About Us
Born in 1962, Pete spent the first twenty years of his working life in Finance and Management. Inspired by his first trip to Tanzania on his honeymoon in 2000, he began to combine a lifelong appreciation of wildlife with photography. He bought his first SLR camera in December 2000, and during the next two years visited numerous sanctuaries and wild places throughout Britain building a portfolio.
In 2001 he was on a holiday to China, and by chance National Geographic had a Tiger Weekend that was picked up by the cable TV in his hotel. Among the programmes shown was a documentary made by Nick Nichols about the tigers of Bandhavgarh. Inspired by what he had seen, Pete chose to ditch the “rat race” and made the decision to turn professional in spring 2002. Shortly afterwards he made a return trip to the Serengeti and the photography career was underway. Weekends saw him loading an old camper van with photographs and frames, travelling across the UK selling via a combination of craft fairs and exhibitions. That first year was a blur of various marquees, stuck in more muddy fields than he could count!
Exhibiting in competition at Bristol Zoo in October 2002, Pete won the Nature Photographers’ Association Merit Award for the Best Portfolio in Show. He repeated this success the following year. In addition, his image of a Lilac Breasted Roller won the Nature Photographers Association Gold Certificate of Merit for Best Photograph in Show.
Always a cat lover, Pete was drawn to India to see tigers in the wild, and in early 2004 spent four weeks travelling to various reserves. One of these places was Bandhavgarh, which had provided his life changing moment two years earlier. The visit made such an impression that he decided to return to the park later in the same year, and again in early 2005. For this visit he was accompanied by the BBC and filmed for a documentary that was screened as part of the Inside Out Series on BBC One in September 2005.
He spends many months each year studying the park, and now runs a series of tours there to support both the wildlife and local communities. He believes that responsible tourism provides valuable protection by its presence, and that where a community benefits financially from its wildlife it is more likely to help protect it. Hopefully this will aid the long-term survival of the tiger in the wild.
He is actively developing similarly focussed tours to other parts of the world, the most recent of which is Sri Lanka.

He is also a member of the RSPB and The Wildlife Trusts, and supports Global Tiger Patrol, the Feline Advisory Bureau and Care For The Wild International. Media contributions include The Derby Evening Telegraph, Nottingham Evening Post and specialist cat magazines such as Cat World and The Cat.

He currently lives in Bingham with his wife Lynn and three cats.
For more information please contact us at:

PO Box 8077
Nottingham
NG13 8ZU

United Kingdom

Telephone +44 (0)1949 839239 email: tours@lionscape.co.uk