Canadian Geese and Maroon Bells

This is the most photographed spot in Colorado — the two Maroon Bells peaks as seen from Maroon Lake near Aspen. I tried to be at least a little original by including the geese.

This is the most photographed spot in Colorado — the two Maroon Bells peaks as seen from Maroon Lake near Aspen. I tried to be at least a little original by including the geese.

This is an old one from Madagascar. The Verreaux’s sifaka is definitely one of my favorites lemurs. They spend most of their time in trees but dance across the ground — ballet style — when they need to get from place to place. I took this photo right outside of the lodge I was staying in at the extreme southern tip of the island.

When you can’t find any other wildlife to photograph, there are always prairie dogs. This one was part of a colony along the side of the road, next to a gas station somewhere in eastern Utah. It was chirping a warning signal to the rest of the colony before it had finished eating its lunch.

Being only about an hour from Denver, Mount Evans is a location that I’ve been to a lot. I see mountain goats about 75% of the time that I go there. I’ve shot a lot of close ups of the goats in the past, so on my most recent trip, I really wanted to get some photos that show their environment in the high Rockies. These two kids were taking a rest while there mother was grazing just to the right of the composition.



I’m off for a few days for the 4th, so this will be the last post until later next week. What you see here is prickly pear cactus and some desert indian paintbrush. What you don’t see is the snake that came slithering out of those rocks after I almost stepped on it.

This little guy was defending his slushy turf and doing a pretty good job of it. We were in Japan in late March and things were definitely starting to melt up at Jigokudani Hotsprings near Nagano. Other than humans, Japanese macaques are the most northerly living primates (but I think I already mentioned that in a previous post.)

First of all, sorry about the flurry of broken link posts that were sent out yesterday at about 6PM. I was updating my site and messing with a few things and, well, you saw what happened. From now on, I’m going to deactivate my subscribers list when I’m doing maintenance. Please don’t unsubscribe. I promise, it won’t happen again… I think.
As for the post — just a few kids playing down by the river with an elephant. Apparently, that’s okay in Sumatra. Actually, the kids are children of the elephant handlers and to them, the elephants are pets that they grow up with.

When the sun is low in the sky and there’s plenty of forest reflecting off the surface of the water, you can really get some interesting colors. This spectacled caiman was photographed late in the day on Lake Chalalan in Madidi National Park in Bolivia. Spectacled caiman can live in either salt or fresh water and because of their adaptability, are the most common of all the crocodilian species.

Another photo of the wild burros that I stumbled across in Moreno Valley, California. These two kept chasing each other back and forth, enabling me to get some nice slow shutter speed, motion blurred shots.

