Alpha Male Orangutan
Time for the obligatory monthly orangutan post. This guy is the alpha male at Camp Leakey in Tanjung Puting National Park in Indonesian Borneo. He’s big, strong and has a really nice hairdo.
Time for the obligatory monthly orangutan post. This guy is the alpha male at Camp Leakey in Tanjung Puting National Park in Indonesian Borneo. He’s big, strong and has a really nice hairdo.
Here’s another one from last weekend in Indiana. I was told that because it was such a dry year, there aren’t as many fish in the ponds and the otters have had to keep moving from one body of water to another to find enough to eat. That being said, they certainly seemed to be finding a lot while I was watching.
A young tufted capuchin monkey reacts with surprise — to what he’s acting with surprise I couldn’t tell you. These are the tool using “Einstein” monkeys of Piaui state in northeastern Brazil.
I came across this barred owl along the side of the highway on Sunday in Red Hills State Park in southern Illinois. Click below to hear what it sounds like:
I had been reading about the white squirrels of Olney, Illinois for a while now and finally made a trip out to see them for myself on Saturday. Several other towns in the US proudly proclaim their resident white squirrels, but none seem to advertise the fact as aggressively as Olney. In fact, the masthead on the town’s official website includes a little circular logo with a white squirrel’s head and the slogan “Home of the White Squirrels.” The same slogan is seen on the sign that welcomes you to town. And on the side of police cars. And on bumper stickers in shop windows. And on signage all over the city park. At first I was skeptical of the hype as I could only find the regular gray guys — but then I finally saw a white one foraging in a resident’s front yard in all its colorless glory. I would eventually see six or so more before leaving town the next morning. I was surprised at how skittish the squirrels were, making it difficult to get shots, but then again maybe that’s because I live in New York where in Union Square they’ll gladly crawl onto your lap if you let them. After hanging around for long enough under a tree in Olney’s City Park, I got the squirrel in these two photos to feel comfortable enough to go about his business while I went about mine. He would repeatedly come down to the ground to grab an acorn before running back up the tree to eat it. There are about 200 white squirrels in Olney — actually albino variants of the common gray squirrel.
Muscatatuck National Wildlife Refuge in Indiana is one of my favorite places to photograph — a little gem of the National Parks system. This weekend I went back for the 5th time in search of river otters. The otters are never guaranteed and if you do see them, they’re often far off in the middle of one of the many lakes in the refuge. Not this time, as I had my best look at them yet, including this family of three I photographed at the end of the day on Sunday. For the most part, the surface of the lakes are frozen, but the otters poke holes through the ice in areas where it is thin and spend the day fishing, resting on the ice, and making sure the holes don’t freeze over. I got tons of shots, so more on these guys in upcoming posts.
Here’s a close up of the young bull moose I saw just outside the entrance to Yellowstone in Silver Gate, Montana. You can see how deep the snow was already in late December. The areas surrounding Yellowstone get about 10 feet of snow a year, but due to the park’s unique geographic positioning, it can get up to 50 feet a year.
The indri is the largest remaining lemur in existence, standing just shy of four feet tall. It is famous for its very loud and distinctive song which can usually be heard early in the morning throughout its range in northeastern Madagascar.
Click to hear what it sounds like:
(sound file © 2000 David Parks and Larry Barnes http://www.mobot.org/mobot/madagascar/)
Due to weather conditions I wasn’t able to get to the more thermal areas of Yellowstone. That being said, Soda Butte Creek in the Lamar Valley always had a bit of steam coming off the surface of the water and I was able to get a few landscape shots of bison grazing, like this one here just after sunset.
A quick break from Yellowstone to check back in on the polar bears.
The reason mid October to mid November is the best time to go to northern Canada to observe polar bears is because they are all waiting around for the ice to freeze on the Hudson Bay so that they can go hunt seals. In the meantime, they’ll do anything to kill time, including rolling around in a pile of dead grass, like this guy here, providing plenty of photo opportunities.