Top nature photographer Paul Nicklen tells all in Masters of Photography course

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In his long and distinguished career, nature photographer Paul Nicklen has captured images that have been hugely significant in keeping awareness of conservation at the front of people’s minds. 

Photography has become far more democratized since Nicklen first picked up his camera, with the technical advances of digital cameras and the internet and social media making it easier than ever for photographers to connect with their viewers.

And it’s this connectivity that Nicklen has turned to for his Masters of Photography online course, which has just launched – spread over 50 lessons, budding or established nature photographers alike can learn from one of the top professionals working in the conservation space.

We caught up with Nicklen to discover more about the course, why he decided to participate in it, and what his prospective students will learn…

“After doing around 500 public lectures across the world and meeting thousands of photographers, and realising that our planet is dying and that we’ve lost 70 per cent of the biodiversity on earth, I have truly realised the power of visual storytelling,” says Nicklen.

“Now that I’ve gotten off the treadmill a little bit, now that I’m not shooting so much for National Geographic because we’re doing SeaLegacy, the non-profit, we need to galvanize certain warriors with their cameras – we need people out there shooting powerful impactful, meaningful photographs for telling important stories, and with the Masters of Photography course, I get to do a tell-all to thousands of people and I hope it inspires them.”

Telling stories is the key to helping achieve ‘conservation wins’, as Nicklen describes them. Citing a very recent example, he mentions sending an email from SeaLegacy which galvanised 6,000 people to write to Justin Trudeau, the Canadian Prime Minister; the following day, 104 species of shark were given protected status – many organisations were involved alongside SeaLegacy, but as Nicklen adds, “you need powerful visuals to start those conversations.”

And those powerful visuals need to tell stories – a picture on its own isn’t enough, as Nicklen explains: “I learned how to shoot decent pictures at a young age – I followed the work of my heroes, who were Tom Mangelsen, Art Wolfe and others, but I just didn’t know how to tell a story. I didn’t know how to make a storytelling image or put together a series of images that told a story.

“Back in 1997, Flip Nicklen offered to mentor me and I moved down to his house in the US. He taught me and I tried to break through a brick wall of what it means to tell a story with a camera.

“It sounds so simple but it is so difficult and especially to get to the hallowed pages of National Geographic magazine, which was every young photographer’s dream, I didn’t realise how far away I was from that.

“I was pushing the limits of what the human body could endure, diving into sea ice in hypothermic conditions, but I was not telling a story. I was actually feeling a little deflated about just shooting pretty pictures in magazines and it was through that two-year mentorship with Flip and then later on a mentorship with Joel Sartore, who was another one of my iconic heroes at National Geographic, that I really fell into that family of great storytellers and got to learn from them.

“Then in 2001 I got my chance when Ken Oberstein, the director of photography at National Geographic, gave me a chance on an Atlantic salmon story, about fish farming and wild Atlantic salmon around the world, which was my first big assignment.

“And it was so difficult. They gave me a big budget – I could go anywhere I wanted to in the world, and it was a two-year journey of trying different phases, different chapters, of that expedition and coming back and failing and getting feedback from my peers like Joel Sartore and Burt Box; Burt was my editor at that time. And everybody kept telling me how disappointed they were with my work and that I wasn’t really capturing it, and adding to the pressure I had on myself, I was driving myself crazy.

“For two years I did nothing but eat and sleep. I had 600 contacts in 10 countries around the world for this assignment and all the scientists and other photographers and fishermen, and the story was supposed to be 16 pages in National Geographic and it ended up being 24 pages and I won first place at World Press Photo.

“It was the first time when I was like, ‘OK I can do this’; I’m building the confidence that I can pull this off. It made sense that when you string together a series of photographs and you work with a great writer and you have powerful captions, all of a sudden that story can effectively reach tens of millions of people and it can really wake people up.”

And humankind does need to wake up, says Nicklen. The planet is not in a good state right now.

Paul Nicklen – Masters of Photography

Above: trailer for Paul Nicklen’s new video course

“I’m a biologist and have worked as a scientist but I am not a world expert,” he says. “But when scientists tell me that we’ve already lost 70 per cent of our biodiversity in ice, that the polar regions, the Arctic in particular, is going to be ice-free in the summer months in the next few years… when you see BBC video shots of 100,000 walrus stacked up on land falling off cliffs when it should be out on the sea ice… 

“When you see that the majority of major fish populations have collapsed or are collapsing, when you see that we are taking hundreds of millions of sharks out of the oceans every year, you see ocean acidification, coral reefs dying, as we are out there on the front lines, you feel so deflated sometimes, and you feel that the more down and out you get, the more depressed you get about the state of our planet – and the only antidote to that is to take action.

“If you stay inactive and this stress builds up, that’s where I think we have climate anxiety and climate depression… We have the whole younger generation terrified about the future of our planet but they’re paralysed. In this course I’m also trying to teach that the antidote to that paralysis and that fear and that depression is action – as soon as you pick up your camera and you get active, and you start to be a part of a win, then nothing feels better than that.

“I’ve taken bad photographs, I’ve taken good photographs, I’ve taken powerful photographs, I’ve taken photographs that have won awards – but all of that pales in comparison to having a major conservation win, because you use your visual storytelling. You galvanised a movement, you worked with a great team of storytellers and that just is where I’m trying to steer the photographic population.”

And a great way of helping to effect this change would be to sign up for Nicklen’s Masters of Photography course. The first 15 episodes are available to early-bird buyers now, with more to follow in early 2023. Click here for a flavor of the course. 

As Nicklen says this the “first and only time” that he will be sharing tips, tricks and insights from his 20-year career, it’s no surprise that he threw himself into the making of his Masters of Photography course.

He says one of his main motivations for doing it was to free people from any nagging doubts they might have regarding their abilities to become successful visual storytellers – especially as this is something that Nicklen had to overcome.

“When I was a young age, I had all the little voices telling me that I was going to fail,” Nicklen recalls. “My dad said, ‘You’re never going to make it – sell your gear and stay with your government job. What are you thinking?’ And all my peers said, ‘Don’t do it, you’re not a photographer.’ 

“And then as I’m going up through the ranks slowly, to have everybody saying you’re not good enough – I even had mentors saying that I was going to fall flat on my face, that I wasn’t going to make it to National Geographic, that I should just give up on the dream… These little voices wear you down emotionally.

