Ryan and I often break up the 17 hour drive home to Minnesota from Yellowstone with a night and half a day in Teddy Roosevelt National Park. The 36-mile auto loop is a fantastic road for wildlife photography…And no crowds!
Prairie Dogs are truly charismatic critters. How can you not like them? Well, I guess cattle ranchers hate them as cows can step in a hole and break their legs. But they’ve been successfully eradicated on much of the private lands of the west.
We tried this unique shot last year but came up empty (Not every wildlife photo must be taken with a telephoto lens!). We placed our cameras with a wide angle lens near the mouth of a Prairie Dog hole…then we retreated to the hillside and waited to trigger the shutter remotely. But Prairie Dogs have interconnected tunnels with many exits/entrances, and they usually outsmarted us. And the same thing seemed to be happening to us this time, but after we had given up and were heading back to the car, one Prairie Dog seemed reluctant to go down his hole as I approached. Maybe curious, maybe young, maybe not too experienced, but “brave” enough to poke his head out to check out the “three-legged predator” just outside his home. “Click” …got the shot. [Canon 7D with Sigma 10-20mm lens at 16mm, f13 at 1/800, tripod with remote trigger]
The North Dakota badlands are much more lush and green than the South Dakota badlands [iPhone!]
Lark Sparrows are very common in Teddy Roosevelt but rare in northern Minnesota. It was a real treat to see and hear many along the auto loop. This guy posed in the tip top of a Rocky Mountain Juniper. [Canon 7D with Canon 400mm f5.6 lens, f5.6 at 1/250 (max flash sync speed), Canon 420EX flash and Better Beamer attachment (to extend the reach of the flash), handheld]
Western Meadowlarks are a symbolic bird of the grasslands of the American West. [Canon 7D with Canon 400mm f5.6 lens, f5.6 at 1/400, handheld from car (This is an exposure between firings of the flash…The flash needs to recycle after every firing, so it is best to set your exposure so even between firings you get a decent exposure of your subject.]
Check out those ears! Mule Deer, in fact, are named for their ears which are oversized as in Mules. It was a very dark, rainy, gray day so the color balance was a bit weird so I converted the image to black-and-white for better effect. [Canon 7D with Canon 400mm f5.6 lens, f5.6 at 1/640, handheld from car]
4 responses to “Theodore Roosevelt National Park—Prairie Dogs and friends”
lynnsarda
June 1st, 2014 at 14:14
This is one of my lifetime favorite places. And you have done a beautiful job of capturing some of the magic there.
Sparky Stensaas
June 3rd, 2014 at 20:10
Thanks Lynn! It is an amazing place.
Mike Powell
June 1st, 2014 at 15:48
What a wonderful shot of the prairie dog–it’s definitely an unique perspective. I seem to recall a posting you did last year about using your wide-angle lens to photograph a buffalo. It’s useful to challenge ourselves to shoot a subject differently. Thanks for proving an explanation (and settings) about the shots
Sparky Stensaas
June 3rd, 2014 at 20:12
Thanks Mike! Yes, we really need to keep thinking…”How can I shoot this critter in a new way” It is very easy to just keep the telephoto on and trying to fill the frame…A little Outside the box photography will really help make our images unique.