Red Fox in Winter
A male Red Fox in the winter sun and snow of Northeastern Yellowstone. March 2025. … Continue readingRed Fox in Winter
A male Red Fox in the winter sun and snow of Northeastern Yellowstone. March 2025. … Continue readingRed Fox in Winter
Coyote pack tests a female Mule Deer
Coyotes attempted to take down this female mule deer multiple times. I watched until sunset and the coyotes trotted away. As of sunset, she was still alive. Yellowstone March 2025. … Continue readingCoyote Pack Tests a Female Mule Deer
A Coyote Hunts the Frozen Lamar River
The various wolf packs have been at spotting scope distance when I have seen them in Yellowstone in the last few weeks. Thankfully the coyotes are out in abundance and I enjoy watching them hunt in the snow and silence of a Yellowstone winter. … Continue readingA Coyote Hunts the Frozen Lamar River
Flying Fox
A male Red Fox hunts the snowy fields of the Northern Range of Yellowstone during Thanksgiving week. … Continue readingFlying Fox
I’m happy to have this black bear sow back in the den that we can see in the Yellowstone Northern Range. Here she takes advantage of a warm day to soak up some rays. … Continue readingA Black Bear Rests at the Entrance to Her Den
Members of the Wapati wolf pack were in the Northern Range of Yellowstone. This was a rare “close encounter” at 150 yards at dusk with these beautiful pack members. … Continue readingTwo Members of the Wapiti Wolf Pack
Look at those claws!
The female grizzly known as Jam was digging in the June rain this year in Yellowstone. … Continue readingThe Grizzly Jam Digging in the June Rain
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
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
A bull moose and cow are getting close during the rut in the Beartooth Mountains, Montana. Photographed September 8th, 2024. … Continue readingLove Is In the Air