Brian Skerry has logged more than 10,000 hours taking pictures beneath the planet’s most remote seas – shooting everything from harp seals under ice in northern Canada to right whales off New Zealand’s Auckland Islands. So it seems like a bad omen when Skerry hops into the frigid waters of a rocky inlet off Cape Ann and yelps a mild epithet.
It’s a few days after Thanksgiving, and the award-winning National Geographic photographer from Uxbridge is starting the first shoot of a five-year project to chronicle the life teeming off the New England coast. The water in Folly Cove is 43 degrees, and Skerry is diving in a drysuit. But the hardy 50-year-old has forgotten his thermal undergarments, the only such lapse he can remember in his 35-year career, making the splash into the turbid water like a dunk into an ice-filled tub. The stabbing sensation recedes into a kind of gnawing numbness as he descends along a granite ledge with more than $20,000 in cameras and strobe lights in tow.
