Prince Charles and International Hockey

December 2, 2009 | Filed Under Photography, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

A nice variety of assignments these days with the recent launch of the Olympic Torch Run here as well a vist from Prince Charles with Camilla and international junior hockey with Team WHL vs Team Russia.

Prince Charles 1

Super Series Mark Pysyk



Olympic Torch Run In Victoria

November 5, 2009 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

The Olympic Torch Run started it’s trek across Canada in Victoria with a lot of ceremony but luckily very short speeches in front of the Legislature.

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Olympic medalists Simon Whitfield and Catriona Lemay-Doan light the first torch

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Premier Gordon Campbell signals success as VANOC CEO John Furlong lights a cauldron with the Olympic flame brought over from Greece

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Esquimalt Chief Andy Thomas holds up the Olympic flame inside a lantern at the start of the ceremony

Olympic Torch Run 4

School children watch as athletes leave with the torch



Victoria In The Fog

November 3, 2009 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

Two weeks ago I was meeting up with Micah Escamilla, a former student now a California based photographer, who was in town for a few days and an an hour to kill before we met up for coffee so took advantage of the time and foggy morning to shoot a few images.

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Memory and the Valley exhibition – David Campion and Sandra Shields.

November 2, 2009 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

Sandra Shields and David Campion have an exhibition of their project Memory and the Valley on at the Chilliwack Museum. If you can’t make it there check out the latest edition of Geist magazine with a feature on the project.

Memory 3

Memory 1

Memory 2



Don Denton is Monocular

July 3, 2009 | Filed Under Uncategorized | 5 Comments 

post-op-photo

A week and a day after my second eye operation the vision in my right eye is like looking up from the bottom of a pool. That’s an improvement from the blackness of last week.

Nearly three weeks ago I was in a meeting when I started to see large black objects floating through my line of sight. I was disconcerted at the suddenness of the event and the realization that I could see the objects but the person I was talking to was totally unaware of what was going on. As soon as she left I called my eye doctor.

He detected bleeding in the eye and had me to a retina specialist first thing the following morning and I was in surgery at 2pm – day surgery – a few days off work but nothing too alarming aside from the fact it was my eye. The retina had detached at the top and with the application of extreme cold to the afflicted area and a small gas bubble injected in the eye to hold everything in place, all looked good. Sure I had to stay erect for three days to keep the bubble in the proper place but a small price to pay for proper healing.

A week later I was in for a post surgery followup and all looked great at 8AM. At 1PM I noticed a black shape moving into my field of vision. A hurried call to the doctor and I was back to see him at 3:30 following his surgeries.  This time the retina had torn badly and was continuimg to tear. I now had blackness over almost half my vision.

Major surgery was needed and no one could do it in Victoria so we hurried for the ferry  (a drawback of Island living). Made the ferry and I got to sit during the crossing watching the blackness move to 3/4.

At Vancouver General, an examination showed that my right eye was no longer and emergency as the damage as done but surgery was needed and would be done in two days. The exam also showed tiny tears in my left eye so immediate laser surgery was needed. The pain wasn’t so bad but the intense light was beyond anything I’d experienced.

Another exam the next morning and more laser surgery.

The next day after waiting  and pre surgery preparation I was finally knocked out for a couple of hours and and woke up with an eye buckled back together and filled with gas (no flying/no high passes for at least 6 weeks).

Four days of lying face down – amazing how you notice all the tiny details in the table top or bedsheet and now 2-3 weeks at home of taking it easy.

The eye currently looks like a bad sci fi experiment but appears to be healing properly. Even the new extreme redness caused by tiny blood vessels that keep bursting is apparently okay  as my doctor reasssured me after a panicked visit yesterday.

Lots of time to think about eyes, vision, seeing, photography, art and life.

I am currently monocular but hope to be soon binocular again.

A note  to mention – we complain a lot about our medical system but when they need to step up to the plate, certainly in this case, everything happens fast. Thanks. There is/was no reason reason for this health event. It can just happen.



Tiny Dancers

February 12, 2009 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

1635 Little Dancers dd

Seven year old Olivia Brown makes a face at herself in the mirror as she stretches during her dance class for the Junior Apprentice Company at Dance Unlimited. Looking on at left is her twin Georgia.



Portrait – Ken Steacy

August 18, 2008 | Filed Under Portrait, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

Ken Steacy, illustrator and artist and frequent collaborator with Douglas Coupland



Bird Logic

August 18, 2008 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

This seagull got into a tugging match with another gull over a full sized dinner bun. The white gull won the tug-o-war and rather than risk another fight swallowed the bun whole leaving a rather large lump in its neck.



Tall Ships

August 11, 2008 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 



On The Job Hazard

August 11, 2008 | Filed Under Uncategorized | Leave a Comment 

Sure it’s only a rabbit but he bit me, well okay, nibbled.



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