Guest Blogger: Jo Walters

Join Al Hornsby for an anthology of poignant, thrilling encounters with wildlife, below and beyond the waves, in his new book, Face to Face…Up Close with Mother Nature. It’s story-telling of both heart-stopping adventure and ethereal, natural beauty, where Al’s powerful prose and photography take you to wild, lovely places for encounters with some of our planet’s most magnificent creatures.

“These breathtaking pictures will give you the insatiable desire to discover, to experience, to understand. They will transport you on an adventure of discovery…” Excerpt from the forward of the book, written by Jean-Michel Cousteau, son of the late Jacques-Yves Cousteau and President of the Ocean Futures Society

I sat down with Al to talk about the book and gathered new insights into a true advocate for wildlife and his many adventures.

Let’s start with diving. When did you get interested in diving?

I discovered the ocean at age 12, when we moved to the Western Pacific island of Guam, first as a freediver then learning to scuba dive the following year. From day one, it was the most incredible thing I had ever experienced, and it set me to pursuing a dream of a career in diving from that point forward.

Al Hornsby with Great Hammerhead Courtesy of Stephen Padar.
Al Hornsby working “face-to-face with a great hammerhead shark in Bimini, Bahamas. Image courtesy of Stephen Padar.

 

What was your path to realizing your dream of becoming a full-time dive professional, and underwater writer and photographer?

Having decided that I wanted to ‘be a diver’, I eventually had to ask myself: “Okay, so what, exactly, does one do when being a diver?” Back then, the industry was small, and there was no established pathway. However, it seemed to me that the underwater photographers, writers and filmmakers were the people sharing the most about the wonders of the underwater world, and also were the men and women who were first talking about the need to respect and admire the ocean’s big animals, especially the “dangerous” ones, like sharks. (And, besides, it was also clear to me that they were having more fun than anybody on the planet!) So, I decided to take that path. I continued to dive, and purchased my very first camera – a cheap, underwater point-and-shoot in a flimsy, plastic case. I practiced my photography and worked on my writing skills, eventually becoming a freelance writer and photographer, both topside and below. Over time, I became involved in shooting car racing, rock and roll concert tours, posters and anything else I could get a chance to try. Nevertheless, my real interests – diving and the ocean – kept me diving and making underwater images.

I was inextricably caught between “What the hell am I doing here?” and the feeling that I was experiencing something truly marvelous and rare… something I would not have missed for anything in the world.” Al Hornsby, describing his Mako Shark encounter in Fact to Face… Up Close with Mother Nature Page 24

Then, a couple years after university, I packed up my cameras and dive gear and headed to Los Angeles to try to find the dive industry. I became an instructor and worked in a dive store, continuing to take pictures and write magazine articles. In 1977, I got an interview with a (then) small company called PADI® , where I’ve now spent 35 years. I’ve had incredible opportunities there, being involved in the development of many of PADI’s backbone programs. Especially fulfilling, however, was being one of the founders of Project AWARE® , and its managing executive for its first nine years.

Green Turtles in Grand Cayman.
Green Turtles in Grand Cayman.

 

Along the way, during a hiatus from PADI, I also had the opportunity to spend a dive-intensive, four years as editorial director (and later, group publisher) of Skin Diver Magazine.

How did this book come about?

Throughout my diving life, I’ve traveled, taken pictures and written articles for various magazines. The result was not only a substantial library of published written and photographic work, but because what emotionally affected me most were the close encounters with beautiful creatures – especially the big predators. Those images and encounter stories always seemed to best communicate the feelings I had for the natural world. Several years ago, it began to occur to me that there was a longer story, here…a book, made up of my best underwater and topside wildlife images and the encounter stories that went with some of the most meaningful. Once I had found a publisher and organized the work, the book was completed fairly quickly over evenings and weekends last year.

Giant guitar fish, Richelieu Rock, Thailand, 1995. Page 85
Giant guitar fish, Richelieu Rock, Thailand, 1995. Page 85

 

The book includes extraordinary encounters with apex predators. Do you have any favorites?

A lot of them…the big predators tend to be the most intelligent and curious of animals, very often completely unafraid of humans – meaning they will sometimes approach more closely than most wild creatures do. And, especially when studied in detail through a camera lens, their beauty, grace and power can be awe-inspiring. For these reasons, most of my favorite encounters in the book tend to be with them. Although it’s impossible for me to choose one, there are several that have always stood out:

A special story would be the Mako Shark encounter, from 1993, in open-ocean some 15 miles off the coast of southern California. Thirty feet down, in a cloud of chum and with the boat having drifted off, my buddy and I were approached and closely studied for 25 excruciating minutes by a huge (12 ft long), female mako shark. She was utterly curious, coming close enough to touch (we didn’t, of course), but never anxious, never aggressive. This encounter was incredible not only because of its rarity and intensity of feeling, but also because the resulting story and images became my first published, big-animal encounter article – kind of what started it all. The entire story is described in the book, and the indelible memory it left behind will always be with me.