“So I thought that if I can just set a lot of these photographers free, to allow them to believe in themselves… This course is supposed to inspire people – I want them to realise that stories are all around them, they’re in their backyard. 

“They don’t all have to head to Africa to take the same picture of the same lion, and then ask, ‘Now what?’ That would be setting themselves up for failure, so I really bring them through believing in themselves.”

Although Nicklen does reference cameras and equipment in the course, participants shouldn’t expect a lot of technique tips – instead, he would rather focus on the photographer’s mindset rather than recommending a suitable tripod height.

“On this course, I really get into left brain/ right brain,” he says. “Everybody has a left mathematical/ analytical brain and I’m trying to teach people to get stuff like ‘Which f-stop and what ISO?’ out of the way as quickly as they can – learn your gear, go sit in the bathroom, turn the lights off and do it that way.

“Instead, get into your right brain and get lost, get creative, just go on a journey. When I’ve done shooting an amazing scene, I am so numb, I am so weak and I almost don’t know where I am. Artistically I’m lost and that’s when I know I’m in the zone and from that I don’t even remember what I’ve shot until I go through the editing process.

“So we do a lot of that kind of thing, I really teach people a lot to set themselves free – again, get left brain/ right brain, don’t get too hunkered down on the technical side.”

In the course description, Nicklen’s ‘20-60-20 rule’ is cited as one of his cornerstone techniques. He explains that is something he developed for himself from the beginning of his first assignment for National Geographic, and recommends that other photographers should try it.

For the first 20% of his time at his chosen location, Nicklen will familiarise himself with his subject, allowing it to see him and smell him and get used to the camera, but without putting any pressure on himself or the animal. Once the familiarity has been established, Nicklen switches into the 60% period, which accounts for most of his shooting time; this is where he calls on his tool set of artistic styles.

Finally, when he feels he has captured enough photos, he moves into a 20% stage, where he tries out techniques he knows might not always work – things like 30-second handheld exposures and “wild split-images”, as he calls them – but where something might just be successful. This experimentation is worth it, he says, because it enables him to learn something and grow as an artist.

And it was from one of these 20% stages that Nicklen landed a National Geographic magazine front cover, for his photo of a spirit bear.

“The assignment was over and heading into an inlet, we hadn’t seen spirit bears for a long time,” he explains. “My assistant, Jed, saw this spirit bear walking out of the forest and the light was so low I was just watching it and not even shooting it.

“I looked over at my captain, who was a doctor, and he’d just bought the latest camera which was good in low light, so I grabbed it out of his hand and grabbed a few shots and all of a sudden it’s in my body of work. Psychologically, it wasn’t something that I had really worked for, and I had so many images that I liked more, but in the editing process it ended up staying in and sticking around.

“It’s the one picture of a spirit bear that I sell as a fine artist, the one picture that is on the cover of National Geographic and it’s the one that people gravitate to.”

The media landscape has evolved a lot since Nicklen started his journey as a nature photographer, and the adoption of digital technology means there has never been such a wide variety of outlets for visual storytellers to tell their stories. But does Nicklen think that the next generation of nature photographers will be as passionate as the previous one?

“I think the fire is there, they just don’t know how to direct it,” he replies. “Also, you get the fire burning in them, the desire to make a difference, then they’ve got the little voices telling them that they’re doing it all wrong.

“Again, I think that this course really helps to separate all that noise, all the mistakes that I made, and it will really help people coming through to focus and to think about what to do and where to go.

“Nowadays you need to be a Swiss army knife: you need to be able to write, you need to be able to blog, you need to be able to shoot, to edit video, to edit stills, to do an interview… you don’t need to be the best at all that stuff, but once you’re a Swiss army knife of stills, then any scientific or non-profit organisation out there is going to want to have you on their team.

“The world has changed – for me there was a funnel to get to National Geographic, just to shoot pictures and shoot stories, but all these mediums have changed now, just in the last 10 years, and it’s more exciting than ever.

“If you’re willing to put in the time to become a Swiss army knife then you no longer have to be the next big name in photography; you could just be a 22-year old who’s figured out all these high-tech gadgets and platforms and from there you’ll be value-added to a great [conservation] programme.

“I think it’s a great time to enter the conservation space, to get in the game. People are all very much value-added right now, and I want to teach people that they are needed and that they can become value-added.”

We started our conversation discussing the power of photographs, and what visual storytelling can achieve. Anyone who takes Nicklen’s Masters of Photography course will be fully aware of that power, and with participants being able to draw inspiration from Nicklen’s expert insights, practical know-how and creative guidance, more conservation wins are sure to come in the future.

“We need people to realise that taking pictures isn’t just fun and joyful and it’s not going to Africa and sitting in vehicles – it is being out there striving for the most powerful, most evocative image that you can shoot that will ultimately drive change.”

Sign up to Paul Nicklen’s course today

For early bird access to Paul Nicklen’s Masters of Photography course, go to the Masters of Photography website. 

Three pricing tiers are available:

Masterclass: $199 – the initial 15 episodes and following 35 episodes, plus unlimited access and access to a private Facebook group

Gold Access Masterclass: $249 – as per previous tier, plus bonus and behind-the-scenes episodes, plus a recording of the live ‘Ask Me Anything’ with Paul

Platinum Access Masterclass: $499 – as per previous tier, plus entry to a draw to win a Sony A7R V plus two lenses, entry to a draw for a portfolio review with Paul, plus live access to ‘Ask Me Anything’ with Paul

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Christmas moon and 4 planets align this week| Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury and Venus

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If you’re looking for an awesome gift that’s free this year, just look to the night sky where the Christmas moon lines up with four bright planets in a celestial holiday treat this week. 

This Christmas (Dec. 25), the young crescent moon will shine with Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury and Venus and will appear to glide past Saturn and Jupiter over the next few days. All five objects will appear in a diagonal line from the south to southwest.



