Black-and-White

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    Ferocious Lake Erie

    Gale force wind sent Lake Erie churning at Port Stanley, Ontario. Winter storms are common occurrence in the Great Lakes, with wind gust frequently reaching 90-100 km/h.

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    Unrelenting Waves

    Lake Superior, churning from the steady wind on this September day. I wanted to capture the unrelenting waves pounding on the shoreline, sculpting the landscape, as they have been for millennia. A black-and-white long exposure suits the mood.

    This image was accepted at the International Salon New York 2021.

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    Rushing Waves

    It was a particularly stormy late summer day by the Lake Superior shore. I spent a good part of the day watching giant waves crashing into boulders and rushing onto rocky beaches. I thought about how the relentless force of nature sculpted the shorelines over millennia, shaping cliffs, polishing rocks into pebbles, and making fine sandy beaches. I fired the shutter. The moment a wave breaking up on the rock was frozen in time, a testament to the power of nature.

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    Icy Vortex

    The sound of crunching ice told me something interesting was happening. On this chilly January day, the flow of the Nith River had sent the floating ice into a swirl. I marveled at the delicate conditions – the flow of the river, the shape of the bend, the cold temperature that partly froze the river – all coming together to create this phenomena. The icy might have been swirling around for minutes or hours, but I was lucky to be at the right place at the right time to witness this. A few minutes after taking this shot, extra ice came down the river, and completely jammed everything up.

    This image won 2nd place in the Overzealous Fine Art Exhibition 2020, Photography, Film and Digital category.

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    Midnight Starscape and Comet Neowise

    A starry midnight scene by Lake Huron, where two prominent features in the night sky made a natural alignment with the Southampton Lighthouse. The first object is the Big Dipper, the seven brightest stars in the image, is part of the constellation of Ursa Major (the Big Bear) and is one of the most well-known asterism in the northern sky. The second object is Comet C/2020 F3 Neowise, which was visible with the unaided eye in July 2020. Comets are “dirty ice balls” made up of ice, dust, and various organic compounds. As a comet approaches the sun, the ice sublimes (turns into water vapour) from the heat of the sun, and the dust is pushed away from the comet nucleus by the solar wind, creating the characteristic dust tail of the comet.

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