Thor Janson

Janson enjoys a morning cup before heading out to his 'studio'

Janson enjoys a morning cup before heading out to his studio

Wildlife conservationist, photographer, author, adventurer, environmentalist and educator

The volcano Pacaya in Guatemala began erupting more dramatically than usual one day several years ago, and nature photographer Thor Janson rushed to the slopes to take pictures for his files.

“By 4 o’clock Pacaya was spewing molten lava several hundred meters into the air every 30 to 45 seconds,” Thor recalls. “The frequency and intensity continued, and by 5 o’clock the explosions reached a frightening ferocity. I was getting some great photos, but my friend was anxious to leave.

“By 6 p.m. hysterical villagers were running down the road—women praying aloud and men yelling at us to abandon the area. Pacaya was beginning to resemble a huge Roman candle. Every 10 seconds the ground shook and large quantities of lava flowed down the slope. We jumped in the jeep, threw it into reverse and backed off the road into the powder-fine ash. We were stuck, our main means of escape gone.”

Thor remembers making a futile attempt to jack the jeep out, while still snapping pictures. “As I grabbed my camera bag to run, a pickup loaded with stragglers sped toward us. Seeing our predicament, several jumped out, tied a cable to the jeep and freed us. We are lucky to be alive.”

Thor, who never has taken a course in photography, later published images of that harrowing experience in Guatemala, one of his 16 colorful picture books. Though he is best known for his photographic work, his life passion focuses on protecting the environment, he says. “I would rather be called a wildlife conservationist. Photography is only a tool I use in my conservation education efforts. Book sales provide royalties I need to support myself.”

I would rather be called a wildlife conservationist. Photography is only a tool I use in my conservation education efforts.

Born in 1953, Oliver Thor Janson grew up in suburban Chicago where his father, a Swedish immigrant, was a doctor, his mother a nurse. “I didn’t start out a troublemaker,” Thor recalls, “but after the Beatles hit the scene in the ‘60s, the world never was the same.” Like many of his generation, Thor began his lifelong struggle against the establishment.

He traveled in Europe and North Africa and tried medical school. But he had seen poverty in his travels, and his premed peers, as he puts it, “…only had eyes on making money. They felt no compassion for suffering people.”

Not yet 20, Thor dropped out in 1973, hopped on his motorcycle and headed south, attending an ‘inspiring’ conference in Mexico City on planetary ecology and the effect of human activity on climate and biodiversity. He continued to Belize, then to Guatemala and down to Lake Atitlan, where he stayed a month. “After feeling sad for a long time, I found a place that made me happy again,” he says. “It took Guatemala to get my smile back!”

Thor later crewed on a sailboat from Panama to New Zealand and eventually returned to Chicago to make some money. He headed back to Guatemala after the earthquake of 1976 to help with reconstruction efforts and decided to stay.

He connected with the University of San Carlos School of Biology and conducted a study of the manatee. “It was then—1978—I got into photography with environmental education groups and later became director of a new conservation group, Defensores de la Naturaleza.”

Thor’s hope to convince the Guatemala government to provide his group a concession to manage a forest reserve was realized in 1987. President Venicio Cerezo signed a special disposition, giving management of a section of the Sierras to Defensores, later known as the Sierra de las Minas Biosphere Reserve.

But by the end of that year, Thor left Defensores to explore and photograph remote areas of Caribbean Central America and to produce several photography books on nature. He describes his recently expanded and republished In the Land of Green Lighting as a 30-year collection of “my best photos of the Maya world.” Like the first edition, he says, the second has something of everything—wildlife, ruins, indigenous people and vistas.

The revised edition of Quetzal will be “the most beautiful book on the most spectacular bird of the Americas,” he boasts. “This is my favorite book. It has everything—natural history, Maya and Aztec mythology, cloud forest ecology, planetary ecology, and so on.” The new edition will “showcase new and innovative ways that humans can live in harmony with nature.”

Never one to stand still, Thor plans to gather material for two new books: Quetzals and Trogons of the World, which he calls “a tribute to two of the most beautiful families of birds on Earth;” and Beers of the World, “a world beer safari, a less scholarly review with photographs of picturesque watering holes from Alice Springs to Bora Bora to Munich to Timbuktu. “ It could be a very fun book.”

photos: Thor Janson

14 comments

  • great stuff Thor…Thanks for sharing the good work….
    Truth is beauty
    Beauty is truth.
    That is all we really know in life
    And all we need to know.

    May all our relations continue to run free.

    Keats and Caballo Blanco

    El Caballo

  • Ludmila and Ralph Brott

    Your pictures, your stories, your work is wonderful! Perhaps, if we all continue, these efforts will reach more people, more good will be done and some pain alleviated. Thank you.

  • Ludmila and Ralph Brott

    Your pictures, your stories, your work is wonderful! Perhaps, if we all continue, these efforts will reach more people, more good will be done and some pain alleviated. Let’s keep on hoping!

  • sisterijah

    As always, Jah Jah is still in full control

    Love,B

  • I remember the pacaya trip.
    love to you wherever you are,
    sista maya jean

  • Rich Sullivan

    Thor, When you get a chance, please email me. I’m trying to contact your brother David in regards to Fire Drive 7. Thanks. PS: Love the pictures.

  • Dennis Lane

    Hello Thor – I just saw your Resplendent Quetzal in Birders World Mag. I truely Love that photo.Its the finest photo of a Quetzal I’ve seen & I surely would LOVE to purchase a copy if it is available.I live in Chicago. I’m an avid Birder & Very amature Photographer.I Hope to here from you. It would help your efforts in Conservation if photos such as yours could be Purchased by folks like me. I’ve worked at Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago for many years & I’ve been a Birder for 30 of those years. I’m in Love with that Photo Of your Resplendent Quetzal thats it. The Best Dennis Lane

  • Daniel Enriquez

    que tal mi amigo thor soy hijo de carlos Enriquez de aqui de guatemala, en villa hermosa guatemala, solo queremos tener contacto con tigo nuevamente… tenemos una mala noticia pues mi mama sara de enriquez fallecio en mayo de este año…. si puedes comunicarte con nosotros puedes hacerlo a mi correo o al 50257617595 esperamos tu respuesta pues te apreciamos mucho

  • Carlos Paniagua

    I would like to get in touch with my friend Jason who I haven’t seen in long time.

  • Hi Thor!! I’m trying to contact you to give my news!
    I was your Spanish teacher in Antigua,longtime ago.Your first year in Antigua! I hope you can answer to this message.
    Now I’m living in Montreal.
    Cheers bro!!

  • Hi Thor.
    Just sorting through old photos and found one of you. Belize ’99? I’m in a new incarnation, where I was meant to be. Imagine you’ve always been where you were meant to be.
    cindy

  • if this gets to you miss cindy let me know and we can chit chat just like olden times!

  • Robert Petrie

    It is good to see you happy my old friend. If my travels should bring me to your neck of the woods, I’d like a personal tour of your neighborhood. It looks like a place I would really enjoy.

    Stay well.

  • Judith

    I just finished reading/admiring pictures in your beautiful Picture book ” Belize: Land of the Free by the Carib Sea”. Very fun stuff. I decided to google your name and stumbled on this. Thank you Thor for sharing your passion with the world

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