Photography

Photos of mine that have been published in OR, FLUX, Align, and Ethos Magazine

OR Magazine

Farming Forward

For Huntermoon, every element of the Heart-Culture community is intertwined. “A big part of our vision is, how do we meet real human needs?” she said. “We do that through our relationship with the land. Like, how do we grow food or interact with the ecology in a way that increases the health of the ecosystem for all living beings and its capacity to support us as humans.”

Farming Forward

Life at Heart-Culture can be hectic for Huntermoon. Between morning chores, homeschooling her and another family’s kids and tending to her many crops, it can be difficult to find time to slow down. “Sometimes I get a nap in there,” she said. But sometimes those de-stressing moments, like pausing to watch her dogs, Loki and Bearly, play, arrive at the perfect time.

Farming Forward

Huntermoon’s 8-year-old daughter, Tegra, followed her closely as she checked in on her variety of projects around the farm. She said that living at Heart-Culture always requires her to be prepared to parent. “My experience being a mother is that I have to be constantly interruptible––and my kids aren’t the only ones interrupting me,” she said.

Farming Forward

Hutermoon spends some time every morning training her puppy, Loki. The exercise they did this morning was a recall game where Huntermoon wraps his leash loosely around the armrest of the tractor and tells him to stay. She runs a couple yards and calls him over, waving the ball excitedly. The trick is to make it fun, she said. Because she is training Loki to herd sheep, he has to come because he thinks it’s fun, not because he wants a treat.

Farming Forward

In one garden bed, Huntermoon said she can fit up to 80 plants. She carefully places each plant in between the rows of drip line, working with a speed and skill that shows her expertise. “We would need to grow way more than we do to be self-sustaining,” she said.

Farming Forward

The jars of milk from the previous week sit on the countertop. Once they thicken, which only takes a few days, Huntermoon pours the milk solids and whey into a cheesecloth which she then forms into a ball, ties and hangs above the sink to solidify. When the sheep are giving milk, she eats the cheese with just about everything, she said.

Something to Believe in

Central Lutheran Church sits on the corner of Potter and 18th Streets, across from the Eugene Pioneer Cemetery. To Merrily Sutton, who represents Central Lutheran in the Earthkeepers, her faith is a big part of why she joined the group. “I feel like my drive to save the planet is very much related to my love of God and what God provided us,” she said. “And the fact that there is no plan B.”

Something to Believe in

Interfaith Earthkeepers appealed to Ron Hess because of its community-minded approach.“The things that make communities strong have to do with people supporting each other, helping each other, sharing their lives and working together,” he said.

Something to Believe in

Though called a church, Sue Craig said in many of the Unitarian congregations she has been a part of there have been many people of other faiths involved including those from the Jewish, Buddhist and Catholic faiths. “A lot of us don’t consider ourselves Christian at all,” she said. “I mean, I really think Jesus had a great message but that’s about it.”

Something to Believe in

Sue Craig stands next to one of her rhododendron bushes. Though her flowers bloom beautifully, Craig can see the effects of climate change right in her neighborhood. “I’m out on Fern Ridge reservoir, and this is about the third year that it’s definitely not full and it’s not going to get full,” she said.

Something to Believe in

First United Methodist Church is fondly known as the “toaster” church due to the way it looks, Sutton said. John Pitney, who started both That’s My Farmer and the Interfaith Earthkeepers, served as associate pastor of First United Methodist, along with his wife, Debbie. They retired in 2015 and moved to McMinnville and built a net-zero house.

Ethos Magazine

Language is Culture

Besides its language, food and landscape, Asturias is also known for its cows. An Asturoan Mountain cattle eats from the side of a tree beside one of the Lakes of Covadonga as visitors rest under the shade. These cows are so famous in Asturias that gift shops in Ovideo are filled with magnets, cups, and stuffed souvenirs of the animal.

Language is Culture

The Lagos de Covadonga are two lakes that sit high in the Picos de Europa mountains about a 30-minute drive from the town of Covadonga. The beautiful green landscape is covered with cows, sheep and goats which roam the mountains and create a symphony from clanging bells around their necks.

Training to Empower

Former roommates Abby Sourwine (left) and Chloe Miller (right) practice some self defense moves they learned in the Women's Self-Defense class at the University of Oregon. The "ready stance," where you put your arms out in front of you and put your feet up if someone pushes you to the ground, creates distance between you and an attacker. "It’s a barrier between you and whoever might be coming near you,” Miller says. “It’s a signal to someone that you know what you're doing.”

Putting the "Fun" in "Fungus"

Lee Yamada crumbles off a chunk of a Suilluls luteus mushroom. These mushrooms are more commonly known as Slippery Jack mushrooms due to their slimy texture. They grow under pine and spruce trees, and they are edible when cooked, though they can cause stomach issues if the slimy skin is not removed.

Training to Empower

Abby Sourwine sits on top of Chloe Miller while Miller practices a move to get out from under an attacker if forced to the ground. “Before the class, I would have no idea what to do in that situation," Sourwine says. "And now I can turn it around and take back that power. It’s really cool.”

Behind the Scene

A posterboard reading "please have your ID, ticket & vax card ready, $5" lies under the painted outdoor table with other decorations leftover from the Halloween show. Along with checking vaccination cards, the housemates— and hosts of the show— also take temperatures at the door. "We just want to cover all of our bases and be as safe as possible. Even if you are showing your vax card, we have an unobtrusive method to see that you're healthy," Kellie says.

Training to Empower

Abby Sourwine (back) and Chloe Miller (font) practice breaking free of an attacker's grasp or hold. Practicing these moves with classmates felt a little weird at first to Miller, but eventually, she became more comfortable.“It was always very helpful and always an encouraging atmosphere,” said Miller. “You didn’t feel like someone was yelling, ‘Ah! You did that wrong.’ No, they always showed you how to do it.”

Align Magazine

FLUX Magazine

Between Two Worlds

Janet Anderson, left, and Evelyn Anderton hosted the three Afghan women when they first arrived
in Eugene. Hosting international students, Anderson said, is a way “to have Americans realize that people are people no matter where they are [from].”

Take me to Church

University of Oregon student Bryce Worthington sits outside St. Thomas More Newman Center, where Catholic students such as him can attend Mass, study or hang out and participate in social events. Worthington says one thing he loves most about being Catholic is the community. “We’re all very together and we’re all very welcoming.”

Take me to Church

Tristen Mora often comes to Mt. Pisgah to hike. He said it’s one of the ways he finds meaning in his life outside of religion. “I’ll just go out there and take my mind off things,” Mora says. Often when he is on these hikes, he says, he thinks about potentially going back to the church he attended as a youth.

Take to me to Church

Mora with his friends, Kendal Peterson (left) and Jean Carlos Ortiz-Orman (center). Mora says his friends mean a lot to him. He met Peterson when they were both working as phlebotomists in 2020; Ortiz-Orman and More are now roommates. “Having a good group of people around me,” Mora says, “it’s very lightening.

Take me to Church

Worthington displays the three Rosaries he uses when he prays. The black one is from his grandfather and the white one is from his parish back home in Campbell, California. He uses the white Rosary the most, he says, because it is more durable than the other two; he doesn’t worry about carrying it around with him.

Behind the Camera

I am a freelance photographer based in Manchester, UK. You can follow me on social media with the links below.

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