What I shot on this day. From April 24, two years ago:
Tag Archives: paddling
Athletic Portrraiture 3
Four page spread in GEOmini
GEOmini launched last Fall in Germany, part of the venerable GEO brand. It’s targeted at children, much like “National Geographic Kids” magazine here in the US. The July issue has a four page spread with six images telling the story of young Arjun:
Heute ist ein besonderer Tag….”Today is a special day. Arjun sees the sea for the first time. So much water! Until now, mountains were his world. The seven-years-old comes from Asia – more exactly from the Himalayan mountains, the highest mountains of the world. He was an orphan. Because of that, Erik and Ellen, two Americans became his new family two years ago. Together, they live in Colorado, a state in the western part of the USA. Since then, Arjun’s life has become exciting. His father is a real adventurer. He climbed the highest mountains of the world, he skis and paddles kayaks and he’s flying with paragliders – and all that despite being blind!”
The images were shot last summer out at the Channel Islands. Here is the opening spread of the feature:
wait for me!
Dogs and Paddles
Saturday was a busy day- from the UCSB Gaucho Gallop and Dog Run in the early morning to a 9 mile paddleboard and stand-up paddle competition from Goleta Beach to Leadbetter to post-race dinner on the grass and sand with the 90+ paddlers. The logistics of my getting from the sand onto one of the race boats was not quite figured out – the race horn sounded, the paddlers were off and I was left still on the beach. One of the big safety jet-skis came in, I threw my camera in a dry bag, held it overhead and waded out thigh deep to hop on the back – he then gunned it, me hanging on with one hand, through the swell to catch up with the lead boat that I could climb on and shoot from. I was soaked but happy.
JettyGirl
My favorite model is featured on JettyGirl’s website:
Blinded with Passion – DEEP Magazine
“Rob Raker and I hadn’t seen each other for over a year when the e-mail landed in the inbox from Colorado: he was psyched to get back to his SB roots and back to the ocean and Channel Islands. The Rake had been in the mountains for well over a decade, filming documentaries from Madagascar to Antarctica…”
So begins a feature story and photo essay that is in this month’s DEEP Magazine from a trip out to Santa Cruz Island in the Channel Islands last August. Clicking the images below will open larger and readable spreads.
“Last year the Rake had been in Nepal climbing ice routes on Lhosar with Erik Weihenmayer. The trip was timed so that Erik could also catch up on the now 2-year adoption process for a young Nepali boy; a process that began before political upheaval halted adoptions as the Maoist party came to power in Nepal. After the ice routes were sent, what was expected to be a brief visit bound with red tape was instead bound with joy as the adoption was suddenly cleared and Erik could bring young Arjun back to the states.
The email I received from Rake eventually led to a plan. The idea was a family outing to Santa Cruz Island for days to include my family of four, Raker and Weihenmayer and wife Ellie, daughter Emma (9) and now seven-year-old Arjun. Little Arjun would be introduced to the ocean.
For Weihenmayer this would be a relaxing break from his day job(s): paraglider, skier, adventure racer, paddler, cyclist, author, speaker and mountain climber.
Weihenmayer has climbed Mt. Everest. Last year he finished the last of the Seven Summits in Austral-Asia, climbing to the highest point on each of the seven continents. Fewer than 100 people on the planet have accomplished this feat; and Weihenmayer is blind.”
Paddleboarding at Sunset
In the water with Rochelle at sunset yesterday for a series of paddleboard shots. Used the Nikon D3 with a 24 lens and a strobe gelled with a 1/2 CTO . The inaugural dunking of the water housing - which worked pretty well although not as much control as I normally shoot on manual. So these were preset to aperture priority (I could change the aperture). We’ve been having beautiful sunrises and sunsets all week. I was in a 3/2 surf wetsuit while Rochelle was pretty hard-core and opted for the bikini – said she was warm enough though as I was making her paddle hard back and forth, back and forth.
Exploring Santa Cruz Island
A world apart – isolated yet so close across the Santa Barbara Channel. Home to sea caves (the world’s largest on an island), coves and sandy beaches and undeveloped thanks to private ranch ownership. The islands are now protected by the NPS and the Nature Conservancy and are being restored to pre-ranch flora and fauna. Our family, Erik and his family and Raker spent 5 days.
Sea Cave on the Northeast end of Santa Cruz
Nico on the bluff top and the view West from Cavern Point
Climbing buddy Rob Raker and remarkable Erik Weihenmayer – blind but unlimited – see his site at www.touchthetop.com
Emma, Arjun and Raker at the entrance to one of the caves. No flash with my Nikon in the dry bag so no images inside the narrow caves we explored that went hundreds of feet…
Aidan at protected Potato Harbor after a tough paddle in windy small craft advisory conditions

















