Bicheno 2018 Jan

Bicheno, Jan 2018


The Fairfax clan had, of course, gathered for Lena and Jonny’s wedding at the end of December, so in early January we had a family fest at Bicheno. This consisted mostly of shared eating and coffee drinking, although, midst much chatter, we also threw in photography, penguin watching, cricket, tennis, swimming, walks along the beach and, well, more eating. Of course, I went running every day, mostly just with Tessa; sometimes alone; once with Keithy. You would not want pictures of all the delicious food we ate. Instead, here are some of the seascapes that resulted.

Taroona 2017 Oct

Taroona sunrise Oct 2017.


On the morning of this sunrise, Bruce and I eyed Taroona up as a possible settling place for some time in the future, as we figured we’d need to move to Hobart one day when our current house would be too much work for me, and, of course, neither of us knew that this would be his last full day on earth. We decided Taroona, with beach walks and sunrise over the ocean, was just the place for us. Who would ever believe what lay ahead of us and that such a conversation was superfluous? It seems surreal to look back on all these tiny events, so incidental at the time, and yet so crammed with importance for me later (like now). Mostly, you only know when something is the “last time” in retrospect.


I guess losing your partner makes you sentimental, as I find myself clinging to all these “last things”, hanging onto them, as if doing so will help me somehow hang on to Bruce. But, meanwhile, his sudden disappearance and death reinforce for me the lesson I have known since I was a child, when my father had a heart attack (I was eight) and my mother got cancer (I was twelve): namely, that I shouldn’t take relationships for granted. What walks and talks today can be gone tomorrow. I learned not to assume that anything I loved would be there for ever. Knowing that helps one live life to the fullest.


Because of my parents, I never wasted time with Bruce, even insisting that he come to Europe for three weeks each year to watch me compete, wanting to use time together wisely while we had it, for you never know what the future holds. We lived life fully right to his end, and so, although I am devastated to lose him, I have lost him without a sense of regret that we could have done better, that we wasted our precious time together, or that we should have done this or that thing while we could. It would have been hard to eek out more than we did from life without dying (even earlier) from exhaustion.  I think it was a marriage well lived.

Tarkine West Coast 2017 Mar

Tarkine, West Coast, day 3. Mar, 2017


Quoll prints on clean, windswept sand.
At last we arrived at the coast. Although I love mountains and lush, green, mossy paths, fungi, waterfalls and streams, I had been longing for the moment when we would reach the wild west coast and I could photograph some seascapes.


I am captivated by water’s motion, and dearly love every opportunity to attempt to record it with my camera. This coast did not disappoint, although the waters were perhaps a little less frenzied than I had hoped for.


The tide was on its way out, and was rather too calm for my liking. The sky was pretty cloudless, but that’s part of what I love about real photography. You take what nature gives you and do your best with that.


The very notion of being disappointed in what was there and popping in a fake sunball, or some snow or some passing birds in photoshop, just to make your photo more interesting, to me is anathema. I love the serendipitous in nature. I am her servant and not vice versa.


I hope you have enjoyed this small selection of the beauty I witnessed on the evening of day 3 of our Tarkine trip.

NSW Seascape, Sydney May 2016

I was off shooting surf last weekend – and a good weekend it was to be away from the mountains, with the lashing and falling of trees and the beating of heavy rain with thunder and lightning. The storm was exhilarating, but I prefer that level of exhilaration to be experienced with a decent patch of glass between me and the action.
I am back into the mountains next weekend. Being reluctant to leave you without anything for the week, I am posting a  seascape I hope encapsulates the wondrous power of nature.