Thursday, November 12, 2009

Adios

Thumper…making a quick exit! Unfortunately, this is how we usually see big bucks. Fortunately, Thumper did give me several seconds of good photo opportunity, although the lighting conditions were less than favorable.

Eight Point Buck

The rut is on and the deer are active. The neck of this buck has just begun to swell and his activity in daylight hours lends to the fact that the rut is starting.

Lip Curling

Typically lip curling is a breeding trait of the whitetail buck trying to locate the estrus doe, but in this photo the buck seems to be trying to catch a whiff of me. Interesting. Once the buck realized what was going on, he quickly disappeared in the timber.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Old Arkansas Bull Elk

This old bull elk is past his prime and was replaced as herd bull by a younger bull. He looks a little worn, but in good health, so I'm sure he'll be around for few more years. His left side antler shows a drop tine that is very unusual, matter of fact, it's the only Arkansas elk that I'm aware of that has the coveted drop tine.






Saturday, November 7, 2009

Thumper

With the hunting seasons upon us, I thought it would be appropriate to start sharing some of my recent Arkansas Whitetail images. Might as well start with the best -- Thumper. I call him that because ANY hunter would thump this one given the opportunity.

As the sun was setting Thumper finally came out of the timber and exposed himself long enough and close enough to get some shots. What a great buck!! He's a typical ten point with kicker points on both G-3's, so in my book, he's considered a twelve point buck. He's one of the best bucks I have ever seen in Arkansas and definitely the highest scoring buck I have ever photographed.

Monday, November 2, 2009

The Eye of the Deer

SUNLIGHT!!! What a rare commodity on the mountain at Compton this past month. (ha)

Sunlight can be harsh and make for difficult photography, but when the sun is low in the sky and the subject orients properly, it can be great conditions to capture some awesome detail. I think seeing the pupil and the iris color of this deer is something that everyone will appreciate.

Tamias Minimus

It was fascinating to watch this chipmunk work at collecting and storing the corn that I put out for the deer. At first it would eat until full, then fill its cheek pouches and scamper back to its borough only to return in a couple minutes for two more cheeks full of corn, then repeat the collecting/storing trip several times over the next hour. It must have thought it had found the mother lode when it came across several pounds of corn scattered near its home. Makes me wonder how much corn it has stored for the winter.

Beaver Creek II

This past October brought near record rainfall amounts and fabulous foliage. The peak foliage seemed to have been earlier this year than the past two or three, with the second and third weeks of October being just awesome in the upper Buffalo River area. Getting photos wasn't easy with all the precipitation and cloudy skies, but the opportunities that did present themselves were well worth braving the rain, wind, fog and cold.

This photo is another from Beaver Creek and was taken just a couple days before a rain/wind storm finished shedding the trees of their leaves. This is a spectacular area that never ceases to amaze me with its beauty.