Went up into the park yesterday at daylight thirty. We had a beautiful morning, dry with thinly filtered light. Found the dominant bull in the valley and he had several more wanna-be bulls following him and his ladies. The smaller bulls are actually more challenging for photographers. Whereas the dominant bulls pretty much ignore you as an insignificant creature, the mid-level guys will come over and try to bully you around. I guess they get frustrated being pushed around by the larger bulls so when they find somebody smaller than them they take advantage. But who knows...
I spotted the big dominant bull a mile or so up the valley but on the other side. He was with three or four cows and several smaller bulls trailing them a couple hundred yards back. By the time I crossed the valley the big guy and the gals had moved into a hemlock thicket. I staked out the area by setting up near a lone spruce tree in the open valley floor about 75m or so from the thicket. The bull could be heard grunting once in a while in the thicket. I ultimately spent the morning shooting the "groupies" as the big boy slept away the morning.
On the way in, ran across this guy following a cow right alongside the trail. He has an unusually tall and narrow set of antlers. He was following the cow so once I got behind him there was no chance to get a frontal shot. This was pre-sunrise but some light showing up on the clouds.
This was the first groupie to come by. This is the same little bull that harassed my wife and I a couple of weeks back when we were out hiking. He's looking back at a couple of more bulls that we'll get to in a bit.
The sun was just hitting the valley floor opposite. This is the same guy as he passed by with a good look at the "bell" under his chin. Older bulls in Alaska typically don't have the pull portion of the bell because it gets frost bitten during severe winters and eventually falls off. So ironically the longer the bell, the younger the bull.
Same moose again. Cropped to show the behavior licking his lips. They do this when excited, whether due to a cow, about to fight another bull, or as in this case presumably due to my presence.
Here come a couple more of them feeding there way up the valley. In this particular location the best strategy with the moose is to stay in clear view of them. They are less nervous if they know exactly where you are. The down side is that if they feel spunky they know exactly where you are...
In this shot you can see the channels in the top of the antlers where the veins ran when the velvet was still on them. This was shot full frame at 200mm. What's wrong in this shot? His ears are indicating that he's not a happy guy.
Sure enough, here he comes. This is way too close! This is a vertical crop out of a full frame shot at 155mm, full frame sensor camera. Not to worry. I just stepped around my tree and he kept on about his business. It's not as bad as the photo looks. He was not charging at a run. Just walking purposefully directly towards me.
See, here we are a few minutes later, all chummy. He tolerated me hanging out with him for an hour or so waiting to see if the big guy would come out to play. This was shot full frame at 300mm. He was even confident enough about his safety to lay flat down on his side and sleep for a while. But alas, this was the highlight of the day. Big boy didn't come out before it was time for me to go.