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[Editor's note: Click through the images above using the arrows to see a collection of Jeremy Hiebert's photographs.]

If you're an Okanagan orchardist, perhaps you've spotted local Jeremy Hiebert skirting the edges of your fruit trees some early mornings, camera in hand.

"A couple of times orchardists have been a bit irritated to find me on their land, at least until we chat and I tell them what I'm doing," he says. "The irritation turns to curiosity pretty quickly."

In search of peace and solitude, Hiebert has been photographing British Columbian orchards since the late 1990s. A web designer by trade, he grew up surrounded by farmland in the prairies, and now lives beside an orchard in Summerland B.C.

Over the years, he's amassed hundreds of images that cross seasons and chronicle change in the Okanagan industry. Asked about the inspiration behind his reverent collection, Hiebert had this to say:

"I guess I'm most struck by how much food can be grown here, and by how beautiful that process can be. Running an orchard is an incredible amount of work, from what I've seen. I didn't expect to fall in love with orchards.

"Most orchards are industrialized farms, but I've chosen to romanticize their beauty, mythology and history. I love them; wandering through, eating their bounty, and viewing them from afar. The Okanagan's orchards are slowly being replaced by condos and vineyards, so this may eventually be a time capsule. I've included a few shots of fruit trees being torn down to reflect that reality, but this is a love story, not a battle cry.

"That said, orchard injustices abound: apples flown here from New Zealand, attacks on the ALR, and dependence on cheap food from far away. Perhaps my naive hope is that this humble collection might help us see the value of growing, buying and eating our food locally, and supporting the people who do. For now, please enjoy the beauty."

Hiebert contributes images to The Tyee's photo pool under the moniker JeremyOK. His first submission was, perhaps unsurprisingly, an orchard snapshot. His photographs hang on the walls of friends, family, and local galleries, and he's also self-published a book of choice orchard shots, available at the Okanagan Regional Library. Many more are available to view on his website.  [Tyee]

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