The Great Bear Rainforest - Spirit Bears
Posted: Wed Dec 16, 2009 1:30 pm
Finally got some photos from our trip to the Great Bear Rainforest in northwest British Columbia. Our first stop was to photograph the Spirit Bear, Kermode Bear (Ursus americanus kermodei). It is a subspecies of the American Black Bear. Note that it is not an albino, it is due to a recessive trait in their gene pool that causes these. It's parents are likely regular black bears. There aren't many of these bears, approx 200-300, predominantly in the northwest of British Columbia.
Waiting for some salmon
Coming down for a feed
All this eating is tough work, better have a rest
All these were taken with the Nikon D700 with grip, 200-400 VR, VR on, auto ISO (great feature of D700/D3 with min shutter). I can't remember if these were handheld or on a tripod as depending on the situation, I would switch from the tripod to handheld. The photos have not had much post processing done. Looking at the black bear photo again, I will probably tone down the bottom tree.
FYI, do not attempt this with bears in other parts of Canada The bears here are in a very remote part of Canada where they don't get much human interaction so they are not worried by humans, we don't compete withe them for the salmon, they don't consider humans food and they are extremely well fed with the streams full of spawning salmon.
I'll post some grizzly bear photos later on.
Cheers,
André
Waiting for some salmon
Coming down for a feed
All this eating is tough work, better have a rest
All these were taken with the Nikon D700 with grip, 200-400 VR, VR on, auto ISO (great feature of D700/D3 with min shutter). I can't remember if these were handheld or on a tripod as depending on the situation, I would switch from the tripod to handheld. The photos have not had much post processing done. Looking at the black bear photo again, I will probably tone down the bottom tree.
FYI, do not attempt this with bears in other parts of Canada The bears here are in a very remote part of Canada where they don't get much human interaction so they are not worried by humans, we don't compete withe them for the salmon, they don't consider humans food and they are extremely well fed with the streams full of spawning salmon.
I'll post some grizzly bear photos later on.
Cheers,
André