Hello, I'm Alfie.
Growing up as an autistic child, I often found the human world difficult to understand. Nature was different. It offered a sense of calm, belonging and connection that I struggled to find elsewhere. Photography became my way of sharing that perspective.
Wild World
Is Back
Due to popular demand, Wild World: Nature Through an Autistic Eye has returned in a very limited reprint. Discover the book that launched my photography career, featuring over 100 wildlife photographs, personal stories about autism and conservation, and a foreword by Chris Packham.
Now available paired with an exclusive signed limited edition fine art print.
The Collection
The First Encounter
2026
There are moments in wildlife photography when words feel unnecessary. This was one of them.
My first polar bear encounter unfolded in near silence, the bear moving through its home with effortless authority. Against the endless palette of grey and white sky, her presence was both commanding and serene—a reminder that true strength rarely needs to announce itself.
For a few brief moments, our worlds intersected. I left with a photograph, but more importantly, with a deeper appreciation for the resilience, beauty, and wildness of these creatures.
After the Storm
Rain Over Still Water
2026
I have photographed flamingos for many years, drawn again and again to their elegance, colour, and quiet presence. Yet this moment offered something entirely new — a flamingo moving through rain-darkened water, something I had long hoped for but never experienced. The rain transformed a familiar subject into something more introspective and atmospheric, revealing a quieter side of a bird I have spent years observing through my lens, and love so deeply. It was a beautiful experience - just me, the birds, and my camera, at the mercy of the weather.In The Path Of Giants
2026
Low, filtered light settles gently on their immense forms, carving depth into every ridge and furrow of skin. Texture dominates the frame—thick, weathered, deliberate—each wrinkle holding the quiet record of distance traveled and time endured. Moving forward in measured silence, they shape the space around them, where shadow yields to presence and the earth seems to remember their passing long after they move on.