I hope to goodness I would not still be working in the corporate world - the money is OK but it is no life at all.
The Kalahari is brilliant - and easy to visit.
So about twenty years ago I gave up on painting - and got into terrible debt after buying a load of camera gear!
Photography started as a means of getting reference material for my paintings of nature subjects.
My first serious project was photographing badgers - very, very difficult as they are shy and nocturnal.
In The States I would have no edge, no advantage at all.
I concentrate on the southern African subcontinent.
I think few wives would have encouraged this kind of drastic and reckless career shift!
For the first few years we lived in a tiny rented cottage at the bottom of a friend's garden. We often joked that there was plenty of film in the fridge, but not too much food!
I also had a tremendous passion for art and read a lot.
I also like flyfishing - maybe I would have figured a way to make a living out of that?
I carry a notebook full of sketches of pictures I want to take - they are really scruffy sketches, but at least I am going out there with a clear objective.
I would never dream, for example, of going to The States to photograph your wildlife.
Currently I am working on another three books, doing a lot of magazine work, am shooting for fifteen stock agencies, plus my own photo library - all this keeps me quite busy!
Big game photography in Africa is mainly done from a vehicle, so then I feel I might as well take the lot.