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Ian Wilson-Navarro: Photographer for Change

Ian Wilson-Navarro: Photographer for Change

Discover how this Florida Keys native is capturing and conserving the natural world around himย 

Splitting his childhood between the Florida Keys, his motherโ€™s native Nicaragua, and his fatherโ€™s native New England, outdoor photographer Ian Wilson-Navarro has never strayed far from the water. While travels and job opportunities have taken him around the globe, Ian has made the Florida Keys his homebase, and their crystal-clear waters his calling.ย ย 

PURPOSEFUL DAYDREAMINGย 

โ€œI wasnโ€™t the best student growing up,โ€ he admits. โ€œI was just a daydreamer, constantly just in my head, thinking of things I wanted to do or places I wanted to travel to.โ€ Spending winters in Latin America with his motherโ€™s family opened Ianโ€™s eyes to a world of possibility, one that of course involved the ocean.ย ย 

Surfing

โ€œI was always around water. Nicaragua is where I learned to surf and fell in love with the ocean. Of course, the Keys are where I was first introduced to it and the clear water diving and underwater coral reefs and fisheries and things like that, and then Nicaragua expanded into the ocean sport-side of things,โ€ Ian explains.ย 

But itโ€™s not just the lure of good waves that draws Ian to the ocean. โ€œIโ€™ve always kind of been interested in science and the reason for why things happen,โ€ he says. โ€œI grew up observing the rapid changes in my home archipelago, and so I picked up on the decline of the greater ecosystem really quickly and realized we werenโ€™t heading in the right direction. And Iโ€™ve taken that interest and run with it.โ€ย ย 

CONSERVATION CONVERSATIONย ย 

โ€œI really enjoy documenting passionate people in their element. And more specifically, people who love the ocean, who love being outdoors on the water or underwater, and are passionate and respectful of those environments,โ€ he states. โ€œWhether thatโ€™s fisheries management or biologists or coral biologists out in the field [โ€ฆ] I find their work just incredibly interesting. The natural system of how everything works in the environment has always fascinated me.โ€ย ย 

Dolphins

A self-taught photographer with a keen eye for detail,ย Ian uses his photography to highlight the conservation efforts of those around him, as well as his own.ย โ€œThe conservationists, the scientists, they donโ€™t necessarily get a lot of the credit. Their work might, but the individuals might not, so itโ€™s always really fun to kind of help bring them front and center.โ€ย 

Last August, Ian spent the entire month asย the artist-in-residence in Dry Tortugas National Park, a 100 square mile park located almost 70 miles west of Key West.ย Comprised of mostly open water with seven small islands, the Dry Tortugas are accessible only by boat or seaplane. Here, Ian lived in the historic lighthouse keepers house on Loggerhead Key,ย spending his days capturing images of the local marine life.ย ย 

That unique experience has since blossomed into Ianโ€™s latest โ€œbig project,โ€ a โ€œlarge format coffee table book highlighting the Dry Tortugas and the manyย ecosystems found in the park, with an emphasis on ecosystem preservation, conservation, sustainability, and of course, the people that work there,โ€ he explains. โ€œIโ€™ve been really lucky to have great relationships; thereโ€™s a lot of great people there doing really cool stuff.โ€ย 

School of fish

In addition to Dry Tortugas and Everglades National Parks, Ian works closely withย Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, a Florida-basedย conversation group dedicated to conserve and restore bonefish, tarpon and permit fisheries and habitats through research, stewardship, education and advocacy. โ€œThey do a lot with the environments that those fish live in, so Iโ€™ve found thereโ€™s a really nice balance there between sport, photography, and conservation of the natural landscape,โ€ states Ian.ย ย 

โ€œI love shooting big schools of any sort of fishโ€”fish or shark or tarponโ€”whenever theyโ€™re engaged in a natural pursuit and theyโ€™re just completely oblivious to things happening around them, and youโ€™re just watching them. Whether itโ€™s bonefish on a shallow water flat or tarpon in deep water or grouper or whatever it is,ย I just really love being like a fly on the wall for natural behaviors on the grand scale. I really love finding myself immersed in those moments,โ€ says Ian.ย ย 

TAKING IT SLOWย 

โ€œAny day itโ€™s glass calm and at sunset, Iโ€™m on a paddle board,โ€ states Ian. Enabling him to arrive quietly, his SUP allows him to stealthily โ€œget up to wildlife and interact. He adds, โ€œAs long as youโ€™re conscious of being quiet, itโ€™s like an underwater safari where I live, so itโ€™s super important to have that access.โ€ย 

Boat in the sunset

Working on, near, and around the water most days, Ian reflects on his appreciation for the natural world and just how much the ocean has to offer. โ€œIt just brings me comfort, itโ€™s where I can go to refocus myself and remember what matters.ย If career things or life things are throwing me for a spin, then thatโ€™s where I go to re-center and come back to life with a kind of reinvigorated approach and refreshed perspective.โ€ย ย 

His advice to others exploring our worldโ€™s waterways? โ€œRemember to go slow and focus on the world around you at a more detailed level.ย Being on the water and on a paddle board, you can be tuned it to this secret, kind of hidden world happening around you if youโ€™re observant enough.ย And remember how special it is to have places to paddle and clean water and pursue that in all aspects and encourage others to do the same.โ€ย 

To learn more about Ian and view his work, visitย https://ianwilsonphoto.com/ย 

Or follow along with his adventures on Instagram atย https://www.instagram.com/ianwilsonn/ย