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The best photography shows of 2022 | Photography

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1. Roy DeCarava: Selected Works

David Zwirner, London

The first UK exhibition of Roy DeCarava’s photography in more than 30 years was a sustained study in the quietly mesmeric power of light and shadow. Whether through formal portraits or mysterious landscapes and interiors, DeCarava imbued the everyday experience of Black urban life in America with a hushed reverence and formal rigour that brought to life a world that was all but invisible to the mainstream. This retrospective was a revelatory glimpse of a singular way of seeing that spanned six decades and constantly evaded the obvious. As his widow, Sherry Turner DeCarava, who curated the exhibition, put it: “He was defined by aesthetics, not just geography or sociology.”

2. Chris Killip, retrospective

Photographers’ Gallery, London, until 19 February

Bever, Skinningrove, North Yorkshire, 1983, by Chris Killip.
Spare and unsentimental … Bever, Skinningrove, North Yorkshire, 1983, by Chris Killip. Photograph: Chris Killip

One the most influential British documentary photographers of the last 50 years, Chris Killip, who died in 2020, finally received the retrospective he deserved with this comprehensive exhibition. Killip’s abiding subject was the deindustrialisation of England’s north-east in the 1970s and 80s, which he captured by immersing himself deeply in the communities that had most to lose in the process. The results, whether shipyards or skinheads, miners or fishers, are spare and unsentimental, but filled with humanity and undercut with what he described as “a sense of urgency” for an England that was rapidly disappearing before his eyes.

3. Vivian Maier: Anthology

MK Gallery, Milton Keynes

New York 1953, by Vivian Maier.
Revelatory … New York, 1953, by Vivian Maier. Photograph: Estate of Vivian Maier/Maloof Collection/Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York

Another revelatory retrospective that deftly highlighted the often audacious artistry of a visionary photographer who died in 2009, aged 83, two years after the discovery of her vast archive. Since then, the romantic myth of Vivian Maier, the secretive nanny with the camera, has tended to overshadow the actual work, which ranges from street scenes to clandestinely shot portraits, sculptural closeups of torsos and fabrics to knowingly conceptual self-portraits. Here, the arc of her constantly creative life was traced in just 140 photographs that spoke volumes about her self-assurance and seeming indifference to fame and recognition.

4. Chris Killip and Graham Smith: 20/20

Augusta Edwards Gallery, London

Bennetts Corner (Giro Corner), South Bank, Middlesbrough, 1982, by Graham Smith.
Groundbreaking … Bennetts Corner (Giro Corner), South Bank, Middlesbrough, 1982, by Graham Smith. Photograph: Graham Smith

As a revealing counterpoint to the Photographers’ Gallery retrospective of Chris Killip’s work, Augusta Edwards homed in on the friendship and creative dynamic between Killip and the more elusive Graham Smith. The latter is a legendary figure in British photography not least because of his long refusal, until now, to engage with the gallery system. The show nodded to a groundbreaking exhibition of their work, Another Country, at the Serpentine Gallery in 1985, the title of which has become even more apposite in the interim. Likewise, the strange poetry of Smith’s candid portraits of working-class drinkers in the pubs of his native Middlesbrough, which are intimate glimpses of alcohol-fuelled reveries and encounters.

5. Sasha Huber: You Name It

Autograph, London, until 25 March 2023

Sasha Huber in her film Rentyhorn at Autograph, London.
High and mighty … Sasha Huber in her film Rentyhorn at Autograph, London. Photograph: Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma/Sasha Huber

Reprising over a decade of the Swiss-Haitian artist’s work exploring the legacy of colonialism in her native Switzerland and beyond, You Name It is a multimedia exhibition that repays close attention to its complex contemporary and historical resonances. It centres on the divisive, 19th-century figure of Louis Agassiz, a renowned archeologist and glaciologist, who was also an extreme proponent of scientific racism who actively championed the segregation and subjugation of Black people on the grounds that God had created them as inferior beings. Using films that record her actions to rename a mountain named after him in the Swiss Alps, alongside historical material and reimagined portraits of some of his subjects – made by “dressing” them in meticulously applied fabric – Huber explores the roots of colonial racism and its contemporary echoes. Timely and complex work.

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Photographer Chris Rainier Captures Sacred Outdoor Places

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Chris Rainier’s latest photo book was 40 years in the making. After being forced to slow down during the pandemic, the documentary photographer combed through boxes in his New Mexico home in search of unrealized projects. “I knew there was this body of work sitting in my basement,” Rainier says. The result of this archival work—as well as more recent photos Rainier took in Iceland and Saudi Arabia to “top off the tank”—is Sacred: In Search of Meaning ($85). Featuring a variety of perspectives on what makes a place sacred, Rainier’s images of breathtaking landscapes are bookended by essays from contributors like American writer Terry Tempest Williams, Tlingit storyteller Gene Tagaban, and British essayist Pico Iyer. “What I wanted to do was bring together a group of highly respected authors and spiritual leaders, and give people the opportunity to think about how we can make our lives more meaningful,” Rainier says. While he is not a follower of any particular religion, Rainier says his travels are motivated by a spiritual yearning. “Who are we, why are we here, and what is this all about? The book doesn’t attempt to answer these questions, but rather just reflect on what they mean to oneself personally.”

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Calanais Standing Stones, Scotland (2019)

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(Chris Rainier)

Serpent art, Southwest U.S. (2019)

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Hsinbyume Pagoda, Myanmar (2019)

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Giant’s Causeway, Northern Ireland (2020)

Iceberg at daybreak

(Chris Rainier)

Black Diamond Beach, Iceland (2021)

whale bones stick out of grass on a cloudy day

(Chris Rainier)

Whale Bone Alley, northern Siberia (2019)

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(Chris Rainier)

Northern lights, Iceland (2021)

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(Chris Rainier)

Al ’Ula ruins, Saudi Arabia (2021)

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(Chris Rainier)

A volcanic sunrise, Iceland (2021)

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South Downs winter walks around East Meon and Cheriton

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To mark the launch of the winter walking season, the National Park is launching a brand-new Miles Without Stiles routes which is ideal for people of all ages and fitness levels.

Miles Without Stiles routes have been specially created as gentle journeys that are suitable for people with limited mobility, including wheelchair users, families with push chairs, dog walkers and less agile walkers.

Allison Thorpe, who leads access and recreation for the National Park, said: “Whether you’re looking for a gentle stroll with the children and grandparents, a high-octane hike, or a romantic ramble, there’s something for everyone in the South Downs National Park this festive season.

