We’ve
all seen outstanding wildlife photographs in magazines or
as movies and/or videos. What we don’t see are the countless days, hours, weeks or months the photographers spent trying to get those photos and
clips.
The
wildlife photographers who take still images or film truly wild
mammals and birds often spend hour after hour or day after day or week after week waiting for their quarry to appear in front of their lenses – and it
may never happen. Most wildlife photographers are quite used to being
frustrated or disappointed for a variety of reasons at various times .
For
the last six months I’ve often been one of those frustrated folks. It
began last fall when we headed for Pennsylvania’s elk range to
photograph elk during the rut. When I became
interested in the elk, roughly 50 years ago, there were only 50-60 of these majestic animals
in the state. Year after year we’ve gone to photograph elk in all
seasons and gotten some wonderful photos –
In
the last 15
years,
both the Pennsylvania Game Commission and Department of Conservation
and Natural Resources seem to be using the elk herd (now numbering
1000+) as a cash cow and tourist attraction.
To
this naturalist the annual elk hunt seems to give the lie to the
concept of a hunt being conducted on “fair chase” principles. And
there’s now a multi-million dollar visitor center and tour busses
and wagon rides. What about the elk? Well the elk seem to have all
but disappeared from their prior haunts; they may well have been
driven off by the hordes of tourists – we’ve been driven off as
well.
*********************************************************************
For
a number of years short-eared owls have wintered on what I call
“Harrier Hill”, a large area of hayfields, pastures and cropland.
Local photographers and some visitors from far away have enjoyed
standing on the windy hill in sub-freezing temperatures trying for a
few good photos of the owls.
Last winter there were only a few sightings of short-eared owls
on the hill – and only two by yours truly.
Why
? To human eyes the habitat hasn’t changed, does it look the same
to an owl? The weather may have been a factor, the winter had been
colder than recent years and 10 ½ inches of snow fell in one storm during February. Some of the snow had blown off the highest points, some
had sublimated and much had settled, voles and mice can move
beneath the snow in some degree of safety.
But
vole populations are cyclic as are most species of wildlife,
gradually rising from a low point over a couple of years until
reaching a peak and then suddenly crashing. If the population of
voles collapsed, there may well not have been enough food to keep owls in
the area.
************************************************************
It was spring, warm and sunny with the buds swelling on trees overhead and some shrubs already leafing out. I spent two mornings sitting in full camo beside a small stream in the Big Woods hoping for photos of a winter wren or a Louisiana water-thrush or almost anything else that would be interesting. In all those hours, what was the only wildlife that appeared? A gray squirrel, the same species I could have photographed from our kitchen window almost any day – and gotten a better photo at that –
************************************************************
Recently
a friend and I went to a site where timber rattlesnakes are known to
bask. The day was ideal, warm and sunny, but not too hot for the snakes
to be basking on the rocks. How many snakes did we see? One, a garter
snake. Oh well, there will be a lot of days that we can try, try, again before the snakes head for their winter dens.
************************************************************
Patience
is not something I have in any quantity so I'll never join the ranks
of those wildlife photographers who spend months in a blind (hide)
waiting for that one chance to get an award-winning image.
Wildlife
photographers have to be tolerant of frustration and disappointments
– but on those occasions when everything comes together, WOW !!