Amazon Jungle Photos

I have been lucky to have spent the last few summers in the Amazon Rainforest in Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve, Ecuador. This has helped me invest time in learning how to take better photos of wildlife!

Capped Heron

It takes time to be able to have the opportunity to see wildlife. I learned from participating on many 4 to 5 day jungle tours, that even with the best guide, that sometimes you get lucky and sometimes you don’t. So the more time you spend immersed in nature, the greater the chance of seeing wildlife and getting a good photo!

Anaconda

Sometimes you get lucky and sometimes you don’t!

Harpy Eagle

Taking great photos also requires time and patience to learn about animal behaviour. Birds especially don’t often pose for a photo, so you have to learn to anticipate their behaviour in order to get a good shot.

Channel-billed Toucan

I have been so fortunate to learn so much about wildlife in Ecuador’s Amazon region thanks to all of the amazing guides and staff at Guacamayo Lodge and Siona Lodge. Special thanks to my fiancé Neiser who made all of these photos possible 😉

Amazon Kingfisher

Check out my Flickr Album for photos from the Amazon!

To support nature conservation in the Amazon, visit our Go Fund Me page.

My writing featured on Elephant Journal

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I’m excited & honoured that my latest blog post is featured on Elephant Journal, an American online magazine about mindful living.

Please click here to access the article.

Wasn’t ‘the plan’ to settle in Canada?

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Manizales, Colombia: my new home!

I could hear the surprise my Mom’s voice as she reacted to the news that I had accepted a last-minute teaching position in Manizales, Colombia. She was right. “The plan” was to stay in Toronto where I had been living for the last year.

Since 2007, I had lived in seven different cities: Kingston, Ottawa, and Toronto, Ontario. Banff, Alberta. London, UK. Fort St. John, British Columbia. Pond Inlet, Nunavut. After years of being away from home, I was feeling a strong pull to put down roots in Toronto where I’d lived on and off since 2009.

However, things in Toronto weren’t really coming together as I’d hoped they would. By the end of the summer, I was feeling frustrated, heart-broken, and restless. So when my good friend messaged me out of the blue to tell me that her school in Manizales was looking for a grade five teacher, I began to wonder if life’s really meant to be lived according to a specific plan. As my friend reminded me, “Toronto will always be there”. Thus, I abandoned “the plan” and opted instead for a more uncertain path, the  “the one less traveled” that Robert Frost wrote about.

Maybe the pressure to “have a plan” and follow a linear path prevents us from taking risks on the spontaneous opportunities that could lead us in the right direction (or maybe I’m just trying to justify a foolish decision).

This all being said, it was never part of my plan to live in Colombia, but here I am.

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Checking out the sights of Manizales!

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Coffee plant. Manizales is part of Colombia’s “Coffee Triangle”

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Posing in front of some wax palms on the Vallé de Cocora hike on a trip to Salento

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Picking my first aguacate (avocado)

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Its mountainous terrain makes Manizales a cycling mecca in South America.