PHOTOGRAPHING REDPOLLS, PART 2

649-14-100On my last post I laid out a way to get close-up photographs of the very small and beautiful common redpoll.  By setting up a feeding station early in the season you can get redpolls to come to you.

Attention to a few photographic details can help you to get professional results.  First, you’re choice of a location is very important.  Some locations are more photogenic than others, obviously.  Avoid situations that are complex.  For example if your location is too thick with brush and vegetation then there will always be something in the way, branches, twigs, between you and your subject.  Often, it is these kinds of distractions that can ruin an otherwise nice photo. Continue reading

PHOTOGRAPHING THE COMMON REDPOLL

649-14-21What a joy it is to observe common redpolls every day all winter long.  When the bottom drops out of the thermometer they go about their cheerful, lively routine seemingly without regard to Interior Alaska’s dangerous temperatures.  Redpolls are active from first light until sunset.  Even at fifty below you will find them busy, usually in small groups feeding among bushes. But where they spend the nights is a mystery to me. They have been reported to spend some nights in snow burrows, like ptarmigan. Continue reading

MARCH MOOSE

5-14-8The arrival of March in Interior Alaska is a wonderful change.  Temperatures generally don’t stray much below twenty below F and the light is increasing by about thirty five minutes a week.  It’s a great time to be out. Moose don’t really mind the cold in fact they might seek the shade even at fifty below zero because their huge bodies produce so much heat. Continue reading

WILLOW PTARMIGAN

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I’ve spent the last four afternoons looking for willow ptarmigan.  One of my photographic goals is to document more of their interesting behavior.  On top of that list of photo wants are photos of willow ptarmigan in their snow burrows.  Ptarmigan use snow to help insulate them against the frigid winter temperatures of interior Alaska.  Their use of snow burrows can occur any time of the day but most common as they prepare to roost for the night.  Willow ptarmigan are cyclic and their numbers have been quite low over the past two or three winters.  But as Justin pointed out, they seem to be bouncing back. Continue reading

WINTER WHITETAILS

IdahoNumerous springs keep miles of the North Fork of the Snake River ice free all winter.

Elk and mule deer have deserted the high country.  To be sure a very few have either tried to winter here or perhaps did not migrate soon enough and were stranded by heavy snow.  But their odds for survival are poor for they are not adapted to this heavy snow country like moose. Continue reading

HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT

518-12-100 A group of willow ptarmigan huddle beneath a willow in Alaska.

It seems hiding in plain sight would be risky business in our hostile and unforgiving world.  But few strategies for survival are as effective as camouflage.  Countless species of wildlife including birds, mammals, reptiles, fish, insects have adapted diverse methods of camouflage for offense as well as defense. Continue reading