Entries in wildlife (3)

Monday
Dec192011

Northwest Wildlife Rehabilitation Center.

Tucked near the woods on the Nooksack River in the small Western Washington town of Deming, the Northwest Wildlife Rehabilitation Center receives and treats hundreds of native wild animals every year.  Run entirely by donation, the center operates under lead rehabilitator and lone staffer Stacy Wise.  With a team of seasonal interns and volunteers year round, Wise and the people who dedicate their time and effort to the center help save the lives of native wildlife that have been injured, abandoned, are sick, or disoriented.  These images are the culmination of several months spent in and around the center. Some are releases for success stories of animal patients brought in, even some of whom were raised by Wise and the volunteers and interns, to be released as thriving adults. And some are the depiction of the sad reality of our own human influence on wildlife.

See the whole gallery Here,

Be sure and check out my projects page for more detailed info per image,

Video to come!

thanks for looking

-Rhys

Saturday
Aug202011

The Bob Marshall Wilderness

Hauling across the state in a Forest Service vehicle, I wasn't sure what awaited me at our destination.  Having completed several fulfilling minutes of thorough research by the grace of Wikipedia, I found my near future work site to hold just as much curiousity as it did mystery.  With more grizzly bears than anywhere in the United States, except Alaska, the Bob Marshall Wilderness is amillion and a half acres of untamed, near pristine wilderness of the northern Rockies of western Montana.  And I was getting paid to go there.

We met up at the firelab in Missoula joining the rest of the crew to make the drive to the Blackfoot river trailhead.  Waiting for us there were our pack animals, horses and sampling gear.  Loading up each mule with 80 to 90 pounds per saddle bag, each carrying two, added a new level of adventure for me as far as packing into a campsite goes.  

Soon to be Dr. Nick Povak and I headed up the trail to hike the seven miles in to our camp, following the dusty trail along the river valley, surveying old fire damage from a holocaust fire that ripped through the Bob in'88 and other in 2001 and 2007.  Looking at a topo map before the trip it was exactly as picturesque as I had imagined.

Nick decided that every day, the Bob had a treat for us.  The views, the wildlife, the sunsets, the day's hike, were all inclusive of something amazing to see and experience each day we were there.  The stars, and the Northern Lights were some of my favorites.

Hiking to our sites everyday was spectacular itself, althought some of our sites were less than cordial.  Young lodgepole pine stands grow thick, and close together, especially after fires, since that is how they reproduce.  But stopping everyday to eat lunch, I had to imagine how many people in the world are as lucky to eat lunch in some of the places I have been able to. 

The Bob is a rugged place.  It's a wild place, I was reminded of this in so many ways from the terrain, to the weather, to seeing the grizzly a few hundred feet from camp.  I felt I only experienced the tip of the iceberg for what Montana has to offer and can't wait to go back.

Check out the Gallery for alot more, and a video to come.

-Rhys

Nick Povak, getting swoll for the trip ahead.

Dr. Paul Hessburg (right) and Brion Salter of the Wenatchee Forestry Sciences Lab look over the ortho-rectified satellite photos of the sampling area. Orthorectified photos or 'orthophotos' are geometrically corrected photos based on satellite imagery compared with maps to create scale uniform with a topographical map.

Dr. Wendell Hann, 25+ year certified packer and retired forest service ecologist was our guide managing the animals. A more grizzled tough cowboy would be hardpressed to find in Montana. Wendell made the trip from his home in Colorado to help lead us.

Monday
May022011

Project Preview: Northwest Wildlife Rehabilitation Center

Based in Deming, Wash. The Northwest Wildlife Rehabilitation Center is a single employee non-profit that cares for sick, injured and orphaned wildlife in Whatcom county.  I have been shooting a body of work covering the center since February and hopefully will finish in August. I plan on adding it to my projects portfolio.  It's been really fascinating and amazing to see our local wildlife so close and initimately cared for, and awesome to meet the great people so passionate about their care and preservation.

just wanted to send along a really small preview,

-Rhys