“Christmas is the most wonderful time of the year, but it can also be quite hectic. Just taking a couple of hours to escape and connect with nature in the South Downs can do wonders for your wellbeing.

READ MORE: Winchester named best UK city to spot Father Christmas

“If it’s a clear evening, you could always try a moonlit stroll at one of our 10 Dark Sky Discovery sites and take some images for our astrophotography competition which has a top prize of £100 this year.

Hampshire Chronicle:

“As always, leave no trace and do keep dogs on leads around livestock.”

The picturesque village of East Meon, once owned by the Bishops of Winchester, is home to many historic buildings including the Old Court House.

The Ye Olde George Inn and the Izaak Walton Public House offer local food and real ales, along with a roaring fire. 

The walking guide suggests two circular walks, both starting at the imposing Norman church of All Saints.

One walk of four miles should take approximately two hours and the second, a longer walk of eight miles, which can be completed in around four hours.

Cheriton has a church which sits upon an ancient barrow and the crystal clear River Itchen, which rises nearby, running alongside thatched cottages.

It’s also steeped in history as it was the site of a decisive battle in the English Civil War.

The Battle of Cheriton took place on March 29 1644 in the fields to the east of Cheriton.

The Battle was between the Royalists led by the Earl of Forth and the Parliamentarians under Sir William Waller.

The Parliamentarians won, halting the Royalists advance to Winchester and forcing King Charles I’s troops on the defensive, leading to their eventual defeat in 1645.

For those looking for a longer winter walk, the 10 mile Cheriton loop, starting and finishing at Cheriton village hall.

Post-walk, pop into The Flower Pots Inn or The Hinton Arms to rest and recover with a traditional pub lunch.



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30 Cute Photos Of Animals That Make You Go AWW!

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Here are the 30 cutest photos of animals that make you go Aww!. There is a subreddit group called r/aww, a place for really cute pictures and videos. People share photos of puppies, bunnies, babies, and so on. This subreddit group has 33 million members, you can check their page for more cutest photos and videos.

Scroll down and enjoy yourself. All photos are linked and lead to the sources from which they were taken. Please feel free to explore further works of these photographers on their collections or their personal sites.

#1 Best day ever!

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/Idhanirem

#2 Found this little guy at work today

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/Boyinthecorn

#3 Zorro and Bandit are ready to fight crime

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/vladgrinch

#4 A whole year has gone and my boy (Basse) is 26 years old! I love growing old with you.

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/AdSignal1933

#5 TFW you’re just 15 minutes old

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/OMGLMAOWTF_com

#6 The gang is eagerly awaiting dinnertime

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/9999monkeys

#7 One year difference… some things never change

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/vladgrinch

#8 May I introduce you to one of my precious rats- Gizmo!

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/sabsel95

#9 I jokingly asked my mom to knit a sweater for my cat. she took it seriously, and actually did it

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/fosterschmidt

#10 This fox fell asleep on a skylight

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/HappyJacket3113

#11 My friend petted a neighborhood cat, now he drops by every day

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/vegardbeid

#12 Do you remember these two rescued from a fire? Here they are now.

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/gulfatma

#13 Pablo’s first trip to the vet

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/confibulator

#14 Cat was born with three Hearts

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/Knight_TheRider

#15 I took my pet ducks to Mind Games to look around since they love browsing stores. They stopped and stared at this toy for several minutes. I think I know what they want for Christmas now.

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/SakuyaMikami

#16 Theo hasn’t quite mastered the loaf, but he’s got the spirit and looks cute trying

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/kttyfrncs

#17 This lion cub, full after eating

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/asilvertintedrose

#18 Hi there little guy

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/won-an-art-contest

#19 Arctic hares are very cute in a snowball type of way

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/iklegemma

#20 One of the Top Stud Mice at My Mousery Smiling for Photos

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/Starlightriddlex

#21 Now that’s a great place to be!

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/brolbo

#22 Sweet support dog who gives comfort to children at the dentist, priceless

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/Alphalarge

#23 Every year this mama duck brings her babies to my house and I help her take care of them. This morning I opened my door to 13 new peeping fluff balls.

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/ivereadthings

#24 What could be more wholesome than this

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/Sugar_Boom

#25 I couldn’t believe what I was seeing when I pulled up next to these three amidst a snowstorm

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/KINGK7

#26 Sometimes Noodle prefers to have his existential crisis in the fridge

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/friendlynoodless

#27 I meowed at our neighbor’s cat once and now it regularly comes up to our door and just watches us live our lives.

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/GreenLigh

#28 My sister’s husky ran out of ink while giving birth

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/r_gavin09

#29 This is Tiger. He just turned 31. We are told he is the oldest cat in the state of Illinois

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/Aritilli

#30 Our cat went missing a year ago. Me and my wife found him while on a bike ride. As soon as he heard my voice he came running crying and now my entire year has been made! So unbelievably happy!

Cute Photos Of Animals

Image Source: u/JohnnyBeFree

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Nature Captions for Instagram 2022: 200+ Best and Short Nature Captions and Quotes for Instagram

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Nature is the only thing that we don’t have to pay for. Spending time in nature can be extremely therapeutic, just a day in the mountains or in a nearby forest can cleanse your mind of problems and give you a fresh perspective of life. Sadly, with our modern fast-paced lifestyle we rarely get a chance to revel in Nature’s lap. Our lives have become so digital and everything is online – people play nature-based games online yet have never been to a real forest. The only forest they perhaps must have seen is during a video game stage playing on their phone, computer or a console. Here are the best 200+ nature captions and quotes for Instagram that will go great with your Instagram nature photos.

