The last time I visited Bosque I thought it was the last but
here I was in mid-December. Most people
come to photograph the sandhill cranes and the other migratory birds that spend
the winter here. What keeps me coming
back is the larger numbers of waterfowl in the 100’s of thousands. In the mornings, the unison blast-off of
thousands of snow geese as the sun emerges is a spectacle as impressive as that
of the ungulate migrations in East Africa. Not just the seeing the white clouds
of feathers rising, but listening to the roar caused by the flapping of the
wings, as the birds raise above the water impoundments where they spend the
night.
Bosque Del Apache is a man-made refuge for wildlife where
crops are planted to feed them. So it is
not a natural habitat but is like a resort for the migrating birds to spend the
winter in a protected area from hunting with a source of food. As soon as they leave the area, they are
subjected to hunting and rare is the day that one does not hear the blast of
guns along the boundaries of the refuge.
Bosque is the ideal habitat because it provides food, a hunter’s free
zone but most important, the water provides a relative safe place from
predators to spend the night.
The first morning I arrived in mid-December I was lucky to
observe a group of sandhill cranes chasing away a coyote. This predator was hiding in the brushes in
the shoreline waiting for the cranes to get closer but it was discovered. The alarm was given and group of the birds
formed a vigilante posse and escorted the frustrated coyote away.
The routine at Bosque is to get to the park early in the
morning from nearby Socorro early to secure a good photographic spot and wait
for the blast-off of the snow geese or the sandhill cranes living the
impoundments in small family groups. The
competition for space is noted; at times having photographers fighting for a
specific waterfront spot.
The number of photographers is usually large and mostly
carrying long telephotos mounted in tripods; some use 2-3 systems on tripods to
include recording devices and fire them selectively with wireless
controls. Some use one camera for
traditional photography and others for videos.
And this is why I ask myself why do I keep returning to Bosque? How many photos do I need of this place? With so many photographers going there, is it
not rational to go to places where no photographer has gone before. But are such places left in the world?
Most activity occurs in the early morning when the birds
depart to feed in fields outside the park and at sunset, when the birds return
to water impoundments that offer protection against predators to spend the
night. In between, I ride a few times
along the loops inside the park and then I go roaming around the rural roads
photographing landscapes and abandoned farms? Sometimes on catch surprises as
the screech owl above watching the tourists passing by without been discovered. And at the nearby park headquarters in the
cactus garden, the Gamble’s quails are easy to photograph.
One day, I drove to the refuge of Bernardo, where the birds
feed in the corn and alfalfa planted by the government. This was different with some of the
cultivated fields still standing and a range of mountains as background
offering a different landscape than the one at Bosque.
While here, I noticed a herd of about 15 mule deer with a
male with a big rack at the edge of the cornfield just watching me. Suddenly they started running out in to the
open field where the snow geese were eating and resting. As the mule deer approached they all took off
to move out of the way landing again just a few feet away. This is one of those rare occasions when
being at the right place allows photographers to capture unique events.
My biggest photography challenge is air travel. Been able to carry a backpack aboard a plane
is becoming almost impossible due to the rules and to their loose
interpretations by the gate and flight crews.
But thanks to the I-Phones, in the near future there may no need to
carry 30-40 pounds camera gear in a backpack.
My friends were admiring the quality of the images and videos taken with
such phones…the miracles of modern technology.
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