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Josh Anon

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  • In a fjord in Svalbard, Anon encountered conditions he'd never seen before: waves newly-forming slush ice.  Beyond the solid waves was a field of pancake ice, and further in the distance, a clearing storm.  Using an ultra-wide angle lens, he composed a shot to capture Svalbard's ever-changing landscape.
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  • WIldlife photography is always an uncertain thing, sometimes needing luck to go with skill and preperation.  One morning on St. Andrew's Bay in South Georgia Island, I thought I was wasting my effots.  We had a clear morning and were able to get to shore for an early sunrise, and I was hoping to get penguins backlit emerging from the water.  I picked a spot where I saw them coming out, lay down on the beach, and waited.  And waited.  I think they could see me, so they were avoiding that spot.  As the sun rose higher and higher, I kept wondering if I was wasting the golden light, and right as I was about to give up, a massive group of penguins came out of the water right in front of me, giving me the shot I wanted with the starburst, shadows, and reflections.  My bad luck had completely changed!
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  • It's rare to see Antarctic shags (cormorants) sitting on ice, as it only happens early in the spring.  It's also rare to have clear enough water to see beneath an iceberg.  I was fortunate enough to encounter both and to be photographing right as the birds began to take off on this dark and stormy day.
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  • A lone adélie penguin sits on an iceberg near Useful Island, Antarctica.  Because it's so early in the season, the water is quite clear, and the ice below the surface turns the water aqua.
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  • It's rare to see Antarctic shags (cormorants) sitting on ice, as it only happens early in the spring.  It's also rare to have clear enough water to see completely beneath an iceberg.  I was fortunate enough to encounter both and to be photographing right as the birds began to take off on this dark and stormy day.
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