegs 1_MG_1118 (Master).tif
  • Macro photograph of a Harvestman, commonly called a Daddy Long Legs.  Species (Opiliones) related to spiders (but not a spider).  Photograph taken in the forests of the Kawarthas region of Ontario
    Daddy Longlegs 2_MG_1539 (Master).tif
  • Macro photograph of a Harvestman, commonly called a Daddy Long legs.  Species (Opiliones) related to spiders (but not a spider).  Photograph taken in the forests of the Kawarthas region of Ontario
    Daddy Longlegs 1_MG_1118 (Master).tif
  • Tight image of frozen water on a forest floor focusing on the surface texture/reflection of the ice, entrained air bubbles entrained and the various forest flotsam that collects over a number of freeze-thaw cycles...This is a crop from a larger stitched series of images created with a Canon 40D and 24 mm TS-E 3.5L II lens.
    Ice Patterns.tif
  • Ontario's Provincial flower, the Trillium, in full Spring bloom in the the forests of the Rouge Valley - Pickering, Ontario, Canada...2-shot stitch (PTGUI) - original 4160x3840 pixels
    White Trillium_MG_3647.tif
  • Macro photograph of a Green Frog (Rana clamitans) found in a small tributary stream to Little Rouge Creek on a warm fall day, Pickering, Ontario, Canada
    Green Frog (Rana clamitans) Master_M...tif
  • Sunset in Kananaskis Country, Alberta with approaching thunderstorm - August 2010.<br />
<br />
This photograph was taken along Highway 40 in Alberta during an amazing sunset with an incoming storm. The mountains in the background define the border with British Columbia, with the Highwood River peeking out here and there in the mid to far distance of the image, and with mountain wildflowers gracing the foreground.<br />
<br />
This is 18 shot stitched panorama plus 2-exposure HDR treatment (2 rows of 9 photographs, 36 exposures total), taken in rapid succession using a panoramic tripod head given the quick moving clouds and rapidly changing light.<br />
<br />
What is memorable from the date this image was taken (besides this sunset) is that maybe 45 minutes earlier, while further west up the highway, near the Highwood Pass, I was into taking a macro shot of some wild-flowers by the side of the highway, with tripod set up maybe 0.15 m above ground (6-inches) with a 100 mm macro lens when my parents shouted from one of the two vehicles we were traveling in "Bear!".<br />
<br />
A Grizzly mother and cub was crossing the highway maybe 125 m away from where I was shooting (moving away from us towards the river). So having the wrong lens on my camera that was also attached to a tripod while I was laying on ground meant that I did not get a shot of the two bears (they were in sight maybe 5-seconds total anyhow), and I rushed back to our vehicle as a precaution and we decided to move out and head back to my folks' home.<br />
<br />
Needless to say, maybe 30 km away from the bear later, I had the added pressure of my nervous father going on about me stopping again on the side of the highway to take these shots with bears "around".
    Kananaskis Sunset 27x13.5 - _MG_0434...tif
  • Sunset in Kananaskis Country, Alberta with approaching thunderstorm - August 2010.<br />
<br />
This photograph was taken along Highway 40 in Alberta during an amazing sunset and an incoming storm. The mountains in the background define the border with British Columbia, with the Highwood River peeking out here and there in the mid to background of the image, with mountain wildflowers gracing the foreground.<br />
<br />
This is 18 shot stitched panorama plus 2-exposure HDR treatment (2 rows of 9 photographs, 36 exposures total) taken with a Canon 40D, Canon TS-E 24 mm/3.5 L, and Nodal Ninja 5 panoramic head, shot very rapidly given quick moving clouds and rapidly changing light.<br />
<br />
What is memorable from the date this image was taken (besides this sunset) is that maybe 45 minutes earlier, while further west up the highway, near the Highwood Pass, I was into taking a macro shot of some wild-flowers by the side of the highway, with tripod set up maybe 0.15 m above ground (6-inches) with a 100 mm macro lens when my parents shouted from one of the two vehicles we were traveling in "Bear!".<br />
<br />
A Grizzly mother and cub was crossing the highway maybe 125 m away from where I was shooting (moving away from us towards the river). So having wrong lens on camera, set up on tripod while lying on ground I certainly did not get that shot (they were in sight maybe 5-seconds total anyhow), and I rushed back to our vehicle as a precaution and we decided to move out and head back to my folks' home.<br />
<br />
Needless to say, maybe 30 km away from the bear later, I had the added pressure of my nervous father going on about me stopping again on the side of the highway to take these shots with bears "around".
    Kananaskis Sunset 22x17_MG_0434.tif
  • Sunset in Kananaskis Country, Alberta with approaching thunderstorm - August 2010.<br />
<br />
This photograph was taken along Highway 40 in Alberta during an amazing sunset with an incoming storm. The mountains in the background define the border with British Columbia, with the Highwood River peeking out here and there in the mid to far distance of the image, and with mountain wildflowers gracing the foreground.<br />
<br />
This is 18 shot stitched panorama plus 2-exposure HDR treatment (2 rows of 9 photographs, 36 exposures total), taken in rapid succession using a panoramic tripod head given the quick moving clouds and rapidly changing light.<br />
<br />
What is memorable from the date this image was taken (besides this sunset) is that maybe 45 minutes earlier, while further west up the highway, near the Highwood Pass, I was into taking a macro shot of some wild-flowers by the side of the highway, with tripod set up maybe 0.15 m above ground (6-inches) with a 100 mm macro lens when my parents shouted from one of the two vehicles we were traveling in "Bear!".<br />
<br />
A Grizzly mother and cub was crossing the highway maybe 125 m away from where I was shooting (moving away from us towards the river). So having the wrong lens on my camera that was also attached to a tripod while I was laying on ground meant that I did not get a shot of the two bears (they were in sight maybe 5-seconds total anyhow), and I rushed back to our vehicle as a precaution and we decided to move out and head back to my folks' home.<br />
<br />
Needless to say, maybe 30 km away from the bear later, I had the added pressure of my nervous father going on about me stopping again on the side of the highway to take these shots with bears "around".
    Kananaskis Sunset (Master)_MG_0434 .tif
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