A four-meter-long mako shark, 15 Mile Bank, California, 1993. Page 25
A four-meter-long mako shark, 15 Mile Bank, California, 1993. Page 25

 

Another favorite story is about the week spent photographing Nile Crocodiles in the Okavango Delta, Botswana. The full story is in the book and too complex to tell here, but the diving, in 53 degree, 1-2 knot, river water with typically 3- 6 feet of viz, was very technical in nature; not because of using different gas or equipment, but due to the number one rule in croc diving – they feed on silhouettes – so you can never be one. This made mid-channel (away from unseen crocs), simultaneous, straight-to-the-bottom entries, and at dive’s end, on-the-bottom gear removal (fun in the current and while holding a big, double-strobe camera system) and ascents under the boat’s shadow, critical skills that we had to master before the real diving started. And, once you found a 12 foot-long croc on the bottom that let you approach? From often less than a couple feet away, they are true dinosaurs, seemingly too old for our brains and psyches to really accommodate. My first and most oft-repeated inner thought in these encounters was, “We are a looking at a…what?”

Nile crocodile in the Okavango River, Okavango Delta, Botswana, 2015. Page 51
Nile crocodile in the Okavango River, Okavango Delta, Botswana, 2015. Page 51

 

But, then there was also the time I was in the midst of a humpback whale scrum, with two males fighting over a female with her calf; or the three incredible hours with six tiger sharks in a constantly-moving ballet; or the leopard; the Komodo Dragon; the giant guitarfish; the Indian Cobra… people will need to go to the book to see those and a lot of other ones, each very special in its own way.

These encounters seem risky. How do you handle the risk?

While I have reasonable comfort with understood and carefully considered risk, I don’t involve myself with dangerous, unknown chance. These encounters, and diving in general, along with skiing, motorcycle riding and virtually every other sporting or athletic endeavor – have inherent risks that can never be fully eliminated. What you can (and need to) do, though, is to make sure you have the training, experience and professional guidance necessary to understand the most likely risks and to recognize any signs that the risks may potentially be increasing – and what to do should this occur. Encounters with sharks and bears (especially professionally guided tours), and even crocodiles when practiced correctly, have proven themselves to be extremely safe. If your educated judgement allows you to proceed with a risk activity, then constant awareness is still required, being cognizant of any tell-tale signs of increasing risk or unpredictability. As an example, I am experienced with sharks and bears (a dipped-shoulder, sidelong-stare; a rising of the hair; and an open-mouthed “woofing” of air through an opened mouth – to smell you better – could all be evidence of a bear’s increasing discomfort, which need to be noticed and responded to at the very subtle stages). On the other hand, I know that there are some photographers who (apparently safely) closely approach lions, on-foot. However, since I have little experience with them, and especially as I do not know what a lion’s subtle signs of stress and aggression are, I simply wouldn’t even consider trying it myself.

The cover photo is really extraordinary. How did that come about?

Thank you…I took a special trip to the Bahamas, solely in the hope of capturing a cover photo. Despite the effects of a huge, winter storm on the US East Coast that limited me to one day of diving, the hammerheads were amazing, and I got the shots I needed.

Great hammerhead sharks. The only view that really shows their hammers is from underneath. Bimini, Bahamas, 2016. Page 21
Great hammerhead sharks. The only view that really shows their hammers is from underneath. Bimini, Bahamas, 2016. Page 21

 

There are several pictures taken by your daughter in the dedication of the book. Is she following in your footsteps?

At ten years old, Juliet is a blossoming wildlife photographer in her own right. In fact, she’s already been published in two different hard-cover, photographic collections. I find so much joy in showing her the natural world; she’s also my snorkeling buddy (and freediving model) – it’s like I’m seeing everything all over again, for the first time.

Is there a message you want to convey through this book?

Aside from sharing the incredible beauty and experiences to be found in nature and the need for us all to help preserve the environment, I also hope to convey, in particular, that the big carnivores are not the fearsome, blood-thirsty man-eaters that they’re made out to be. They are, instead, curious, majestic and beautiful, and they play such critical roles in the ecosystems they inhabit. They help keep the other species around them strong and healthy, and help keep the environment itself in balance.  And, especially because of the fear and misunderstanding they face from humans, even more than most other animals, they so badly need our appreciation, our respect and our protection.

 

[box size=”large” border=”full”]For a look at Face to Face – Up Close with Mother Nature, please visit AlHornsbyProductions.com.

If you would like to obtain a copy, please go to the website’s Shopping Cart and enter the promo code: paf  

This will provide you: A personally signed copy. A discount of 10% off the (already discounted) Special Introductory Price. And, in addition, a donation of US $5.00 will be made by the author to Project AWARE for each book sold.

Donate to Project AWARE when you buy the book, Face to Face…Up Close with Mother Nature.[/box]

 About the Author

Al Hornsby is a PADI Master Instructor and Course Director, and has been a diver for more than 55 years. He joined PADI in 1978 and has been involved with the development of many of the organization’s core programs, now serving as Senior Vice President, Legal Affairs. Along the way, he held the positions of Editorial Director and Group Publisher of Skin Diver magazine; helped shape dive industry policy as past president of DEMA; participated in setting diver training standards as a founding board member of the RSTC; and dedicated himself to ocean conservation as one of the founders and the original managing executive of Project AWARE. Throughout, he has continued to take every opportunity to travel the world photographing underwater and topside wildlife, and his work is widely published. He also authored two additional books, This is the Caribbean and The Retail Dive Store: Management and Operations, co-authored Diving with Sharks and was a featured contributor to Fifty Places to Dive Before You Die. His original poetry is included in the anthology, Poets of the Deep and he released an original music album, “Dolphin’s Dance” in 1990. Today, Al lives with his wife Christine and daughter Juliet in Singapore.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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