View allAll Photos Tagged DEER
My it is a buyt time for the deer during the rut. You can sense the tensions as they run too and fro chasing one another .
The Park Rangers have named this deer Frank. He seemed pretty complacent relaxing in an open field two hours before sunset. Hopefully Frank knows where the park boundaries are, hunting season isn't far away. Good luck, Frank.
White-tailed Deer
Brazos Bend State Park
Needville, TX
I spotted this doe Roe deer deep in the vegetation, we looked at each other for a few moments before she took flight. I just love those ears.
Bucks don't get much rest during the Fall rut. They eat and sleep little, always on the move to find and breed receptive does with a few fights thrown in. They are physically exhausted by the end of the rut. Our beautiful world, pass it on.
"Photography is not just a pleasure, it is a need.
Like breathing air or drinking water...I need it."
- Julia Bailey -
Photo from today July 5th
while I was cycling from Swalmen (my village) to Tegelen (to walk my daughter's dog).
Location: behind a fence in Ronckenstein/Reuver
spotted these under a tree shading from the sun at calke abbey taken with canon 60d with canon 400mm
One of the many deer at Normanby Park in the North Lincolnshire countryside. There's a mixture of red deer and fallow deer like in this image.
This small and exotic looking deer can be surprisingly hard to spot... unless it is heading straight at you !!!
Red deer hinds chilling in Richmond park. Photo Kevin Keatley, Camera Nikon D800, 200-400@310mm, F4.5, 1/640 sec., ISO 500, Monopod, Camera & Lens cover.
De meeste herten bleven op afstand en zodra ze je in de gaten hadden, waren ze weg. Behalve dit mannetjeshert. Totaal niet bang, maar juist nieuwsgierig.
Vogelenzang, Nederland
Most of the deer stayed at distance and as soon as they noticed you, they were gone. Expect for this stag. Not afraid at all, but curious.
Vogelenzang, The Netherlands
© 2015 Alan Mackenzie.
www.alanmackenziephotography.com
This one month old Roe deer has grown very fast. I caught a glimpse of him just two weeks ago and he could barely be seen in the grass. I hope to be seeing more of him in the coming years. July 1st was certainly the hottest day of his short life, reaching a stifling 34.1°C at this location on the Sussex/Surrey border. Temperatures like this are normal to many people around the world, but in England, it's newsworthy. The air felt like the inside of a car parked in the sun for a couple of hours. Only baby deer and wildlife photographers have the energy to remain active in these weather conditions.