The Stunning Eyes of a Yellowstone Coyote
The stunning eyes of a Yellowstone coyote … Continue readingThe Stunning Eyes of a Yellowstone Coyote
Wildlife photos and videos from Yellowstone National Park and Beyond
The stunning eyes of a Yellowstone coyote … Continue readingThe Stunning Eyes of a Yellowstone Coyote
A pronghorn mom teaches her twin fawns what to watch out for in the American Serengeti aka Yellowstone’s Lamar Valley. … Continue readingPronghorn Mom and Her Twins
Black Bear Family in 2023 and 2024
I’m happy to report that these two cinnamon black bear cuties are still with us here in the Yellowstone region at a year and a few months old (second photo). Their mom didn’t want her picture taken 😂 … Continue readingBlack Bear Family in 2023 and 2024
A Mountain Goat Kid rests on mom … Continue readingA Mountain Goat Kid rests on mom
Grizzly Bear Mother Nursing Her Cub in Yellowstone. … Continue readingGrizzly Bear Mother Nursing Her Cub in Yellowstone
A large cinnamon black bear grazes on some greenery. This Yellowstone boar is so large that I lost the augment with tourists as I tried to explain that he is a black bear and not a grizzly. … Continue readingBig Boy Cinnamon Black Bear
Two coyote parents keep watch over their little pups in Yellowstone … Continue readingTwo Coyote Parents Keep Watch Over their Little Pups
Wolf Track in the Montana Wilderness
It is always a moment of excitement and joy when I come across an unexpected wolf track when I’m alone in the backcountry far from Yellowstone. The length of the track is 5.5 inches. I hope that this wolf survives the Montana wolf hunting season. … Continue readingWolf Track in the Montana Wilderness
Leaning on mom
A just born Red Dog (Baby Bison) leans on his mom as he learns to walk.
Photographed April 20th, 2024 in Yellowstone. … Continue readingLeaning on Mom
Pronhorns lock horns in Lamar Valley while a youngster looks on.
American pronghorns have horns, not antlers. Their horns are unique because they have a bony core covered by a sheath made of keratin (the same material as fingernails). Unlike antlers, which are shed annually by animals like elk, pronghorns shed the outer keratin sheath of their horns each year but retain the bony core. This makes pronghorn horns distinct from the permanent horns of other horned animals, such as mountain goats, and different from antlers, which are fully shed and regrown annually. … Continue readingPronghorns Lock Horns