Heading to Antarctica

Greetings from the Southern Ocean, where I am currently on board the National Geographic Endurance en route from New Zealand to Antarctica.  Soon we will be too far south to connect to the ships satellite internet, so I thought I share a few images from the first part of the voyage while I still can.

We sailed from Dunedin, New Zealand, and had several exciting days visiting sub-antarctic islands on the way south.  Below are a few favorite shots so far.  Stay tuned, and I’ll share more from this long voyage along western Antarctica to the Antarctic Peninsula, and eventually ending in Argentina.  I’m serving as the National Geographic photography expert on board, sharing my work, giving talks on wildlife photography for the guests, and of course shooting pictures myself at every opportunity.

Albatross Over the Surf Zone

The second group of islands we visited on our journey south were New Zealand’s Aukland Island group, about 450 kilometers south of  New Zealand’s South Island.  Here we had a chance to hike across the island of Enderby to a cliff-top overlook, where Southern Royal Albatross were occasionally cruising by as the went to and from their nesting grounds on the island.  This bird came especially close and passed over the surf zone at the cliff base where the turbulent water took on this beautiful aquamarine hue.  Southern Royals are among the largest flying birds along with their close relative the Wandering Albatross, with a wingspan that can reach 12 feet (or 3.5 meters). It was an amazing experience to see these spectacular birds passing so close by.

More from the Sub-antarctic Islands

At our very first stop heading south from New Zealand, we came upon a feeding frenzy of Bullar’s Albatross, feeding on fish in the shallows of the Snares Islands.  Actually seeing albatross feeding on prey is very rare, so this was an exciting encounter.

At Macquarie Island (an Australian controlled territory nearly 1500 km from Tasmania) we were able to see the endemic Royal Penguins going to and from their nesting colonies on land.  This group of Royal Penguins was heading into the surf when I captured this moment.

Although tricky in the lumpy seas we experienced, I managed to get one frame of a porpoising Royal Penguin during our zodiac cruise along the coastline of Macquarie Island.

When we came offshore of a large King Penguin colony on Macquarie Island, hundreds, if not thousands, of curious King Penguins came out and swam around our zodiac boats.  Not having a proper underwater housing with me on this trip, I used my waterproof iPhone held underwater to capture this shot and the one below.             

The water off Macquarie Islands was amazingly clear, and I captured this image of a curious King Penguin coming over to check out our boat.  Although they appear rather clumsy on land, King Penguins are incredibly graceful underwater.

Thanks for tuning in to my adventures.  Please feel free to share this newsletter with anyone who you think might enjoy it.  

Stay safe everyone, and be sure to get your dose of nature therapy!  I’ll look forward to sending you further updates from this trip when I have a chance.

Warmest regards,

Tim Laman

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Happy New Year!

As I write this, I’m headed South to finish off 2018 and start 2019 with a voyage to Antarctica as the National Geographic photographer aboard the Lindblad/NatGeo ship “National Geographic Explorer”.  It will be my fifth trip to Antarctica, and as always, I travel to the white continent with a great sense of excitement for the photographic potential, and for the chance to spend time in such a spectacular part of our planet.  Since wintery scenes always seem so appropriate for a holiday greeting, I’ve chosen one of my favorite images from a past Antarctica trip and will share its story with you here.

I made this image on my first voyage to Antarctica back in 2009.  We were cruising into the Weddell Sea when we spotted a massive, strangely shaped iceberg.  On approaching with the ship, these ice towers reminiscent of Monument Valley revealed themselves.  As we circled this natural ice sculpture, probably formed underwater and then surfacing when the iceberg flipped over, I saw the handful of Adelie Penguins, and framed my shot to include them at the bottom edge of the frame.  I love the way they give a sense of scale to the image, as well as instantly telling the story that we are in Antarctic waters.  I believe the success of the shot comes from using a long zoom to isolate this portion of the wider scene.  Photography is as much about what you leave out of the frame as what you put in.

I’ll be sharing brand new work from this Antarctica trip on my Social channels (IG: @TimLaman, FB: TimLamanPhoto), so please follow along.  In case you would like to see more of my past work from Antarctica, we have also just uploaded a new gallery to my Fine Art website, www.timlamanfineart.com, so please enjoy the gallery.  We’ll be adding new galleries all year long of both my favorite archival images as well as new work, so check in once in a while, and thanks for your support.

Here is wishing you all a more peaceful world in 2019 where we collectively put a higher priority on taking care of our beautiful planet, and being more kind to each other!

Warm regards from Antarctica,
Tim

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