When is enough enough?
Photo: Ulrich Jobs

When is enough enough?
Photo: Ulrich Jobs

Swimming lesson
Photo: Ulrich Jobs

Fishing lesson
Photo: Ulrich Jobs

When I say it I mean it. Guess bear parenting is difficult too.
Photo: Ulrich Jobs

Port Hardy on Vancouver Island is the starting point to the Great Bear Lodge using these wonderful more than 80 years old land/sea planes.
Photos: Ulrich Jobs


They say you have to be unlucky not to see a tiger visiting Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve and I believe that is true. We were lucky to get another opportunity for some great shots of a beautiful animal. So glad we made the effort to come and see those wonderful big cats in the wild.
Photo: Ulrich Jobs

How many tiger photos do you need? As many as you like. Tigers are just beautiful even in monochrome pictures.
Photo: Ulrich Jobs

A photographer´s dream becomes true when a tiger leaves the bush and approaches a waterhole. It gets really exiting when it decides to cool off and enters the water for a walk or swim and you are in right position to see the face and some reflections in the water. Thank you Anshu from Samode Safari Lodge at Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve.
Photo: Ulrich Jobs

Tiger, tiger, tiger! First time we heard our trackers in the Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve shouting the sighting of a tiger we got really excited and were hoping for good position to get a decent shot. Sometimes it worked out – sometimes not so much. But the animals never disappointed. To see them in the wilderness in their natural habitat Roaming around freely is an experience of a lifetime just like meeting gorillas in the impenetrable rain forest. We are very grateful we got the opportunity to do both.
Photo: Ulrich Jobs

You would think you have to leave the city to find tawny frogmouth. I was very surprised to spot two of them in the front yard of some friends we visited yesterday but I should have known better. From Wikipedia: They can be found in almost any habitat type, including forests and woodlands, scrub and heathland vegetation, and savannahs.[19] However, they are rarely seen in heavy rainforests and treeless deserts.[20] They are seen in large numbers in areas populated with many river gums and casuarinas, and can be found along river courses if these areas are timbered.[6] Tawny frogmouths are common in suburbs, having adapted to human presence. They have been reported nesting in parks and gardens with trees.[6]
Photos: Ulrich Jobs

