View allAll Photos Tagged wolfes
Puppies to be reintroduced to the main pack at Wolf Park.
And yes, I was inside the enclosure with the puppies! An honor I shall never forget!
Wolf steals a Snow Goose kill off the beach, taken from a juvenile Bald Eagle, Metchosin, BC
I was watching through a spotting scope a Bald Eagle tearing at something when suddenly this wolf appeared in the frame.
This is a she-wolf who was abandoned by her mother as a puppy. Because she could not survive on her own, she was transferred from Lithuania to the wolf park in the Black Forest.
The Alternative Wolf and Bear Park Black Forest is a wildlife protection project of the association “Alternativer Bärenpark Schwarzwald e. V.” and the “Foundation for Bears” in Bad Rippoldsau-Schapbach in the Freudenstadt district. The aim is to accommodate large animals - especially bears - that are in distress, to impart environmental education on animal husbandry issues and to spread it through tourism in the Black Forest Central/North Nature Park.
The park was opened in 2010, as the second project of its kind after the Alternative Bear Park in Worbis, with a bear. Then wolves and more bears arrived. In 2012, a separate enclosure for old animals was built. In 2016, lynxes were also recorded for the first time.[1]
The park area covers approximately 10 hectares. As of January 2024, 9 bears, 3 lynxes and 1 wolf live there. Most of these animals had been kept by private individuals in species-appropriate conditions before they came to the park.
Grey wolf on ridge basking in the last rays of the winter setting sun.
Taken on a Minolta camera on manual exposure setting and the lens was a big clunky Sigma 600mm Mirror lens that only had two focus options...manual focus and manual focus. Having said that I miss using these old film cameras and counting every frame of the 36 exposure film.
This is the first macro image I ever attempted, for the February 25th, 2013 Macro Monday challenge "Hair". It was lost in an upload disaster - so this is a repost, so that I can add it to the groups discussion panel for the upcoming 10th anniversary celebration.
What I wrote initially was - "This shot was taken behind the left ear of an Alaskan wolf. I love the color variations."
The so-called alpha male in the middle.
Taken three months ago today.
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This picture was taken under bad light conditions. The wolf was far away and so I needed the 2x teleconverter to get 1200mm focal length. On the other hand, the focal length called for a short shutter speed and so I ended up shooting at ISO 25600, which I normally would never ever use.
Of course I had to do quite a lot of post processing with the picture. Anyhow, I think the result is not too bad...
Okavago delta. These are 2 of litter of 9 in a pack of 5 adults. Large litters are not uncommon in this species and they behave like puppies of domestic dogs (canis familiaris).
Main pic: here
This is the cave below the monastery. Everyone who wants to enter has to pass the wolves. That's an easy way to get rid off undesired visitors.
This is kiros hes a awesome wolf hes got electric powers and your lucky he fight for you couse he can disable eggmans mechs
Maned Wolf (Chrysocyon brachyurus), a large canine of South America. Its markings resemble those of foxes, but it is neither a fox nor a wolf. It is the only species in the genus Chrysocyon.
This is the last surviving film wolf that have been housed at the Assiniboine Zoo, Winnipeg MB Canada. There were five initially, all were trained for film making. One by one, they succumbed to their age. On my visits to the zoo, I've been fortunate to capture special moments like this... he seemed happy to see me and sat as I talked to him and tried to capture his aging spirit!