A partner, Asad Chishti, and I are currently bicycling 15,000 km across Canada, from the east coast to the Arctic to the west coast. As a semi-professional adventure photographer, it hasn’t been as easy as I expected to get the kinds of wilderness-based photos that I like to shoot. There’s been no shortage of human stories to share, but rugged landscapes and wild adventures have been more rare.
That’s not to say they haven’t happened, or they won’t. Newfoundland had a few untamed spots, and northern Ontario, the Yukon and coastal British Columbia will all have their own silent expanses and physical challenges. But in my experience of cycle touring so far, I’m tethered to the highway, limited by my own endurance and loaded gear. It’s hard to immerse myself in nature from the edge of an asphalt shoulder, and hard to justify off-route wilderness-based excursions when we’ve got distance to make.
This all means that when I do get a chance to get off the highway, it’s more memorable than it might otherwise have been—which brings me to this story. Cape Breton’s Skyline Trail wasn’t really the most spectacular exposed height of land I’ve ever experienced; Chéticamp’s beaches weren’t really the most beautiful coastline I’ve walked. But from the edge of the highway to the uncompromising Atlantic Ocean, there was a wild, windswept beauty that pushed against my heart and lit up my eyes. That’s what I’m sharing.
— Jonathon