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The Tron Orphic

  • Work
  • Prints
  • Limited Edition Prints
  • The Blog
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     I haven't yet visited another world, but I am not too bothered by that fact. I'm quite certain that I will have much more to discover in my travels across this one for a while yet. Here you will find images from Nepal, Mongolia, Australia, Indonesia, Iceland, Greenland, Italy, Belgium, Czech Republic, Norway, Sweden and Scotland, amongst a slowly growing list of beautiful places I have been fortunate enough to visit to this point.

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View fullsize  Day one of a 3 week adventure through the wilds of the remote wonderland that is Mongolia.
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View fullsize  A tiny village in possibly the most far removed place from home I have ever visited - Kulusuk, Greenland.
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View fullsize  Horses graze upon what nourishment they can find, before a mountain range of sand that stretches for 100's of kilometres in the Gobi Desert.
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View fullsize  Aurora Australis, as seen in the Tasmanian midlands, Autumn 2014.
View fullsize  One of the most serene places I've ever visited - Khuvsgul Lake, Northern Mongolia. I don't think the magic of this place will ever leave me.
View fullsize  Sometimes beauty comes to you, though maybe not from where you had placed your hope - after having driven 3 hours in the early morning to a surf spot that was not breaking, with tails between our legs we began the drive east, back home.   And t
View fullsize  The great ocean road in Victoria is known mostly for two things - the ocean, and a road. Whilst that IS pretty great, what people don't always realise, is how much beauty is to be found by making the odd turn off from that road. There is much magic
View fullsize  These little fellows are often happy to make your acquaintance when you head out to the barren coastlines of western South Australia. Well, maybe they're not always happy, but they WILL make your acquaintance! Blue Tongue Lizard, near Streaky Bay, S
View fullsize  The truly awesome Gulfoss waterfall in Iceland. Gulfoss translates to Golden Falls, and its power and majesty are a phenomenal sight to behold.
View fullsize  Strokkur Geysir, Iceland.   300 degree C water, that erupts to about 30 metres height every 5-10 minutes, through naturally formed geothermic plumbing?  Yes please.
View fullsize  Canola field, Bellarine Peninsula, Victoria.
View fullsize  That tiny, magic, remote little village again - Kulusuk, Greenland. It doesn't even look real, but I promise you, people live here! This is about as nice as the weather ever gets (it was roughly 7 degrees C when I shot this in late August), and the
View fullsize  Aurora Australis, as seen in the Tasmanian midlands, Autumn 2014.
View fullsize  Strokkur Geysir, Iceland. Viewed from a distance, you get a stunning perspective of its reach!
View fullsize  Rushing down the coastline on a hunt for waves, it has become common for me to pull over in the middle of nowhere, and shift the priority of my mission. Early morning detour in Victoria, not far from Colac.
View fullsize  The strange, enchanting serenity of the village of Kulusuk, Greenland.
View fullsize  There is a law in Scotland known as 'The right to roam'. This means you are free to responsibly traverse the country side as you wish, which I found to be of great benefit in my little explorations of its green expanses.
View fullsize  A lovely vista of the Prague Castle.
View fullsize  Mesmerised by gentle Arctic winds, these little buds swayed to some enchanting music I could not hear.
View fullsize  A wheelbarrow and an iceberg. Kulusuk, Greenland.
View fullsize  A Spaniard, a German and an Australian, bonding over a common passion in Java, Indonesia. The ocean and its shapes.
View fullsize  A young boy strolls along a road in Watu Karung, Java, a village comprising of possibly the friendliest collective of genuine humans I have ever encountered anywhere.
View fullsize  The Milky Way, as witnessed by this skeleton tree on clear nights, in the icy  Tasmanian midlands.
View fullsize  Prayer flags strung across the enormous Boudhanath Stupa, Kathmandu. The largest stupa in Nepal, an ode to the enlightened mind of the Buddha.
View fullsize  A prayer wheel in Kathmandu, Nepal. They are always spun clockwise, and used as a focus for spoken mantras to accumulate wisdom and good karma.
View fullsize  Shortly before sunset, I found this quaint little hut next to a river in Mongolia. I asked our guide what it was, and she could only manage to convey 'scientist house'. I assumed it had something to do with testing the river, but may never know for
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View fullsize  Day 3 of an 'easy' 6 day hike in the Himalayas. Mists hung about the trees, creating a strange atmosphere, hemming us in at around 3000 metres altitude.
View fullsize  The tiny Himalayan village of Poon Hill, our shelter from this torrential downpour. The top of Poon Hill is said to be one of the most awesome views of the western Himalayas, but we arrived at the summit in the early morning to a wall of cloud a few
View fullsize  The last rays of light over the mountains bordering Phokara. This was taken whilst sitting at a restaurant waiting for dinner, not a bad view to absorb, whilst enjoying the spicy delights of Nepal...
View fullsize  The Annapurna Mountain Range, visible at sunrise on a clear morning (often these peaks are entirely hidden by cloud, we were lucky to have such a view), as seen from Phokara. Difficult to grasp the magnitude, but some of those mountains are greater
View fullsize  Annapurna Mountain Range, on a clear morning from Phokara. Awesome.
View fullsize  The strange moods of a summer sky, lightning over Ballarat, Victoria.
View fullsize  Autumn colours are a lovely thing. A lone tree prepares for winter near Forrest, Victoria.
View fullsize  Glistening mists ghost their ascent across the verge of Gulfoss, Iceland, after plummeting over successive raging waterfalls into the gorge roaring gorge.
View fullsize  I am yet to visit a place that has moved me as much as Iceland. Its landscapes are astonishing.
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View fullsize  No company will insure these houses, due to the inordinate amount of geothermic activity that occurs in Iceland (roughly 120 earthquakes a day), and sends giant boulders and chunks of earth plummeting from great heights. But the Icelandic people are
View fullsize  Greenland is certainly barren, but not entirely bereft of colour. Scarlet creepers mingle with the vibrant abodes of the locals, in the not-as-cold summertime.
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View fullsize  Further evidence of the captivating weather of Mongolia. Each of us has traversed a stormy road at some point in our lives, for some reason they don't always seem as beautiful as this, at the time though...
View fullsize  View across the rooftops of Brugge, from the clock tower. ("You're not goin' up there are you?") 
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View fullsize  Brugge. Such a magical little town to stroll around in a state of silent reverie.
View fullsize  The Pantheon. One of the most well preserved ancient structures in Rome. The colossal feat of engineering and logistics has been in constant use ever since its construction, over 2000 years ago.
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