Best Nature Captions/Quotes for Instagram
Short Nature Captions for Instagram Pic - Law of Nature is Healing Quotes

  • Nature heals
  • Nature is therapy
  • Spend time with nature 
  • Spend time in natural surroundings
  • Nature feels like nothing else
  • Nature is our only saviour
  • Nature is the best teacher
  • Nature = love 
  • Nature is beautiful
  • Nature = beauty
  • Natural beauty beats everything else
  • Nature is bountiful
  • Nature gives the best lessons
  • Never take nature for granted
  • Nature is our protector
  • Nature should be everywhere
  • Spend time in nature, less at your desk
  • Spend more time in nature, less time at work
  • Nature cleans the soul
  • Nature is good for the soul

One Word Nature Captions

130 Short and Beautiful Nature Quotes for Instagram Captions Pictures, or Posts Ideas

  • Peaceful
  • Majestic
  • Heavenly
  • Fantastic
  • Awe-inspiring
  • Picturesque
  • Mystical
  • Breathless
  • Beautiful
  • Wonderful
  • Glorious
  • Magical
  • Magnificent nature
  • Beautiful nature
  • Romantic nature
  • Captivating nature
  • Outstanding nature
  • Heaven on earth
  • Gorgeous nature
  • Spectacular nature

Short Nature Captions/Quotes for Instagram

215 Epic Nature Captions for Instagram [Quotes & Captions about Nature] — What's Danny Doing?

  • Thank you nature
  • Nature, you masterpiece
  • Nature, you’re beautiful
  • Nature all the way
  • Nature you’re stunning 
  • Nature is the best
  • Thank you for healing me
  • The beauty of simplicity
  • Just look at this view!
  • Nature is incredible!
  • In silence, I find solace
  • Nature is the rhythm of life
  • Nature makes you feel alive
  • Nature helps you put things into perspective
  • Nature changes your perspective
  • Nature is the best sights 
  • Natural sights are the best
  • Natural world=best world
  • Natural surroundings can heal your mind
  • Nothing smells like nature

Best Forest Quotes for Instagram

50+ Forest Quotes | Short Deep Wild Wood Quotes with Images

  • “Trees do not preach learning and precepts. They preach, undeterred by particulars, the ancient law of life.” Herman Hesse
  • “Human beings grew up in forests; we have a natural affinity for them.” – Carl Sagan
  • “If you go to a desert, you will hear this mysterious voice: Be wise, protect your forests!” – Mehmet Murat Ildan
  • “Every forest branch moves differently in the breeze, but as they sway they connect at the roots.” – Rumi
  • “When you are lost in the wilderness, a tree will always point you in the right direction.” – Anthony T. Hincks
  • “Some of the best advice you will ever hear will come from the forest.” – Dacha Avelin
  • “We can learn a lot from the forests, regrowth, change, and beauty.” – Catherine Pulsifer
  • “Every time I have some moment on a seashore, or in the mountains, or sometimes in a quiet forest, I think this is why the environment has to be preserved.” – Bill Bradley
  • “Forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the winds long to play with your hair.” – Khalil Gibran
  • “I grew up in a forest. It’s like a room. It’s protected. Like a cathedral. It is a place between heaven and earth.” Anselm Kiefer
  • “Forests, lakes, and rivers, clouds and winds, stars and flowers, stupendous glaciers and crystal snowflakes, every form of animate or inanimate existence, leaves its impression upon the soul of man.” – Orison Swett Marden
  • “Use what talents you possess: the woods would be very silent if no birds sang there except those that sang best.” – Henry van Dyke
  • “Who else goes to the woods to find peace only to discover themselves in the process? I find forests declutter the mind with each breath the trees afford me.” Michael Poeltl
  • “To me, a lush carpet of pine needles or spongy grass is more welcome than the most luxurious Persian rug.” – Helen Keller
  • “Among the scenes which are deeply impressed on my mind, none exceed in sublimity the primaeval forests. No one can stand in these solitudes unmoved, and not feel that there is more in man than the mere breath of his body.” – Charles Darwin 
  • “Of all the paths you take in life, make sure a few of them are dirt.” – John Muir
  • “I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.” – Henry David Thoreau
  • “In nature, nothing is perfect and everything is perfect. Trees can be contorted, bent in weird ways, and they’re still beautiful.” – Alice Walker
  • “Ancient trees are precious. There is little else on Earth that plays host to such a rich community of life within a single living organism.” – Sir David Attenborough
  • “I felt my lungs inflate with the onrush of scenery- air, mountains, trees, people. I thought, ‘This is what it is to be happy.” – Sylvia Plath

Nature Captions for Instagram for Girl

  • Nature’s girl
  • Natural girl
  • Love being natural
  • All natural
  • Nature baby
  • Water baby
  • Wilderness girl.
  • All I ever need is this view. 
  • I wish I could give you the stars
  • Nature brings out the woman in me.
  • Treat yourself to a rejuvenating time in nature. 
  • Nature is the remedy for exhaustion. 
  • Tired of life? Try a dose of nature. 
  • Cities kill, nature heals. 
  • Explore your wanderlust, no matter where it takes you.
  • The scenery makes for the most gorgeous background.
  • Nature makes the perfect background. 
  • Nature is the best background. 
  • Nature is the best backdrop for your story.
  • Want to tell an interesting story? Spend time in nature. 

Nature Captions for Instagram for Boy

  • Nature boy
  • Natural boy
  • Wilderness boy
  • I am a boy who loves nature. 
  • Taking the long road through nature. 
  • I feel best when I spend time in nature. 
  • Feeling good nature. 
  • Branching out.
  • Love trees. 
  • Tree hugger. 
  • Tree spotter here. 
  • Birdwatching is my hobby. 
  • I love wildlife. 
  • Nature is my god.
  • I believe in nature. 
  • Never stop exploring. 
  • If you need me I will be outside.
  • Take the trails
  • Take the dirt path less travelled. 
  • Nature is the best place to heal. 

Cute Instagram Nature Quotes

  • Breath in the wild air.
  • Bloom where you are planted.
  • The best colors are found in nature. 
  • Follow your heart, especially if it leads you to nature. 
  • Those who appreciate nature will find beauty everywhere. 
  • More adventure, less worry. 
  • More nature, less worry
  • Lost in the woods
  • Never stop exploring
  • Take the trails
  • Go where you feel most alive
  • The mountains are calling
  • More adventure, less worry
  • Adopt nature’s pace
  • Flowers are cute
  • Birds are cute.
  • I love flowers.
  • I love watching cute birds
  • Go with the flow of nature
  • Listen to the trees, they tell stories

Instagram Captions for Exploring Nature

Best Nature Captions For Instagram - Over 200 Captions For Nature Photos!

