
If you plan a trip the way other people plan investments, this is for you. You research where the money goes, who runs the operation, what gets left behind when you leave. You read carefully. You travel slowly. You’d rather drive eight hours to a guide who knows the river than fly to one who knows the algorithm.
This is Postmarked Wild.
Postmarked Wild is the field blog of Emma Expedition. A conservation photography blog, written from the actual place. Photography-first, not from a press kit. The name carries its own promise: a postmark is proof you were there.
What this isn’t: a highlight reel, aspirational tourism content, or another rotating PR feed of gear nobody paid for. If a piece of equipment shows up here, it’s because I paid for it, hauled it into the field, and used it long enough to develop a strong opinion. Same goes for the lodges, guides, and outfitters. If they appear, they earned it.

The posts you’ll find here fall into four threads, all filtered through the same conservation lens.
Wildlife & Conservation. Field dispatches and species stories told through the camera, plus a working guide to spotting the difference between operators doing the work and operators doing the marketing. The occasional guest dispatch from vets, biologists, and field scientists when their work is worth bringing in. Greenwashing is everywhere right now and rarely subtle. Even after a decade of this, it takes me a minute to read through the noise. So I write down what I look for, and I share all of it here.
Lost & Found. The human and cultural texture of a place. Makers, craftspeople, the small economies you only find when you stay long enough to notice them. Community work tied to a trip: what it looks like, how to support it, why it’s worth your time.
Field Notes. The journal layer. Gear that earned its place in the pack, logistics for getting from point A to point B, behind-the-scenes details, the things you only learn the hard way. Lower stakes, higher utility.
The Green Edit. The photography craft side of things. How I approach a subject, the moves that change a photo in-camera and in post, and the occasional gear note when something has genuinely earned its place in the pack. First on deck: a beginner’s guide to macro, from Costa Rica.
I trained as a veterinarian. I won’t lead with it on every post. The credential should show up in what I notice, not in a CV line. But it’s the reason the animal sections aren’t written like a national-park brochure. After ten years of traveling with a camera and over twenty countries on the list, I read body language in every frame whether I want to or not. The filter is built in. You’ll see it in everything I write here.

One more thing. All of this has always been the serious side hustle, not the full-time gig, and I plan to keep it that way. The day job funds the cameras, the trips, and the ability to walk away from any sponsorship that doesn’t fit.
Slow posts. Specific recommendations. Photos that earn the space they take up. The occasional argument about whether a place deserves your money. No subscribe-button performance. Read what you want, when you want. In the bush, on a plane, somewhere between point A and point B.
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Sent from somewhere wild.
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Like any good expedition, this one uses cookies to track the journey. Not the animal kind.