Published Photos

14/06/2008 Yellow poison frogs at the London zoo, gram for gram, the most lethal vertebrate on earth. Published in The Globe and Mail. 07/06/2008 The Ij Brewery, tucked under one of the city's last remaining windmills, offers fresh local beer at dirt cheap prices - and not a tourist in sight. Published in The Globe and Mail. 07/06/2008 One of Amsterdam's many bikes, next to one of the city's many beautiful canals. Published in The Globe and Mail. 07/06/2008 One of the Amsterdam's many bikes, alongside one of the city's many beautiful canals.
07/06/2008 Amsterdam's Library, Openbare Bibliotheek, Oosterdokskade 143. You have to love a culture that makes a library look like a nightclub. Published in The Globe and Mail. 07/06/2008 De Dampkring Coffeeshop, Handboogstraat 29, Amsterdam. Locals and tourists enjoy a heady smoke at one of the city's iconic coffeeshops. Published in The Globe and Mail. 08/03/2008 Anna Debbage, shortly after recovering from a severe case of chronic fatigue syndrome, which left her paralyzed in the dark for almost eight years. Published in The Globe and Mail. 08/03/2008 Anna Debbage, shortly after recovering from a severe case of chronic fatigue syndrome, which left her paralyzed in the dark for almost eight years. Published in The Globe and Mail.
24/02/2008 Mike and Tracy Pepler in their eight acres of woodland, clearing the ground and restoring the coppices. Published in The Toronto Star. 02/10/2007 Joseph Oliver, founder of the UK's first eco-entertainment company, BASH Creations. Published on the Global Cool website. 01/10/2007 Borough Market, nestled under London Bridge, is the city's oldest food market and the absolute best place for cheap, organic gnosh in London. Published in Plenty Magazine. 01/10/2007 From Somewhere, a Notting Hill boutique for the eco-conscious shopper. Every stitch of clothing is made from recycled fabrics and scraps from the cutting room floor. Published in Plenty Magazine.
22/05/2007 Lucy Avenue residents in Scarborough (an eastern suburb of Toronto, Ontario) live right next door to an auto recycling yard, which they say makes their little street a living hell. Published in Corporate Knights. 01/12/2006 A rusting Nova chemical factory sits next to the entrance to Aamjiwnaang First Nation. The sign reads: Where Opportunity Begins. Published in The Ecologist. 01/12/2006 Ada Lockridge keeps track of every strange smell, explosion or cloud of gas that the factories around her reserve produce. Published in The Ecologist. 01/12/2006 The Aanishnaabek people, after discovering that their creek was contaminated with pollutants from the surrounding factories, put up this sign. Published in The Ecologist.
01/12/2006 Ada Lockridge looks out her windshield at the Suncor factory which sits beside her native reserve. Published in The Ecologist. 01/12/2006 The preschool for the children of the Aamjiwnaang First Nation sits across the road from a Nova chemical factory. Published in The Ecologist. 01/11/2006 Fourteen-year-olds Sarah Mediouni, left, and Miranda Brar, right, are campaigning to get pesticides banned in their hometown of Orangeville. Six months after starting their campaign Sarah was diagnosed with leukemia. Published in Corporate Knights. 30/11/2005 The view from the road next to Ada Lockridge's home - vats of naptha belonging to Suncor. Published in Corporate Knights.
30/11/2005 The Lambton coal-fired power plant, one of the largest emitters of mercury, sulphur dioxides and other respiratory irritants in Ontario. Published in Corporate Knights. 14/03/2005 In the central dome of the Allan Gardens greenhouses this palm tree reaches for the sky. One of a set of four photos published in The Varsity. 14/03/2005 A pool of calm water in one of Allan Garden's waterways. One of a set of four photos published in The Varsity. 14/03/2005 One of many beautiful floral displays on show at Allan Gardens on a cold March day. One of a set of four photos published in The Varsity.
14/03/2005 Toronto's most beautiful greenhouse, Allan Gardens, is located in one of it's grimiest neighbourhoods. One of a set of four photos published in The Varsity. 21/02/2005 Biophysicist Dr. Luca Turin, whose controversial theory about how our sense of smell functions was the topic of a book, The Emperor of Scent, and my own piece, Making Sense of Smell, in The Varsity. 07/10/2004 Anti-abortion activist Stephanie Gray compares abortion to the holocaust. Published in The Varsity. 27/09/2004 With a magnetic force 200,000 times stronger than that of the Earth, Dr. Lewis Kay has looked at the structure of life in a way never thought possible. Published in The Varsity
23/09/2004 U of T cafeteria employees Connie Yi Kong, left, and Valerie Gaynor, right, were trying to organize a union - much to the displeasure of their employer, Sodexho. Published in The Varsity. 29/03/2004 Assorted hippies and children playing in the mud at the Glastonbury Festival, June 2003. I shot this with a disposable camera, as I dared not take any of my valuables into the festival grounds. Published in The Varsity. 29/03/2004 The One World Stage at the Glastonbury Festival, June 2003. I shot this with a disposable camera as I dared not take any of my valuables into the festival. Published in The Varsity. 29/03/2004 The head of a life-size wooden dragon, one of many hand-crafted sculptures on display at the Glastonbury Festival, June 2003. I shot this with a disposable camera, as I dared not take my valuables into the festival. Published in The Varsity.
22/03/2004 Grad student Amy Tong using robotic equipment to create 12.5 million strains of yeast in order to look at how the microbe's 6,000 genes interact with each other. Published in The Varsity. 17/11/2003 Biomedical engineer Dr Adam Thrasher attaches electrodes to the legs of paraplegic Raymond Daniel, who hopes to regain the use of his legs through 'functional electrical stimulation. Published in The Varsity. 17/11/2003 Biomedical engineer Adam Thrasher attaches electrodes to Adrian Morrison's paralysed right leg, in the hopes of getting it up to the same level of mobility as the left. Published in The Varsity. 17/11/2003 Biomedical engineer Raymond Daniel and his patient Raymond Daniel at the rehabilitation lab where Daniel is learning how to walk again. Published in The Varsity.
17/11/2003 Biomedical engineers help paraplegic Raymond Daniel to walk along a treadmill by using electrical stimulation to move his muscles, in the hope of helping him to one day move them on his own. Published in The Varsity. 06/10/2003 Dr. Donald Low served as a makeshift SARS Czar when Toronto was struck by an outbreak of the deathly respiratory illness. Published in The Varsity. 15/09/2003 Dr Hardy Limeback has maintained for years that water fluoridation is detrimental to our health, with only minor benefits for our teeth. Published in The Varsity.