Untamed Images Blog

    Adventures in Nature Photography

    Browsing Posts tagged Olare Orok Conservancy

    A female cheetah poses cooperatively during a rain shower in Kenya's Olare Orok Conservancy located just outside the Maasai Mara.

    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV, EF500mm f/4L IS USM at 500 mm, 1/500 sec at f/4, ISO 1600


    Admittedly, it has taken me far too long, but I have finally posted an image gallery from a trip to Southern Kenya that Alison and I took several years ago. The game viewing we experienced on this trip was nothing short of spectacular. We saw multiple river crossings by massive herds of wildebeest and zebra, predation by crocodiles, lions mating, lions with cubs, countless cheetahs with cubs, and brilliant sunsets, to name just a few of the highlights.

    I hope you enjoy viewing the pictures. Please click here to see the gallery. As always, I welcome your questions and comments.

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    The Royal Couple

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    A lion and lioness relax at dawn among the grasses of the Olare Orok Conservancy in Southwestern Kenya.


    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV, EF70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM +1.4x at 280 mm, 1/200 sec at f/4, ISO 400

    I am currently working my way through a ridiculous number of images that I took on a recent trip to Africa, but because I am confident that the image of the lion couple shown above will make the final cut, I wanted to share it right away. I have to give a large measure of credit to our expert guide from Kicheche Bush Camp for making this photograph a reality. This particular guide, whose name is Nampaso, understands the needs of the wildlife photographer perhaps better than any guide I have ever worked with in Africa.

    We set out one morning a few minutes before dawn and Nampaso immediately began urgently scouting the area near camp for an interesting subject, knowing that I would want to take advantage of the sweet light occurring in the first minutes after sunrise. Within fifteen minutes he had located a pair of lions that we assumed were involved in courtship since they had separated themselves from the rest of their pride. As the sun crept above the horizon, Nampaso positioned the vehicle such that the lions were dramatically backlit. I captured this image of the lions in a quiet moment, but before long they returned to the business of mating, which lions are known to do up to forty times a day!

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