1/10 Who is intrepid? Over twenty five years of adventure photography, published by houses like National Geographic and Lonely Planet, exhibited in galleries around the world from Sydney, to New York, to Milan, with 130 1/1s sold along with editions and curated releases (over 500 blockchain-verified collectors with ~150Ξ in intrepid.eth art volume across ETH/BTC/SOL). More 👇
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Twenty eight years of photography in over 60 countries and territories. Just getting started .
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Itap of the view out from my front door.
Nice to be back home . And after 6 weeks of a flash drought we finally got some rain.
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End of an Era. We’re back in Aruba after 11,000 nautical miles (20,000 km or 12,500 miles), 430 anchorages, and nearly four years living at sea.
What now? We’re hauling out the boat and mothballing it for 18 to 24 months, taking a land break back at our remote property in Australia. Adventure is exhausting, and the kids deserve some time with their grandparents - time to roam on land, dig holes in the earth, sit around a fire, and watch the milky way from the hot tub.
I’ll be flying back via NYC for NFT NYC, so if you’re in town, be sure to say hi! When we come back we need to decide if we sail east to Europe or west across the Pacific.
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We say farewell to the Exumas today, blessed to have passed through these magical azure waters and their endless shades of blue twice in the past twelve months.
The last six weeks, in particular, we have been blessed with amazing company—boat friends from around the world whom we have had the pleasure of sailing with, as well as friends flying in from Australia and Canada to spend some time with us.
Nothing is forever, and the winds of life take us all on different journeys. It has been a bittersweet few weeks, as we’ve had to say goodbye to some amazing friends from around the world—friends we’ve been sailing with for quite some time.
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I am obsessed with this image. It captures what it feels like to head out into the deep blue nothingness better than anything else in my ocean collection.
My little family is on that boat, just going about their daily lives. It reminds you how small and vulnerable you are out there, how insignificant you are compared to the vastness of the world.
Life is a constant balance between having enough self-belief to think you can do anything, and enough perspective to remember how irrelevant you truly are in the grand scheme of things. The ocean is a humbling partner in that endeavour.
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My small family spent two years of our lives essentially stateless, stranded at sea, 18,000km from home, floating on 40ft of fiberglass. 'Freedom to transact' literally became a matter of life or death. This is our story 👇
https://paragraph.xyz/@intrepid/stranded-at-sea