Tag Archives: marmot

Animals

Last summer we saw many amazing places and lots of wildlife.  Some were expected and others were a complete surprise.  The first surprise was spotting a young bighorn sheep in Zion National Park.  In Rocky Mountain NP we saw elk.  Driving in Wyoming I had to stop the car to get pictures of a herd of antelope.

In Yellowstone we were hiking on a trail and had to walk by that big bison.  Being that close did make me a little nervous.  After all, he was definitely a wild animal.  Further north in Glacier NP is where we saw the adorable young mountain goat sticking close to mom.  On the same hike to Hidden Lake we saw the furry little marmot.  Legend has that they will eat anything they can sink their teeth into.

It wasn’t until we got to Canada’s Glacier Waterton NP when we finally saw bear.  It’s hard to tell from the photo whether this is a brown bear or a grizzly.  A brown bear’s nose is fairly straight and a grizzly bear has a more rounded nose.  It’s hard to tell from the photo which it is and I stuck to using my telephoto lens instead of getting closer.  And finally we saw caribou near Jasper Alberta.  They are huge!

I am always happy when I can photograph animals in the wild and feel fortunate when I spot them.  When asked why I’m an environmentalist who wants to save habitats, these photos are my answer.  One of my favorite presidents, Teddy Roosevelt, recognized that states cannot be trusted to save the land and protect it from commercial exploitation.  I abhor what’s going on in the West with a few people who feel the federal government has no right to protect land for future generations.

New Name Wanted

Denial doesn’t slow it or stop it.  Facts remain unaffected by opinion and political rhetoric.  By 2030 the namesake glaciers the park is named after will have all melted.  When I look at the pictures I took on our travels last summer I am saddened with the knowledge that soon all that may be left are images like these of Glacier National Park.

After working two decades in science and research fields, Wooly finds the practice of construing opinion as scientific fact misrepresentation at best and using statistical outliers to promulgate bogus science that promotes a hidden agenda an even more abhorrent practice.

Enjoy these pictures and please consider we have the privilege of experiencing the real thing, something future generations may be denied.  Which plants and animals will survive after the glaciers melt?

I will leave you today with these final thoughts.  Allowing the most serious issue humanity has ever faced to become a political football is wrong.  Doing the right thing for future generations will require honesty and sacrifice by virtually every human being on the planet.  What legacy will you leave to your grandchildren and great grandchildren?

And remember, nature bats last.

Endangered glaciers
Endangered glaciers
Shrinking glaciers
Shrinking glaciers
Something smells good here.
Something smells good here.
Breaking rules
Breaking rules
Staying close to mom.
Staying close to mom.
Keeping it cool on the ice.
Keeping it cool on the ice.