(already subscribe? log in).

Brian Skerry begins long project to chronicle sea life in New England

THIS STORY APPEARED IN
Boston Articles
January 15, 2012|By David Abel
  • MARINE SCENES Brian Skerry points his camera and strobes at a luminous moon snail.
MARINE SCENES Brian Skerry points his camera and strobes at a luminous moon… (Ethan Gordon )

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.

I’ve joined Skerry on the dive today, and so has a photographer friend of his. I’m a tad skittish, in my wetsuit with as many layers as I can fit beneath it for warmth. Even with the extra insulation, it’s by far the coldest dive I’ve experienced.

As we trail behind, Skerry hovers over a patch of sand about 30 feet below the surface, where all the shells are alive, and hermit crabs and other creatures skitter along the seabed. Skerry spends a few minutes looking for compelling contrasts between the dark splotches of scattered sand dollars and the white bottom before finding a large moon snail, a luminously spectral creature about the size of a fist that doesn’t seem to take notice as Skerry clicks away from above.

Taking pictures underwater can be uniquely challenging, especially when the seas are filled with plankton and bacteria, as they are on this November morning, reducing visibility to 15 feet. “The ocean acts as a giant filter, with the water absorbing color and wreaking havoc on light, reflecting, refracting, and scattering it,” Skerry says afterward. “If you’re not careful, you’ll illuminate all the particles in the water.”

Skerry doesn’t use telephoto lenses. Instead, he gets as close as possible, whether to sharks, whales, or giant squids, and his photographs have been published in nearly 20 National Geographic articles and five books. His most recent book, Ocean Soul, made up of highlights from his work around the world, came out last fall.

Advertisement
Advertisement
|
|
|
|