A very good friend, explorer, photographer, fellow cave dive and instructor has passed away. Wes Skiles will never be forgotten, and our condolences go out to his family. Wes was on staff for National Geographic and has photographer all over the world. You can view and purchase some of his pictures, including some excellent manatee photos on his website at
www.karstproductions.comAttached is an article:Audubon of Florida News
In Memorial: Wes Skiles, Explorer, Photographer, Colleague and Friend
posted on July 22, 2010 in Central Florida,
Wes Skiles, photographed at Ginnie Springs in 2001, shortly before departing
to co-lead a National Geographic-sponsored expedition to Antarctica to document
and photograph the largest iceberg in history. Photo by John Moran.
By John Moran
World-class explorer and image maker Wes Skiles, 52, died July 21 in a
reef-diving incident in Palm Beach County, where he had been working on
assignment for National Geographic.
Wes was best known for his work in educational and adventure science films and
for his pioneering exploration and documentation of Florida’s springs. His death
comes days before publication of his cover story on the Blue Holes of the
Bahamas in the August National Geographic.
Over the past 20 years, Wes created and produced more than a dozen films for
major networks including PBS and was a pioneer in the field of high definition
imaging, employing innovative techniques as both an underwater and topside
shooter. In addition to his acclaimed Water’s Journey series of films, he
directed the IMAX film “Journey into Amazing Caves” and led a major National
Geographic expedition to Antarctica to film the largest iceberg in recorded
history. His primary goal was to focus public attention on the earth’s most
important resource, water.
Wes successfully filmed where no one had before. His unstoppable spirit of
adventure led him to exotic destinations and fantastic voyages. At ease with
both motion and still photography he divided his time working on assignment for
National Geographic Magazine and with television’s top producers of science,
adventure and natural history programming.
Wes’s devotion to the study and protection of Florida’s springs led him to
serve as the education chairman of the Florida Springs Task Force. His work in
exploration and survey within Florida’s groundwater systems has been widely
published in scientific journals and publications. He established both Karst
Environmental Services and Karst Productions in order to pursue a career
centered on his primary interest.
His bio goes on and on, with tales of escaping shark attacks and collapsing
caves and dodging hurricanes over many years, all the while making fantastic
pictures and managing to come home in one piece. Skiles’s life story reads like
a screenplay from a Jules Verne movie.
So how did he get this job? This is my favorite part of Wes’s story. He’d be
the first to tell you that in spite of an early love of science, he barely made
it out of high school, and never went to college. He enrolled in the School of
Life and pursued a degree in “curiology,” as he called it. Shortly thereafter
he had a boat and was running a diving business in Haiti, setting the stage
for a life of adventure to follow.
Along the way he developed sound business acumen and figured out how to
actually get paid to shoot the pictures he loved to shoot. Wes’s adventures
took him all over the world but his first love, apart from his family, was
exploring the waters of Florida: the rivers, lakes, coasts, swamps and
especially the springs. The writer Loren Eisley said that if there’s magic to
be found on the planet, it is to be found in water. Eisley and Skiles would
have found much in common.
Wes was about more than just adventuring for the sake of a good time. He was a
man on a mission, and his mission was to educate and to inspire the people of
Florida; to show us and teach us about our remarkable array of water resources
and how each of us has a role to play in safeguarding this precious resource.
Wes largely directed his efforts to reach out to people who generally paid
little attention to the environment, and was equally at ease talking to
schoolchildren, dairy farmers and governors. He knew his work made a difference
when he got letters such as the one that read, “You’ve done for the springs of
Florida what Jacques Cousteau did for the oceans.”
Wes was a towering inspiration. His work took us places we could never imagine,
and helped us to see and appreciate the world in a new light. His impact lives
on. And for that, Wes, on behalf of my grandchildren yet unborn, and for all
the people of Florida who never had a chance to personally acknowledge the
important work you did, I say thank you.
Share on Facebook
Comments (15) © 2010 b