 

  • Explore, it’s free
  • Never stop exploring
  • Keep exploring
  • Always keep exploring
  • Exploring never gets old
  • You are never too old to explore
  • You are never too young to explore
  • Explore beyond your comfort zone. 
  • Explore nature, it’s the best experience you’ll have. 
  • A natural exploration is the best.
  • Take a hike along the woods. 
  • There’s so much to learn by walking in a forest. 
  • Go exploring. It will take your breath away. 
  • Explorations give the best lessons. 
  • The best gift that you have is to explore. 
  • Exploring breaks down barriers. 
  • Exploring makes you a better person. 
  • Explorations are the best.
  • Explore the woods, and listen to the trees. 
  • Explore the woods and listen to the sounds of the forest. 

Instagram Captions for the Beauty of Nature

102 Nature Captions and Quotes for Instagram [2023] - Laure Wanders

  • You are never alone when you are connected with nature.
  • The beauty of nature is unmatched. 
  • Nature’s beauty is unparalleled. 
  • You cannot match the beauty of nature. 
  • You cannot imitate the beauty of nature. 
  • The beauty of nature is inimitable. 
  • Nature is beautiful, nothing else matters.
  • The beauty of nature is all that matters. 
  • Feeling down? Soak in the beauty of nature. 
  • Go out, explore nature. 
  • Nothing can compare to nature’s beauty.
  • Green vibes only.
  • Soak in the green vibes.
  • The world’s beauty is enough.
  • Soak in the natural beauty. 
  • Soak in the beauty of nature. 
  • Roam far & wander wide.
  • Listen, for the beauty of nature speaks. 
  • If you need me, I’ll be outside soaking in nature’s beauty.
  • Take the beautiful trails.

Deep Nature Quotes for Instagram

  • Be you, those who mind, don’t matter, those who matter, don’t mind.
  • Hope always beats fear, especially in nature. 
  • Nature is a reality begging to be experienced. 
  • I’ve found out that nature can heal almost anything.
  • Nature is stronger than fear. 
  • The more you learn about nature, the less you know.
  • In nature, everything happens for a reason.
  • Nature is the best therapist. 
  • All good things in nature are wild and free. 
  • Nature is the best shield from a cruel world. 
  • Spending time in nature builds character. 
  • Be natural – nothing’s better. 
  • Nature, nothing comes even close. 
  • Nature teaches the truest lessons. 
  • Ever want to learn something deep? Spend time in nature. 
  • Life skills and more – you can learn so much from nature. 
  • Survival in nature means survival of the fittest. 
  • The forest speaks and so you must listen. 
  • Nature is the perfect antidote.
  • The city may or may not get you but nature surely will. 

Greenery Captions/Quotes for Instagram

  • A little greenery can go a long way. 
  • Greenery is the best policy.
  • Bring some greenery into your life. 
  • Greenery is the best remedy. 
  • Some greenery is all it takes. 
  • Bring some greenery into your home. 
  • Spending time in greenery = therapy. 
  • Green mind = happy mind. 
  • Greenery is the best. 
  • I love greenery. 
  • I love being surrounded by greenery. 
  • Being surrounded by greenery is like magic. 
  • Greenery heals. 
  • Greenery fixes a broken heart. 
  • Greenery is good for the mind 
  • Greenery is the best way to unwind. 
  • You can never go wrong with some greenery. 
  • You won’t regret, if you spend time in greenery. 
  • A tired soul can be fixed with a little greenery. 
  • Exhausted? Spend some time in greenery and rejuvenate. 

Nature Photography Captions for Instagram
Rare nature photography captions nature post captions for instagram - YouTube

  • Nature photos are the best
  • The best clicks are in nature
  • Click nature
  • Take photos of nature. 
  • Nature photography is the best. 
  • The best pictures come out in nature. 
  • Ever taken photos of nature? It’s awesome. 
  • Photography is best practised in natural surroundings. 
  • Want to take beautiful photos? Head outdoors. 
  • The best photos are taken in nature. 
  • Natural photography is the ideal photography.
  • A picture can speak a thousand words. 
  • Pictures of wildlife can tell you a lot. 
  • No better way to reset. 
  • Time to branch out a little. 
  • Time to tune into nature and drop out. 
  • Let nature be your creative director. 
  • Want to feel creative? Head out into nature. 
  • Nature inspires great photography. 
  • Natural photography is the best. 

Nature Bio for Instagram
 

  • I love nature
  • Nature is my first love
  • Nature is my only love
  • I love natural surroundings
  • Nature baby
  • Sucker for nature
  • Roam far and wide
  • The beauty of nature is unparalleled
  • You cannot compare anything to nature’s beauty
  • I am a conservationist
  • Saving nature is my priority
  • Saving wildlife is my priority
  • I want to save nature
  • Nature can save us from ourselves
  • Life is better when surrounded by nature’s beauty!
  • Be grateful for the lessons nature has taught you
  • Natural vibes only
  • Good nature vibes only
  • Green vibes only
  • Go green

Tags: Natureone word captionsquotes



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Tenderly Painted Illustrations Capture Idyllic Nature Scenes

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Acrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia Seetim

Sometimes the greatest muses are just a hike away. England-based artist Olivia Seetim finds the subjects for her paintings in the varied beauty of her natural surroundings. From verdant forests to open meadows, these acrylic landscape paintings immortalize a certain time and place.

Although Seetim has a background in numerous types of media, she gravitated towards acrylics in 2020 and began sharing her work soon after. Her small canvases contain tender portrayals of places devoid of people, offering immersive visual escapes for the viewer. “The feelings conjured by nature are a great source of inspiration for me,” Seetim explains to My Modern Met. ‘For me, this includes a sense of safety and familiarity, but also adventure and curiosity. These are things I like to make sure are always present in my work.”

While many of these paintings depict daytime with a bright blue sky, others are accompanied by starry nights and a full moon. “The landscapes that inspire me the most range from dense forests to vast expanses of ocean,” she continues. “Also, astrophotography is something I deeply admire, and is where I get a lot of my ideas for galaxy landscapes.” Each of these pieces, though different, communicates the power and grandeur of the environment, and the respect we should have for it.

You can purchase original paintings via Seetim’s website, and keep up to date with her latest projects by following the artist on Instagram.

England-based artist Olivia Seetim captures idyllic landscapes in acrylic.

Acrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia SeetimAcrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia SeetimAcrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia Seetim

Her colorful paintings depict bucolic forests and meadows during the day as well as at night.

Acrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia SeetimAcrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia SeetimAcrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia SeetimAcrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia SeetimAcrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia SeetimAcrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia SeetimAcrylic Landscape Paintings by Olivia SeetimOlivia Seetim: Website | Instagram

My Modern Met granted permission to feature photos by Olivia Seetim.

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Naomi Campbell and Kate Moss pictured at height of their careers in Arthur Elgort exhibition

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A new exhibition is celebrating the work of famed fashion photographer Arthur Elgort over the span of his five-decade career, including his unforgettable shoots with ’90s Christy Turlington, Naomi Campbell, and Kate Moss. 

Arthur Elgort On the Move is on display at the Staley-Wise Gallery in New York City until January 28, 2023, and features well-known photos as well as new images that were pulled from his archive that had never been printed or exhibited. 

Born and raised in New York City, the 82-year-old artist studied painting at Hunter College before he segued into photography. He became known for his candid ‘snapshot’ style images after making his debut in British Vogue in 1971.

Elgort, who is the father of actor Ansel Elgort, breathed new life into fashion photography by taking his models out in public and encouraging them to move freely during shoots. 

‘When my career was just beginning, I noticed that most of the magazines had plenty of studio photographers. All I saw were models standing still,’ he said in a statement. ‘So I decided to do something else. I took my models out on the streets of New York, Paris, or wherever I was, and the magazines liked it. It felt different.’ 

Fashion photographer Arthur Elgort is showcasing his work at the Arthur Elgort On the Move exhibition at the Staley-Wise Gallery in New York City. His photo of Kate Moss that was taken at Cafe Lipp in Paris for Vogue Italia in 1993 is among the highlights

Fashion photographer Arthur Elgort is showcasing his work at the Arthur Elgort On the Move exhibition at the Staley-Wise Gallery in New York City. His photo of Kate Moss that was taken at Cafe Lipp in Paris for Vogue Italia in 1993 is among the highlights 

Elgort is known for his 'snapshot' style photography, and he captured Lisa Taylor driving over the George Washington Bridge in New York City, the wind whipping through her hair, for Vogue in 1976

Elgort is known for his ‘snapshot’ style photography, and he captured Lisa Taylor driving over the George Washington Bridge in New York City, the wind whipping through her hair, for Vogue in 1976 

The photographer is best known for his work with Vogue, but he also shot a number of fashion campaigns. He took this black and white photo of models Rosie Vela, Alva Chinn, and Karen Bjornson (left to right) for Halston in 1977

The photographer is best known for his work with Vogue, but he also shot a number of fashion campaigns. He took this black and white photo of models Rosie Vela, Alva Chinn, and Karen Bjornson (left to right) for Halston in 1977 

In 2008, Elgort had Caroline Trentini pose on top of a basketball hoop and David Alvarez leap into the air below her in this New York City shoot that was featured in Vogue

In 2008, Elgort had Caroline Trentini pose on top of a basketball hoop and David Alvarez leap into the air below her in this New York City shoot that was featured in Vogue

Elgort snapped this ballet-inspired photo of Naomi Campbell in Paris for Alaia in 1986, the year she was discovered. Campbell was studying ballet at the Italia Conti Academy of Theatre Arts in England when she was scouted

Elgort snapped this ballet-inspired photo of Naomi Campbell in Paris for Alaia in 1986, the year she was discovered. Campbell was studying ballet at the Italia Conti Academy of Theatre Arts in England when she was scouted 

In 1994, Claudia Schiffer was at the height of her career and looked every bit the star when she was photographed by Elgort in Rome for Valentino

In 1994, Claudia Schiffer was at the height of her career and looked every bit the star when she was photographed by Elgort in Rome for Valentino 

Models tended to wear less makeup when working with Elgort, who captured this stunning black and white portrait of Christy Turlington in New York City in 1993

Models tended to wear less makeup when working with Elgort, who captured this stunning black and white portrait of Christy Turlington in New York City in 1993

The photographer captured Linda Evangelista playing the piano in head-to-toe plaid for Vogue shoot in Scotland in 1991

The photographer captured Linda Evangelista playing the piano in head-to-toe plaid for Vogue shoot in Scotland in 1991

Elgort was knowing for working with models, but he also photographed The Rolling Stones standing on top of a barn at Long View Farm in North Brookfield, Massachusetts, in 1981. The band spent six weeks living and rehearsing on the property before going on tour that year

Elgort was knowing for working with models, but he also photographed The Rolling Stones standing on top of a barn at Long View Farm in North Brookfield, Massachusetts, in 1981. The band spent six weeks living and rehearsing on the property before going on tour that year 

Elgort took this playful snapshot of Gail Elliott, Yasmin Le Bon, Christy Turlington and Linda Evangelista (left to right) laughing on a New York City sidewalk in 1987

Elgort took this playful snapshot of Gail Elliott, Yasmin Le Bon, Christy Turlington and Linda Evangelista (left to right) laughing on a New York City sidewalk in 1987 

One of Elgort's more recent images featured in the exhibition is this photo of British model Fran Summers, which is titled 'Up, Up, and Away.' Summers was photographed in West Hampton, New York, for British Vogue in 2019

One of Elgort’s more recent images featured in the exhibition is this photo of British model Fran Summers, which is titled ‘Up, Up, and Away.’ Summers was photographed in West Hampton, New York, for British Vogue in 2019 

Elgort traveled all of the world for his shoots, including to Nepal, where he photographed Kate Moss with an elephant for British Vogue in 1993

Elgort traveled all of the world for his shoots, including to Nepal, where he photographed Kate Moss with an elephant for British Vogue in 1993 

The photographer captured Ethiopian model Liya Kebede and rapper Andre 3000 on a vespa for this 1950s-inspired shoot featured in Vogue in 2005

The photographer captured Ethiopian model Liya Kebede and rapper Andre 3000 on a vespa for this 1950s-inspired shoot featured in Vogue in 2005

Another photo from Liya Kebede and Andre 3000 shows them mid laugh

Another photo from Liya Kebede and Andre 3000’s Vogue shoot shows them mid laugh

Elgort was in Paris when he captured this portrait of German designer Karl Lagerfeld in 1983, the year he became the creative director of Chanel, a position he held until his death in 2019

Elgort was in Paris when he captured this portrait of German designer Karl Lagerfeld in 1983, the year he became the creative director of Chanel, a position he held until his death in 2019

