Matthijs Mazereeuw

Titanic, because why not?
This is an entry in the 2016 Heritage Photo Contest. View all the entries in the online gallery, learn more and find out how to enter here.
Titanic, because why not?
This is an entry in the 2016 Heritage Photo Contest. View all the entries in the online gallery, learn more and find out how to enter here.
De locale bevolking van Sint Maarten is geweldig. Vriendelijk en altijd te zien met een grote glimlach. Kinderen die spelen op het strand. En wat ik het mooie vind is dat dit jongetje bid voor een hoge golf. This is an entry in the 2016 Heritage Photo Contest. View all the entries in the online …
Pelican watching a human swimmer.
This is an entry in the 2016 Heritage Photo Contest. View all the entries in the online gallery, learn more and find out how to enter here.
Father and daughter happiness.
This is an entry in the 2016 Heritage Photo Contest. View all the entries in the online gallery, learn more and find out how to enter here.
As a descendant from a farmer’s family in the Netherlands, this Caribbean image caught my attention for sentimental reasons. Those were the days. This is an entry in the 2016 Heritage Photo Contest. View all the entries in the online gallery, learn more and find out how to enter here.
Happy sailing at Cocunut Beach, Kimsha in Simpson Bay.
This is an entry in the 2016 Heritage Photo Contest. View all the entries in the online gallery, learn more and find out how to enter here.
We had a couple good questions about the photo contest that we figured we should share. Be sure to get your entries in. See the full rules and instructions here. Must the photo be untouched, unedited? No, you can edit your photos however you normally do. We would recommend not including your name or any …
When a solid rain comes in early May after a dry April it is a relief in many ways: a refreshing shower that signals the hills will erupt into green again. On our ponds, though, there’s a delicate balancing act on the water’s edge.
Salt pans on the Great Salt Pond and the national bird of St. Maarten, the Brown Pelican. The salt ponds are where human history and natural history collide most beautifully on the island.
The Bearded Anole—a lizard that lives nowhere else on earth—always reminds me exactly where I am. The islands of the Caribbean share so many things, but each is unique, right down to the lizards. More than any other, this animal embodies the unique spirit of St. Martin. (Sample entry, not in competition.)