July 3, 2019- Kids just wanna have fun
These two kids were playing and head butting and generally having a good time.
Read moreThese two kids were playing and head butting and generally having a good time.
Read moreWe opened US Forest Service Colter campground to fine weather. It has been rainy for the last few weeks so everyone appreciated the great weather. Our good friends Cam and Dawn Smith joined us on the weekend before the opening and brought with them great wildlife viewing luck. Foxes were one of the first animals we saw and we saw them everywhere! So we went down to the Bearclaw Bakery to have the best breakfast in Montana. Helen bakes foxes and many other scrumptious goodies. Terri's menu is very creative and gourmet for breakfast. We took the grand loop around the park...
Read moreWe are getting ready for a new summer in Yellowstone National Park. Excited to see how the JUnction Butte and Lamar wolves have fared during the winter. I put together a longer video, than I can post here,of a morning from Aug. 31, 2018 watching the Junction Butte Pack which I uploaded to Youtube here: Junction Butte Pack
Read moreToday the campground officially closes. The end of our summer adventure. Time to turn out the lights and lock the doors. It has been an important time for us. Creative time. Simple time. A time to reconnect. I think our favorite animal this summer has been the Bison. Probably because there are opportunities to see them up very close...safely. So many interesting people. The Wolf people. The Bison people. The Pronghorn people. We traveled down to the Tetons for a couple of days to meet the moose people. Goodbye my friends. I hope you survive the winter.
Read moreAs our summer comes to a close we are enjoying perfect weather. The views in the high country are spectacular around here. Here a number of Bighorn are enjoying the last summer sun on Henderson Mountain. This is an image of the highest mountain in Montana, Granite Peak.
Read more*** Dec 2018,It is with sad heart that I have to report that 926F, the matriarch of the tiny Lamar pack, wandered over the park boundary to Silver Gate, Montana and was shot by someone who did not care how hard 926F struggled to keep her pups alive. Did not care that the Lamar pack has had over 20 pups, over the years die before becoming adults. Did not care that park wolves only live for an average of 5 years. Did not care that the pups born this year may not survive without her. Did not care. *** If it is one thing I have learned this summer is that really good wildlife shots, in the wild,...
Read moreOne great aspect of spending more time than a glancing drive-by view of a place is you begin to understand it. For the wolves of the northern tier we have learned the routes they take, the times of the day they spend in various locations and places they like to hang out. The reward is being able to see them interacting rather than just a glimpse in the woods. Here is a early morning video of the Junction Butte pack howling. Two early for enough light for a good video but you can at least hear the audio of them howling a mile away. Next entry in diary
Read moreWe have only seen a couple of Bears all summer so it was a delight to see a grizzly feeding on a Bison carcass relatively close to the road this morning. It was unfortunate that the Bison calf was hit by a car. Next entry in diary
Read moreA week ago today the temperature dropped dramatically, barely reaching 40 degrees, and it rained off and on all day. It had rained all night Sunday and early into Monday morning, the most rain we had seen since arriving on July 1. When the clouds finally lifted for a moment late Monday afternoon, there was fresh snow on all the surrounding mountain tops. Ram Pasture in Snow Republic Mountain in Snow Henderson Mountain in Snow The mountains looked beautiful with fresh snow, especially the next day when the clouds were gone and the sky was crystal clear, all the smoke having been washed and blown...
Read moreOne thing we are careful about when photographing wildlife is to never cause them harm. We don't push the wildlife by getting inside their comfort range. We don't block wildlife if they're wanting to get past us. We once had a grizzly with her two cubs "push" us down a beach in Alaska. She simply wanted to use a trail that came out onto the beach and once she had pushed us beyond the turn-off to the trail she turned onto it and left us behind. In Yellowstone, in our opinion, too many people are impatient and drive too fast on the roads. They don't get that this is no longer the expressway to work...
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