Roberts walked away from photography once, swallowed by the static of daily life, but he came back swinging. The camera became his weapon and salvation, a way to wrestle order from chaos and bring back proof that the wild is still out there kicking. Every shot is a field report: lightning storms stitched over the Three Sisters, deer skulls strung up in hunting camps, forests whispering secrets in the dark.

Through Nerdy Viking Photography, Roberts keeps driving down back roads, chasing storms, and crawling into the forgotten corners of the Pacific Northwest. His work is part survival note, part love letter, part battle cry. A reminder that beauty isn’t gentle, it’s feral, and you have to step off the map to find it.

  • Random Thoughts

    nerdy-life-of-mine: The star Alpha Herculis is twenty five times larger than the circumference described by the earth’s revolution around the sun. This means that twenty five diameters of our solar orbit would have to be placed end to end to equal the diameter of this star. View On WordPress Read more

  • Science!

    nerdy-life-of-mine: The telescope was invented in 1608 when spectacle-maker Hans Lippershey’s apprentice was playing games. The apprentice was amusing himself with lenses and found a combination that made things seem closer. When Lippershey was shown this combination, he enclosed the lenses at two ends of a tube. View On WordPress Read more

  • nerdy-life-of-mine: Had To Share Read more

  • Star Trek Book Challenge 11: Nightshade (Star Trek: The Next Generation #24)

    nerdy-life-of-mine: Star Trek Book Challenge 11: Nightshade (Star Trek: The Next Generation #24) Laurell K.. Hamilton… I did not know she wrote a Star Trek Novel! Always been a big fan of her work. Always enjoyed the Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series and as well as the her Marvel comic series. So once I found this… Read more

  • Fun Science Time

    nerdy-life-of-mine: Actually, rotational speed around the Earth is also dependent on altitude above sea level, and a person at the top of a mountain on the Equator is actually travelling faster than 1,660 kilometres per hour (as he has further to go with each revolution). Taking this to an extreme, an object in geostationary orbit… Read more

  • nerdy-life-of-mine: Dear Nerd Read more

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