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SPECIAL COLLECTOR'S EDITION: BEST WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHY 2022

CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC | 2022

Cover shot for Canadian Geographic magazine.

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STELLER SLUMBER

REMOTE PARADISE: THE WONDER OF B.C.'S TRIANGLE ISLAND 

CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC | 2022

As he approached the fog-shrouded cliffside, photographer Ryan Tidman began to notice specks of black breaking through the low-hanging cloud. Drawing closer, he realized he was seeing a natural wonder — thousands upon thousands of common murres circling the island as they prepared to nest. Though a mere dot in the ocean 45 kilometres off the northern tip of Vancouver Island, Triangle Island is home to more than two million birds. It’s in what’s officially called Anne Vallée (Triangle Island) Ecological Reserve, after a researcher who died there in 1982.

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BRINGING THE ENDANGERED VANCOUVER ISLAND MARMOT BACK FROM THE BRINK

THE NARWHAL | 2020

One of the rarest mammals in the world was almost wiped out two decades ago, sparking an elaborate and costly recovery program that has boosted numbers and offers hope for other at-risk species. The best way to trap a Vancouver Island marmot is with peanut butter — and not the healthy kind. Marmots use beaver-like incisors to chow down on an alpine meadow buffet of more than 40 species of grasses, herbs and wildflowers. The starfish leaves of alpine lupins are a favourite dish.

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TRIANGLE FOG

EXPLORATION: TRIANGLE ISLAND

OCEANOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE | 2020

Off the northwest tip of Vancouver Island, with nothing but ocean between it and Japan, is a speck of land that throngs with life. A wild corner of the world where millions of seabirds call into the wind, and sea lions raise their young. An island alive and thriving as a result of both isolation and protection.

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