View allAll Photos Tagged moose
These moose don't have to worry about traffic. Thanks for looking and wish all a Merry Christmas and happy holidays.
Just back from spending my birthday weekend looking for moose. I was not disappointed. This was a mom who also had her baby with her (pictures to come) munching on some yummies in a high elevation lake. No better way to spend a birthday in my opinion.
Catch up with everyone ASAP
Spotted near Lake Marie in the Snowy Mountains of Wyoming. He is still young but already you can see those long legs and the antlers starting to form!
A cow moose and her nearby one year old calf foraging for what they can find under the snow. I had hoped they would line up together for me in one shot but no such luck. Taken in a little opening in the woods near Mud Lake in Kananaskis Alberta.
An abundance of rivers, streams, lakes, and bogs attracts wildlife of all varieties in Glacier National Park. A mother moose and her calf were briefly separated but joined back together in a deep swamp to eat their daily fill of greens. They seemed to feel safe in their surroundings as we hiked by them on a trail behind Two Medicine Lake.
This Moose calf crossed right in front of me.
It was so close that I couldn't get him all into the frame :)
Because this Moose was Grey and White I contacted Fish and Wildlife - this was their response.
"This is an interesting calf for sure. We do see some variation in coat colour but this pale colour overall is more often associated with winter coat in older moose. But this is a calf. There is no disease aspect of this – for example, this is NOT a ghost moose with hair damage in association with winter tick infestation. In fact this moose does not have a tick problem and the haircoat seems normal, other than being pale. I suspect it is a genetic anomaly that resulted in the pale coat colour – all moose hairs are white at the base and dark towards the tip of each hair. This moose has brown/grey rather than dark brown/black tips. As for the mane, yes it is quite normal in moose but appears more prominent because of the pale colour."
Provincial Wildlife Disease Specialist, Alberta Fish and Wildlife
Texture is my own.
Digital Painting inspired by a tree flowering at the Audubon Moose Hill Reserve near Sharon, MA.
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Portrait of a resting bull North American Moose (Alces alces) in Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada.
18 September, 2016.
Slide # GWB_20160918_5565.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
Photographed the calf Moose alongside Highway 11 North in Bourkes Township Northeastern Ontario Canada
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Smile on Saturday - Copy Collage
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Please visit this piece 'Moose and Friends' for my Exhibit ‘All Creatures Great and Small’ and other new pieces at The Edge Art Gallery Art Gallery Exhibition AFFLATUS. Take in the wonderful atmosphere of the Gallery and check out the other amazing artists works.
Exhibition will run till 21st of October! _Your LM to the Gallery
You've got a Friend_James Taylor
When you're down and troubled
And you need a helping hand
And nothing, nothing is going right
Close your eyes and think of me
And soon I will be there
To brighten up even your darkest night
You just call out my name
And you know wherever I am
I'll come running, oh yeah baby, to see you again
Winter, spring, summer or fall
All you've got to do is call
And I'll be there, ye, ye, ye
You've got a friend
Picture taken @ Breath of Nature
Only one image is applicable on a day like today and that is of a moose in the snow. We got 30CM where I live, but parts of the province got far more!
A North American Moose (Alces alces) browsing on Red Osier Dogwood in an aspen woodland on the edge of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
There were three moose in this woodlot and all were very comfortable in their surroundings so near to the city. I departed the area without disturbing them, allowing them to continue feeding.
11 November, 2017.
Slide # GWB_20171111_9007.CR2
Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.
© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
He came out of the woods to a marshy/wet area to get a big drink...I could hear him slurping the water!!! It was at dusk.
Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada
"Pink House" and Bunkhouse, John Moulton Homestead, Teton Range of the Rocky Mountains, Mormon Row, Grand Teton National Park, Jackson Hole, Teton County, Moose, Wyoming
The Western moose (Alces alces andersoni) inhabits boreal forests and mixed deciduous forests in the Canadian Arctic, and western Canadian provinces. Male Western moose are aggressive during mating season (autumn and winter) and may injure or kill with provocation.
Third and final installment in my Alaska min-series.
This bull moose was eyeing some leaves on a low hanging branch for his next snack. Well, they weren't that low hanging...probably eight feet off the ground.
My husband and I spent the weekend up in Maine. I really wanted to get a moose in the beautiful autumn colors. On our first day we saw this bull moose in a field full of colors but he seemed skittish and didn't stay for long. This was the best sighting we had all weekend. Hunting season was starting in this area and I think the moose knew it.
My trip to Canada in 2017 was a Moose desert not one was to be seen even though the signs of the edge of the roads said there were more Moose than people in the area
So we were pretty excited when we spotted this one and there were two others out of range of my camera . We had driven to Maligne Lake in Jasper NP with the purpose of taking a boat down the lake . We were a little early for the boat and we walked to another smaller lake near Maligne and bingo fortunately I had lugged the 300mm lens otherwise it might not have worked
This was officially Moose Day as we came upon some others on the journey back to Jasper
THANKS FOR YOUR VISITING BUT CAN I ASK YOU NOT TO FAVE AN IMAGE WITHOUT ALSO MAKING A COMMENT. MANY THANKS KEITH. ANYONE MAKING MULTIPLE FAVES WITHOUT COMMENTS WILL SIMPLY BE BLOCKED
This bull was captured early morning during rutting season. He initially followed the female out of the bush, settled down to graze a bit, thrashed a tree and eventually strolled back into the woods.
A female Moose was grazing at Turnbull NWR. What caught my eye while reviewing my photos was that it appears that she has a second face on the end of her snout! This perspective of the Moose is a little odd, alien and/or eerie... but definitely an interesting dark passenger. Photo taken in Cheney, Washington.