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Desaturated Times

Desaturated Times

We're living in times that seem to inject very little color into what should be a kaleidoscope of adventures.

It's tough. Life is tough at this crazy point in history. I normally don't allow things to get me down but even the strongest resolve can take a hit. Of late I've been heading more and more to the Ocean, it is there I find solace. But when I get there it's full of trash. We've just had one small typhoon here in Okinawa, another bearing down on us, and with that comes crazy amounts of shoreline debris. What is there to appreciate in a view when one has to photoshop out the trash from most wide angle compositions? I thought I'd get away from that and went to shoot one of my favored places here in Okinawa recently, the Cape Zanpa Lighthouse.

Tried something very different for this shot. ND10,000 at ISO1250 for 1.3sec. Laowa 12mm f2.8 wide open. Canon EOS5DSr using additional KANI Soft GND0.9 Filter.

Very much needing my trusted felt bottomed booties to negotiate the razor sharp volcanic landscape around the location I headed out. I needed sea air to clear the mind. The Ocean was rough, awesome, I was planning to shoot long exposures anyways. Darkness again descended during my walk out to the planned shooting spot. Everywhere I looked trash was apparent. Lifted and deposited into pretty much every nook and cranny of the uneven rocks everything from dolls heads to Wellington boots and beyond. The sight makes me sick to my stomach. I dread the day when my son is old enough and able to understand the issues that threaten the World he lives in, and for him to potentially ask me "What did you do Dad to help avoid this"?

What are we doing folks? What are we all doing? The health of our Planet should be our first and foremost priority. Without that there is no future for our families. I don't see the future of my family ending just with my son, what about his kids, and theirs? What kind of a World should they be expected to live in? But I digress. It's not the kids of today that need the education, it's the parents. When I see so many parents more preoccupied with their 'smart' devices while driving, in school meetings, in recreational areas and at social events. It's so sad to think there is something more important than the here and now, something more important than spending time with your kids that requires you to ignore them and, more importantly, your surroundings.

I guess this post sounds more like a bundled collection of non-directional concerns, and I guess it is that. I don't have the answers. I don't have the answers but I do have an intention, and that is to try and inspire a need for change in addressing at a simple local level the need for greater regard, and respect, for our immediate surroundings. How that will galvanize in real terms is yet to be seen but I can't simple stand by idly as our World becomes so infested with trash that it then becomes the norm.

"Our oceans are facing innumerable threats from overfishing and pollution to ocean acidification and invasive species, yet we haven't had a blueprint for its use and development, incredible as that seems "

Phillipe Cousteau Jr.

About the Author

Internationally recognized as a provider of quality mixed media Mark Thorpe is always on the search for captivating content.

Mark Thorpe

Photographer / Cameraman

Mark Thorpe

Emmy Award Winning wildlife cameraman and Internationally published landscape photographer Mark Thorpe has been an adventurer since he could walk! Spending 17yrs as an Underwater Cameraman at the start of his imaging career the highlight of which was being contracted to work with National Geographic. In that role as a field producer and cameraman he's been privy to a mixed bag of hair raising adventures. For some reason he was always selected for projects relating to large toothed marine predators such as Great White and Tiger Sharks, Sperm Whales and Fur Seals. Additionally he has also been active within Southern Africa on terrestrial projects dealing with a wide array of iconic wildlife.

Currently based in Okinawa, Japan he's always on the lookout for his next big adventure. He shares his exploits online with a totally organic social audience in excess of 200,000. Sponsored by a number of photographic industry manufacturers he is constantly scouring the islands for captivating landscape and oceanscape compositions. Videography wise he continues to create short photographic tutorial videos as well as creating content about the diversity of wildlife within Okinawa and the Ryukyu Islands of Southern Japan.

Mark has just created a Patreon channel where he's hoping to raise an audience of supporters who through small monthly shows of appreciation will allow him to concentrate on the creation of a wildlife and landscape imaging themed YouTube Channel. If you feel that is something you'd like to support you can visit his Patreon Channel for more information.

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