All the photos you see on this website are my own.
It takes a lot of quiet time – hiking the trails, paddling the lake, sitting behind a bush, or even climbing a tree, to find the wildlife I love to write about.
And once I do, I might sit there for an hour or two,
or three,
watching quietly,
snapping hundreds of images,
hoping for the perfect capture.
Of those hundreds of pictures, I may get 6 to 10 great photos. But I gain so much more than that, because monitoring the wildlife is how I research to create stories that are realistic and true ~
So readers like you can feel as if they’re on the lake and trails with Cooper, Packrat and I.
Below are some of my favorite photos from Maine and Sanibel Island, Florida. Please don’t copy to share or post without permission unless you are a teacher using them within a teaching curriculum. Students also have my permission to use these photos in their class projects. All I ask is that you keep the photo intact with my copyright information. I use many of these photos within my Descriptive Writing presentation as well.
Be sure to check out the Words and Wildlife Blog for some of my wildlife-stalking adventure stories, such as the summer I monitored a loon family from nesting and hatching, until they flew south for the winter. Or the time I videotaped a snapping turtle fight . . . which in turn ended up a scene in the first chapter of Mystery of the Bear Cub!
Nesting Loon 2015 (c) Tamra Wight
Loon and Two Week Old Chick 2015
Loon Family 2015
Wings Open Wide
Preening
Bald Eagle
Eagle Nest Approximately 700 lbs
Bringing Sticks To Add To Nest
Rearranging the Nest
Eagle In Flight
Eaglet Triplets
Fox Kit
Fox Kit Watching Me, Watching Him
Fox Kits Wrestling
Fox Kit noticing me
Fox Kit during it’s first weeks
Chickadee
Snowy Owl
Black Bear Named Red
Blue Heron
Painted Turtle
Harbor Seals – Casco Bay
Harbor Seals – Casco Bay
Hummingbird
Hummingbird
Ladybug
Full Moon Rising Over The Eagle’s Nest
Painted Turtle
An Adult Fox on my front lawn
The Adult Eagles 2017 – one chick hatched
Barred Owl 2017
Loon and 5 week old chick
Black Bear – Maine Wildlife Park
Loon and Chick
Loon and chick – 2016
Loon and chick at feeding time – 2016
Black Bear at the Maine Wildlife Park
Nesting Loon
Sun Rise Over The Lake
Dragonfly
Red Squirrel
Pileated Woodpecker
Pelican – Sanibel Island
Pelican with Lunch – Sanibel Island
Pelican and Seagull – Sanibel Island
A Black Bear at the Maine Wildlife Park
Black Bears like the water, and they will take their cubs to it while they are still young.
Black Bear Named Red
Both of these bears are considered Black Bears. You can tell based on the tan color of their snout. Black Bears can be any color, from blond to black.