28 Feb 2010 Hobiyee 2010
 |  Category: Hobiyee  | Leave a Comment
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Hobiyee is a Nisga’a celebration of the New Year. People attending the celebration can expect traditional dancing from four youth dance groups, over 120 local Nisga’a dancers, as well as sixteen confirmed Aboriginal dancing groups from all over the North Coast.

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post

07 Feb 2010 New Portraits photos
 |  Category: Portraiture  | Leave a Comment
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

using off camera flash has become an obsession, the way light and shadow fall on each other is very amazing, I like the way I can control light.

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post

29 Dec 2009 Added new gear
 |  Category: Portraiture, photography  | Leave a Comment
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

So I bought some new gear, two strobes from China, back ground holder and 2 light stands for my flash’s, went the strobist way as I didn’t want to have a lot of equipment.


Example:
Camera right yongnuo YN-465 1/2 power through an umbrella, Camera left CY-32TWZ 1/2 power bounce of ceiling, using yongnuo RF-602 triggers

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post

06 Jun 2009 Barred Owl Of Port Ed
 |  Category: Owls  | Leave a Comment
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

So I was lucky a fellow photography friend told me about an Owl he had spotted and were to find him. Well for the last week I have been able to photograph him, but with the hot weather I have not seen him..

here are some shots.

Barred Owl

Barred Owl

Barred Owl

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post

23 May 2009 Wolves on the lake Ice
 |  Category: photography, wolves  | Leave a Comment
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

So a few weeks ago I was lucky to watch two wolves crossing a frozen lake. For the last 4 years I have been waiting to take a photo of a coastal wolf in the snow, I finally got my chance. this guy watched for a few min before running across the frozen lake into the bush, the other wolf was waiting for traffic to slow down before he headed out across the frozen ice.

here are a few photos.

Healthy wolf on the lake shore

Healthy wolf on side of road

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post

25 Jan 2009 Portraiture Photos
 |  Category: Portraiture, photography  | One Comment
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Here are some of my Portraiture Photos I have taken. I hope you enjoy..

Stacey Lavigne
Stacey Lavigne
Stacey Lavigne

Sophia

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post

19 Jan 2009 Bald Eagles Of Prince Rupert are back
 |  Category: eagles, photography  | Leave a Comment
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Every year about June to Dec the Eagles sort of disappear going up the many rivers to catch and eat the remains of salmon, then in the new year the eagles make their way back to prince Rupert water front. Of course not all go, some stay to eat at the local dump, some stay near the local canneries. Anyways the weather was good and we went to the water front to photograph the return Of the eagles.

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post

11 Jan 2009 Whales and Sealions
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

Humpback whales that breach at the end of video.

Sea lions sitting on a rock. This Video taken at Prince Leboo

Humpback whales and Killer whales..

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post

10 Jan 2009 wild life videos
 |  Category: Grizzlys, Video  | Tags: ,  | Leave a Comment
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

I did up a bunch of wild life videos some have never been seen before enjoy….

Grizzly Bears from the Khutzeymateen.

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post

24 Dec 2008 Sea lions are they to be blamed on the loss of fish stocks?
 |  Category: seals, wildlife  | Tags: , ,  | Leave a Comment
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

I’m not a marine biologist nor a fisherman; I’m a person who is a bit skeptical about blaming one species for the decline of another species, especially when the top predators are going after the same food source while one is making a living on it. When the top predator (humans) species make a living on the food source they do not like competition. Competition can be from other fishers, sport or commercial; it could be killer whales, or seals, and over the years Killer whales and Seals have been killed by fisherman, fishing boats have been used as weapons to run into killer whales, and guns to shoot seals. Seals are often intentionally killed by fishermen who erroneously believe they are responsible for reduced fish stocks caused by overfishing, pollution and habitat destruction.

To blame the seals and seal lions for the loose of the fishing industry on the coast of BC, is a lame attempt at the real problems. Over the last 50 years we have seen a steady loss in fish stocks due to overfishing, the loss of habitat due to logging, and pollution is also part of the problem and more importantly the real reason salmon stocks are on the decline. Other factors could be the warming of the oceans,

The simple fact is, stocks are in wide decline because we have been killing far too many salmon for far too long. In 1913, the year of the last great run in the Fraser, an estimated 38 million sockeye returned. But 32 million of those fish were killed and put in cans. Four years later, when the run crashed to just eight million sockeye, the government allowed a catch of more than 7.3 million fish.
Since then the government has typically allowed 40 to 70 per cent of any given run to be taken in nets.
Not only has overfishing hurt the environment, but it has also brought the commercial fleet to its knees and left native villages impoverished.

Let’s look at some statistics, seal populations are at an extreme high and salmon are at an extreme low and on the verge of collapsing. If seals and sea lions main food diet consisted of salmon stocks, we should see a decline in the seals and sea lions population or unless they are on the verge of a collapse. More likely is that their diet is much more varied than we once thought and salmon only plays a small part in the diet of seals and sea lions.

Our oceans are a complex ecosystem one that we are just starting to understand.
When one species of animal dies especially when that species is a key species it has domino effect on other species in the ecosystem. We will see the decline of the coastal grizzly whose diet is made up of spawning salmon. Grizzly bears are starving on some rivers already. Killer whales are abandoning coastal regions because of a lack of Chinook.

There is hope, not all fisherman blame the decline of fish stocks on the seals and seal lions, and with the government intervention like in the States, there is no commercial fisheries this year in California, Oregon and Washington. BC and Alaska should be next.

That means ending the commercial fishery at sea. Shut it down and get government emergency funding to assist fishermen in the way forest workers are being helped through the pine-beetle infestation.

In rivers, only live traps should be used, such as beach seines, weirs and fish wheels, so that wild fish can be released while surplus hatchery stocks are retained.

All sports fishing should be restricted to catch-and-release.

Stop the commercial sale of salmon by native communities.

Only then should we see the return of millions of salmon to the river systems. With out tough measures, salmon won’t survive and with a key species gone we will see the decline in other species like coastal grizzly bears and killer whales.

Here is a great write up on the Fraser river.

Email This Post Email This Post

Print This Post Print This Post