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  1. #1
    Buglin Billy
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Murray, Utah USA
    Posts
    205

    Dry year for the Pronghorns

    Each year I go up to Wyoming on a number of occasions to photograph Pronghorn antelope. Boy is this year ever dry compared to last year.

    Last year when I was photographing at this same place here's how it looked.



    And here's how it looked this year.



    The same waterhole is basically just a wallow













    Have a good one. BB
    Olympus E-3

    Olympus E-5

    Zuiko Digital ED
    70-300mm
    F4.0-5.6

    Zuiko Digital ED
    12-60mm
    F2.8-4.0 SWD

    Zuiko Digital ED
    50mm
    F2.0 Macro

    Zuiko Digital ED
    50-200mm
    F2.8-3.5 SWD


    Zuiko Digital ED
    90-250mm
    F2.8

    A promise made is a debt unpaid!

  2. #2
    Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2012
    Location
    Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts
    124

    Re: Dry year for the Pronghorns

    Nice photos!

  3. #3
    Captain of the Ship Photo-John's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2001
    Location
    Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
    Posts
    15,422

    Re: Dry year for the Pronghorns

    Very nice! Those are some of the best pronghorn photos I remember seeing. I've never taken a good one of them. I usually see them on Antelope Island, from the car. I've never been able to get out, get my gear ready and get close enough to get a good photo. But then again, I'm never out there for wildlife photos. I expect you must pick a spot and wait patiently to get photos like these?

    It is a dry year for sure. We were riding Wasatch Crest in early June and last year, a wet year, we couldn't get up there until August. I think the wildflowers are going to be a bust.
    Photo-John

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  4. #4
    Buglin Billy
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Murray, Utah USA
    Posts
    205

    Re: Dry year for the Pronghorns

    Pronghorns are one of the toughest critters out there to photograph, as its very hard to get close if they are wild. If you can find a place where they are around people all the time and they have been raised that way, its kind of like taking elk photos in the Park.. But truly wild antelope are almost impossible for anyone unless one is will to put a lot of time and effort into setting up in a way that can beat their eyes. I would never get these photos unless I paid the price and put up a blind long before I intended to take photos. And that's what I do. Many of the photos I take are taken at 15-20 yards. But if the wind is not blowing and they can hear the shutter click, you get one photo and they are gone. If you notice the manes in some of those photos the wind was blowing hard, thus covering the camera noise, thus I could get more shots than just one.

    I used my Olympus E-5 camera and my Zukio 300/2.8 lens

    I live in Murray Utah. I think I read that you are from SLC if I'm correct. So we live close.









    And on occasion you even see a few hawks/eagles.



    Have a good one BB
    Olympus E-3

    Olympus E-5

    Zuiko Digital ED
    70-300mm
    F4.0-5.6

    Zuiko Digital ED
    12-60mm
    F2.8-4.0 SWD

    Zuiko Digital ED
    50mm
    F2.0 Macro

    Zuiko Digital ED
    50-200mm
    F2.8-3.5 SWD


    Zuiko Digital ED
    90-250mm
    F2.8

    A promise made is a debt unpaid!

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