Elgort photographed Christy Turlington peeking her head out the top of a car in New Orleans. The black and white shot was featured in British Vogue in 1990

Elgort photographed Christy Turlington peeking her head out the top of a car in New Orleans. The black and white shot was featured in British Vogue in 1990 

Naomi Campbell and Christy Turlington were photographed walking on the grounds at Parlange Plantation in Louisiana for Vogue in 1992

Naomi Campbell and Christy Turlington were photographed walking on the grounds at Parlange Plantation in Louisiana for Vogue in 1992

In 1976, Lisa Taylor struck a pose at the TWA lounge at John F. Kennedy International Airport while working with Elgort on a shoot for Vogue

In 1976, Lisa Taylor struck a pose at the TWA lounge at John F. Kennedy International Airport while working with Elgort on a shoot for Vogue 

Elgort photographed trombonist Wycliffe Gordon performing in New York City in 1992

Elgort photographed trombonist Wycliffe Gordon performing in New York City in 1992

In 2002, the photographer captured famed designer Manolo Blahnik turned away from the camera in Paris

In 2002, the photographer captured famed designer Manolo Blahnik turned away from the camera in Paris 

Elgort traveled to Moscow to photograph Christy Turlington for Vogue in 1990, the year before the dissolution of the Soviet Union

Elgort traveled to Moscow to photograph Christy Turlington for Vogue in 1990, the year before the dissolution of the Soviet Union 

Elgort photographed German model Nadja Auermann running across Park Avenue in New York City for a spread featured in Vogue in 1995

Elgort photographed German model Nadja Auermann running across Park Avenue in New York City for a spread featured in Vogue in 1995 

In 1982, Elgort turned the camera on himself for a self-portrait at his home in New York City

In 1982, Elgort turned the camera on himself for a self-portrait at his home in New York City 

Elgort captured these models stretching and talking on set in New York City in 1978. Titled 'In the Studio,' the photograph was featured in Vogue

Elgort captured these models stretching and talking on set in New York City in 1978. Titled ‘In the Studio,’ the photograph was featured in Vogue 

In 1988, the photographer shot this image of models standing around at the Christian Lacroix Haute Couture Atelier in Paris

In 1988, the photographer shot this image of models standing around at the Christian Lacroix Haute Couture Atelier in Paris 

Model Shaun Casey was captured flinging her skirt over her head during this playful shoot for Italian Harper's Bazaar in 1978

Model Shaun Casey was captured flinging her skirt over her head during this playful shoot for Italian Harper’s Bazaar in 1978 

Elgort took this black and white photo of a lion while visiting Africa in 1991

Elgort took this black and white photo of a lion while visiting Africa in 1991 

Elgort's photo of Giraffe Manor, a boutique hotel with a resident heard of giraffes in Nairobi, Kenya, was featured in Vogue in 2007

Elgort’s photo of Giraffe Manor, a boutique hotel with a resident heard of giraffes in Nairobi, Kenya, was featured in Vogue in 2007 

Father and son: Photographer Arthur Elgort and his actor son Ansel Elgort pictured at The Royalton Hotel in New York City in June 2014

Father and son: Photographer Arthur Elgort and his actor son Ansel Elgort pictured at The Royalton Hotel in New York City in June 2014 

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Relocated ‘nuisance’ bear travels nearly 1,000 miles, returns to national park

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Bear 609 (Submitted by Bill Stiver)

A bold black bear with a reputation for looting campsites and backpacks has wowed researchers once again.

Bear 609, a black bear in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, had to be relocated for exhibiting “food-conditioning behavior,” or what happens when bears get accustomed to eating food and garbage from people, explained Bill Stiver, a wildlife biologist for the park.

“We did try to do some things to prevent moving her the first year,” Stiver said. “We let her go back in the same location, and often it will put that fear of people in them, but she returned the next year, getting food out of fire rings and challenging people for their backpacks.”

National Park Service officials moved Bear 609 from Great Smoky Mountains National Park to Cherokee National Forest, about 45 or 50 miles from where she was caught. She was fitted with a GPS tracker before being released. 

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A view of the Cherokee National Forest from the west bound I-26 scenic overlook in Unicoi County, TN on August 04, 2016 (Photo by Bryan Steffy/Getty Images)

From there, the bear “almost immediately” started traveling south, trekking through Georgia and South Carolina before circling around Asheville, North Carolina. She headed north from Asheville and reentered the national park, eventually making it within five or six miles of where she was caught on July 8.

READ MORE: Heartbreaking photos show whale migrated 3,000 miles despite broken spine

“Frankly, I thought she would just go back to where we caught her because a lot of bears do that,” Stiver said. “That circle around those few states was 300-400 miles.”

85609-Map.jpg

Map showing Bear 609’s epic journey (submitted by Bill Stiver)

But Bear 609 wasn’t done with her travels yet. She turned south again and did an even bigger circle, about 450-500 miles through Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Tennessee.

She was even spotted at a shopping mall in Alpharetta, Georgia, where she was hit by a car. Still, she kept going, crossing major interstates and passing through urban areas.

“She just kind of never stopped moving,” Stiver said.

READ MORE: These animals are champions in this year’s Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards

Now, her trackers believe she’s denned in Tennessee, back in Cherokee National Forest “about 20 miles from where we dropped her off.”

Stiver is one of the researchers for a three-year study tracking what happens to black bears when they’re relocated from the park. 

 Why she traveled as far as she did is still a mystery.

“As we’re doing this study we’ve seen a few bears make some very long distance moves, but this is by far the longest,” Stiver said.

Bear 609 is lucky: Stiver said about two-thirds of relocated bears die within four-five months. That’s why it’s so important to educate people on reducing human-bear conflicts and preventing them from getting to food and garbage.

Exploring Great Smoky Mountains National Park

A black bear searches for food along the Tennessee border at Newfound Gap on May 11, 2018 near Cherokee, North Carolina. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park straddles the Tennessee and North Carolina borders in the heart of the Appalachian Mounta

“When that happens obviously they’re more vulnerable to getting hit by cars, and they’re more vulnerable to hunting,” Stiver said.

Bearwise.org is a great resource for learning what to do — and what not to do — if you live or recreate in areas with bears, he said.

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