Along with a great collection of cards and gifts, our Christmas Shop is also selling our 2014 calendar, containing photos taken by the Trust's own Dominic Kavanagh.
We've asked Dominic to give us an insight into the story behind some of the photos included.
It's a privilege to help out with the 2014 calendar It's exciting to think my efforts will help support clinical care, campaigning, raising awareness and funding of vital research within cystic fibrosis.
We've asked Dominic to give us an insight into the story behind some of the photos included.
It's a privilege to help out with the 2014 calendar It's exciting to think my efforts will help support clinical care, campaigning, raising awareness and funding of vital research within cystic fibrosis.
My
creative expression has always been through art; through watercolour painting
and drawing as a child and young adult, but a love of wildlife and the natural
world and interest in cameras led me into wildlife and landscape photography as
a hobby.
Importantly,
this has kept me relatively fit over the years - carrying heavy lenses to photo
destinations is a great form of airway clearance! Although my health has
deteriorated in the last two years, I've not let CF beat me or my photography. I
have to compromise, doing morning physio whilst other photographers are
capturing great sunrises; stopping short of the highest vantage points as others
carry on for the best landscape views. But whilst other photographers list
their achievements in terms of awards or competition prizes, I feel my
achievement is managing to get out there and capture an evocative image in spite
of the discomfort and breathlessness CF causes.
Some
of my favourite images have been the hardest to achieve. A trip inside the
Arctic Circle in March 2013 was physically punishing for me, in temperatures of
-25 °C in Finland and a balmy -7 °C in Norway . I dosed up on steroids and
took all the advice from my CF team to counter the low temperatures. I battled
my way through Heathrow with camera bag, tripod, suitcase, rucksack of meds and
compressor/nebs, as well as my in-flight oxygen. Hours later, the snow scene (January)
of pine trees greeted us, as we headed into the woods for Finland 's colourful
birds. I stayed out until 3am to photograph the Aurora Borealis (Northern
Lights), although haemoptysis cut my last night short.
The
image of two puffins (July, pictured) on the Shetland Islands
reminds me of the challenge of wildlife photography for someone with cystic
fibrosis. I had to get up at 4am to do physio and nebs before our gruelling
walk, with kit, to the cliffs at Hermaness. The experience provided everything:
beautiful natural morning sunlight, undisturbed great squa birds breeding in
the moorland and the melodious call of ring plovers which look like Faberge
eggs in golden sunlight. To top it all, the return from sea of colourful,
characterful puffins to feed their young, at almost arm's length in front of
us. We lay in wait for hours for a handful of puffins, kept awake by 'the
Stones' on a photographer’s iPhone.