Fitful Sleep

An elk bull sleeps in the tall grasses of a meadow at Yellowstone National Park

This is the same bull elk that is bugling in the top picture in this post, but photographed an hour and a half earlier and from a different location. I had more light so I was able to use a teleconverter to focus in more on the sleeping bull.

There were several aspects I wanted to capture in this picture. There’s a slightly comical aspect in that the sleeping bull is almost invisible save for his antlers which stick up out of the tall grass and completely betray his presence. The bull isn’t really trying to hide, but I wondered if he wouldn’t have preferred at that moment to be able to just take the antlers off while he slept, if only so he could lay his head wherever and however he liked.

I also wanted to convey the exhaustion the bulls feel at the end of the rut. He slept most of the time I watched him, but couldn’t resist raising his head and answering the call whenever another bull bugled in the distance. Fortunately all of the people watching him kept their distance so he was able to rest in the quiet periods.

A couple of weeks before I visited, one of the bulls had its neck snapped while it was sparring with one of the other bulls. These fights usually aren’t fatal, but add in disease, predators, and the long winter, and I do wonder how many of the animals I see will still be around come spring.

Close Quarters

I came across this alligator at Yellowstone’s … er, wait, no, sorry, this is from this summer’s visit to Huntington Beach State Park in South Carolina. There’s a small sandbar in the freshwater marsh where a handful of gators often sun themselves, and during this visit a small flock of great and snowy egrets joined in and gorged themselves on shrimp.

The gators showed no aggression towards the birds, and it was fun to watch such different size egrets work around the alligators as they scored shrimp after shrimp after shrimp. This gator had slipped into the water to cool off, so I waited until the egret walked past and its reflection filled in the negative space of the submerged body.

I think the egret in the picture is a snowy but I’m not certain, that’s what I get for waiting five months to edit the picture.

Elk Songs

Now look, I understand the desire to take your iPod with you wherever you go, believe me I do, but maybe that collar is just a little too tight …

(For the record, lest you think the Yellowstone rangers were guilty of animal cruelty, the radio collar may not be the most stylish but it was a good fit, the cow had just grabbed a mouthful of plants, and she just happened to stick her tongue out when I snapped the picture)

Little Landscapes

Another of my attempts to show the colors and textures of Yellowstone, especially in the thermal areas. I still have a lot of pictures to sort through and edit, but I think this will be one of my favorites from this series. I forgot to write down the name of the place (why do I think that I will remember? I never do) but it’s one of the many neat little sights in Mammoth Hot Springs.

The water was flowing down over some rocks right underneath the boardwalk, and I think these are bacteria mats covering the surface of the rocks. No plant life appeared to be able to tolerate the high temperatures of the water.

But if I don’t stop editing pictures from my Wyoming trip, my brain will never slow down enough to let me sleep, so perhaps it’s time to call it a night.

A Yellow River Runs Through It

A yellow stream runs through mineral deposits in Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park

Taken around sunrise on a cool and cloudy day in Mammoth Hot Springs on my last day in Yellowstone. I had arrived early hoping to see elk in the thermal areas, but they had chosen the grassy lawns of Mammoth instead.

I walked the boardwalks for a while before heading to West Yellowstone to get a tire puncture repaired. I’ve been to the area several times before but somehow had not paid much attention to this little yellow stream (I assume that the yellow coloration is due to sulfur).

A yellow stream runs through mineral deposits in Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park