Archive for the ‘Wildlife Photography’ Category

Along the Gardner River: Bighorn Sheep!

Let’s be frank, a visit to Yellowstone National Park is really about seeing the animals*.  In a single day, it is about even-odds of viewing Bears, Bison, Elk, and Pronghorn.  Wolves and Big Horn Sheep though, are on the special list.  We’ll leave Wolves for another discussion, in this entry we’ll focus on Bighorn Sheep.

Ask any ranger where you are likely to see Bighorn Sheep, and they will most likely nominate the North Entrance Road between Mammoth Hot Springs and Gardiner, MT.  Alternatively, you might well see one or two Bighorns near the ridge above the Yellowstone River picnic area, and Yankee Jim Canyon north of Gardiner is another possibility.  Anyway, back to the North Entrance Road…  The road runs north between Mammoth and Gardiner, a distance of about 5 miles.  Two miles out of Mammoth the road joins the Gardner River**, and the road follows the Gardner until it runs into the Yellowstone River.  About halfway between Mammoth hot Springs and Gardiner (MT) the road and river pass near to steepish cliffs of Gardner Canyon.  This is the place that; if you are patient and a bit lucky, you may see a herd of Bighorns.

If you stalk the Bighorn from the North Entrance Road, you will naturally be shooting from below the animals – shots like the one shown below are inevitable…

The images in this entry were recorded at about 18:00 MDT on September 22, 2010, using the Nikon D3s and the AF-S VR Zoom-NIKKOR 200-400mm f/4G IF-ED at 400mm.  Exposures were in the vicinity of f/11 and 1/400s (+0.33 EV, corrected in RAW conversion), ISO 6400. RAW conversion, noise reduction, and capture sharpening conducted using Nikon NX2.  Further processing, including contrast enhancement (curves), local contrast enhancement (USM), and output sharpening (USM) conducted using Photoshop CS5.

*Here’s a question, if not for the animals, would you visit Yellowstone?  Sure, once or twice to see the thermal works, but how often after?

**Note that the town is named Gardiner, while the river is Gardner – kinda silly.

This entry edited September 24, 2001 to convert Big Horn references to Bighorn.

Copyright 2011 Peter F. Flynn. No usage permitted without prior written consent. All rights reserved.

Happy New Year!

A short entry to wish everyone a very happy new year.  After a couple of days of snowy, wintry weather, today dawned mostly clear.  A pair of Mule Deer bucks decided to lounge a bit in the backyard of Casa Don Pedro, giving me a great opportunity to make the first image of the year.

The image above was recorded at about 12:30 MST on January 1, 2011, using the Nikon D3s and the AF-S VR Zoom- NIKKOR 200-400mm f/4G IF-ED lens at 400mm.  Exposure was f/8 at 1/1600s, ISO at 800.

Copyright 2010 Peter F. Flynn. No usage permitted without prior written consent. All rights reserved.

Soda Butte Creek

I do not fish, but if I did, I believe I would favor the rivers of Yellowstone National Park.  If you are going to commit to standing in or on the bank of a river for hours, it seems like you might as well have some spectacular scenery to ponder.  There are many fishable streams in Yellowstone – Gallatin, Gardiner, Gibbon, Lamar, Madison, Soda Butte Creek, and of course, the Yellowstone – all of which fit the bill in terms of blending good fishing and excellent location.

Note the two fisherman in the image above.  The location is a popular fishing spot along the Soda Butte Creek river near its confluence with the Lamar River.  They seem to be watching something pretty intently, as in, they have abandoned angling all together.  The target of their attention is actually in the shot, however the image is much too small to reveal it.  As shown below, it turns out to be a pretty good sized Grizzly Bear wandering along the bank of the Lamar river – I’d estimate that there were not more than 100 yards between bear and anglers.

Both images were recorded from a position just north of the Northeast Entrance Road.  This spot is on the near side of Soda Butte Creek, whereas the anglers are on the far side.  The bear was foraging along the Lamar and moving rapidly, but might as easily have wandered northward into the delta between Soda Butte Creek and the Lamar – in which case the two dudes would be compelled to make a watery retreat across the Creek.

Images in this entry were recorded on August 9, 2010, at around 12:30, using the Nikon D3s and the AF-S VR Zoom-NIKKOR 200-400mm f/4G IF-ED lens at either 200mm (first image) or 400mm (second image, plus crop).  Exposure was f/8 and 1/1250s, ISO at 1600.

Copyright 2010 Peter F. Flynn. No usage permitted without prior written consent. All rights reserved.