Svalbard Reindeer – A Gentle Sparring Moment

Svalbard Reindeer

A Gentle Sparring Moment Softly swirl did the airy flakes of snow as the amply-antlered bull Svalbard Reindeer casually approached a nearby member of the herd. What he instigated next was a gentle sparring moment. It was not a “battle royal” for social position. That had already come to fruition. Instead, the perpetrator simply was exerting and reinforcing his dominance. ~ Anecdote and Svalbard Reindeer capture, A Gentle Sparring Moment © Jerry L. Ferrara, Spitsbergen, Norway.

Rocky Mountain Elk – Coming Soon

Rocky Mountain Elk

Coming Soon Coming soon to nearby Autumn mountain meadows … the eerie challenges of Rocky Mountain bull Elk. It is one of Nature’s most alluring sounds. ~ Anecdote and Rocky Mountain Elk capture, Coming Soon © Jerry L. Ferrara

Red-crowned Cranes – A Shade of Dusty Rose

Red-crowned Cranes

A Shade of Dusty Rose As the Belt of Venus infused the evening firmament with a shade of dusty rose, a flock of Red-crowned Cranes sail to roost. ~ Anecdote and Red-crowned Cranes capture, A Shade of Dusty Rose © Jerry L. Ferrara

Bald Eagle – Dances With Fish

Bald Eagle

Dances With Fish Fleeting, ephemeral and transitory instances in Nature are thrilling to witness. Vision, however, is often challenged. To capture all of the precise aspects of an ephemeral moment with the eye alone is nearly impossible. An example of this is proffered here. A resplendent Bald Eagle is caught in a trice as it is about to seize a Kokanee Salmon. At the same time, the eagle’s watery likeness impersonates the predator’s reality. The bird and its “apparent partner” seem to be dancing around a precise locus, a pivot at a point in the prance where real and reflected are both in rhythmic lockstep, tripping the light fantastic in concert as they perform dances with fish … and the camera captured an elusive part of the deed in a wink of the eye.  ~ Anecdote and Bald Eagle capture, Dances With Fish © Jerry L. Ferrara

Brown Bear – The Bear, The Light and The Drama

Brown Bear

The Bear, The Light and The Drama Every day for two weeks I walked past a finger of land that projected into a remote Alaskan lake. Sometimes a Brown Bear was on the spit, but the light was terrible for capturing a visually meaningful moment. On other occasions, the presentation painted across the sweep was stunningly gorgeous, but always a bruin was absent from the landscape. I had about given up capturing that point in time where. the bear and the light came together, at least how I envisioned it in my mind’s eye. On the morning before the day the float plane was to retrieve us, I trekked past the small peninsula thinking, most likely, for the final time. The sky was riotous in presentation … and the bear was in perfect position near the point. ~ Anecdote and Brown Bear capture, The Bear, The Light and The Drama © Jerry L. Ferrara

Mountain Bluebird – Mr. Cerulean

Mountain Bluebird

Mr. Cerulean One of the most striking features of the male Mountain Bluebird is its electric, sky-blue feathering. Here, Mr. Cerulean has just caught a spider meal. ~ Anecdote and Mountain Bluebird capture, Mr. Cerulean © Jerry L. Ferrara

Cedar Waxwing – It Tossed Back Its Breakfast

Cedar Waxwint

It Tossed Back Its Breakfast They were hidden from view by the dense foliage, yet the flock of Cedar Waxwings’ high-trilling, soft murmurings came from seemingly everywhere in the fruit-laden chokecherry bushes. The gentle prattle amongst the birds were contact calls … the way members of a “bird herd” stay in touch with one another. Vocalizing was only temporarily interrupted for this Cedar Waxwing as it suddenly popped into view. Greedily it tossed back its breakfast. ~ Anecdote and Cedar Waxwing capture, It Tossed Back Its Breakfast © Jerry L. Ferrara

Turkey Vulture – Nature’s Sanitation Corps

Turkey Vulture

Nature’s Sanitation Corps The Turkey Vulture employs both keen eyesight and a well-developed sense of smell for locating its carrion meals. They are Nature’s sanitation corps. Along a southern Texas shore Death lies on the coastal floor Disease from rot won’t have a chance Nor may we call this happenstance For the vultures’ prowess lies Not just with its acute eyes Detects its meal when odors swell Through its superb sense of smell So what does all this really mean? The vulture keeps the landscape clean ~ Anecdote, poem and Turkey Vulture capture, Nature’s Sanitation Corps © Jerry L. Ferrara

Arctic Tern – To Loaf on a Post

Arctic Tern

To Loaf on a Post Not far from the Arctic Circle, an Arctic Tern takes a moment to loaf on a post. The Arctic Tern is considered to be one of Nature’s longest-distance travelers, migrating yearly between the Arctic and Antarctic regions. ~ Anecdote and Arctic Tern capture, To Loaf on a Post © Jerry L. Ferrara