Solitude at the Edge of Ice

Nestled high in the glacial wilderness near Salmon Glacier in northwestern British Columbia, just beyond the small town of Stewart, a lone weathered cabin stands sentinel over the slow, unyielding advance of ice. Shrouded in cold mist and framed by rugged pines, the scene evokes a profound sense of isolation and quiet resilience. The black-and-white treatment accentuates the stark interplay of glacial textures, steep alpine slopes, and the enduring imprint of human presence on the edge of wilderness. It is a portrait of solitude, where time moves with the glacier—slow, immense, and unstoppable. Photographed on Kodak TMX 6052 with a Hasselblad 500cm and 40mm lens

What Still Stands in Memory

Spanning a rugged ravine beneath the distant echo of a mountain waterfall, this wooden train trestle once carried the weight of industry across remote terrain. Captured with a Hasselblad 500CM and 40mm lens, the image preserves a structure that no longer exists—lost to fire, yet rendered here in stark black and white as both document and elegy. The dense scaffolding of timber, the weathered slopes, and the slow creep of nature reclaiming the hillside all speak to time, labor, and loss. This photograph is not only a visual record, but a tribute to the impermanence of the built world—and the enduring power of memory.


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