Thursday 29 December 2016

Care To Click MAKE A DIFFERENCE!

http://caretoclick.com/?referral_id=4506-ce0b6ca7f4507de855135e7882afc57d
Join me on CaretoClick today to help People, Animals and the environment!



Conservation photographer wants his emotional photos to propel you into action

Jasper Doest makes people notice worthy environmental causes.

JAYMI HEIMBUCH
October 12, 2016, 6:20 a.m.
Photographing storks that have changed their migrations to stay at dumps inspired Joest to start a #challengetochange campaign.
Photographing storks that have changed their migrations to stay at dumps inspired Joest to start a #challengetochange campaign. (Photo: Jasper Doest)
To Jasper Doest, it doesn't matter if a photo tells a story if it doesn't inspire action. What an audience feels and chooses to do after viewing his work is as important to him as the work itself.
The recipient of many prestigious awards, Doest focus is on tough environmental issues and he has launched a #challengetochange campaign alongside his photography. When you look at his emotional images, which are as much fine art as photojournalism, it's impossible not to ponder how one can help both the species and the planet.
We spoke with Doest about what he seeks out in his subjects, how he combats compassion fatigue and what he hopes to accomplish through his photography.
MNN: How did you get started in photography?
Jasper Doest: When I look back at images of my childhood, photography always seemed to play a role in my life. Firstly, my dad liked to do photography, and by the age of 4 I had my own Kodak Instamatic. However, it wasn't until the age of 20 that I purchased a SLR camera with my first salary, working as a laboratory assistant. I really enjoyed taking photographs, but this first camera soon ended up in the closet. When I decided to continue my studies, I took a job in an electronic warehouse, accidentally ending up in the camera department. I had no knowledge about the cameras whatsoever but decided I needed to acquire some to help people choose the right camera. And from that moment on I was hooked!
My parents raised me with a lot of respect for the natural world. When I started out with my photography I tried many disciplines, but I found the most enjoyment when I was working with the natural world. I therefore decided to take a biology degree to enhance my knowledge about the subjects I was photographing. The study for that degree took me to the Arctic region, where I took an image of two Arctic fox kits that won a major award in the Netherlands.
That's when I decided I had to follow my heart and become a full-time professional, dedicating my time to documenting the utter beauty and fragility of the world that surrounds us. That was more than 10 years ago, and that's what I'm still doing now.
Arctic foxes play together.Arctic foxes play together. (Photo: Jasper Doest)
What drew you to conservation as a focus in your work?
When I visited the Arctic for the first time, I was stunned by the vast landscape that had been there as far as humans can remember. Yet when I returned, only a couple of years later, I noticed the significant changes in the landscape and its weather patterns.
I remember I sat down on a rock and stared into the distance in the drizzling rain, and I realized science wasn't for me. It would take me forever to statistically prove something that I could instantly communicate to an audience as a photographer. That's the power of photography. I would even dare to say that without imagery, we wouldn't be able to communicate about some of these issues as they are so complicated that we need visual guidance.
Foraging storks surround a bulldozer in a landfill. Foraging storks surround a bulldozer in a landfill. (Photo: Jasper Doest)
How did you first discover that storks were changing their migratory patterns based on landfills?
I started focusing on the natural history of white storks shortly after I started as a professional photographer. The issues I wanted to tackle in the Arctic felt too big for a new kid on the block like I was. I felt too far away from the fire and realized it would take a lot of investments to produce the image material to really make a difference. In the meantime, I saw some of conservation photography heroes, like Paul Nicklen, doing such an amazing job around the poles so I didn't feel the urge to contribute here. I wanted to work on something that deserved attention closer to home.
I decided to work one season on a bird species that is deeply embedded in many cultures: the white stork. I wasn't aware of any conservation issues, besides the bird being one of the big reintroduction successes of the past century.
During the summer, my wife, Maaike, and I decided to travel to Spain for the holidays, and it was there that I discovered large numbers of white storks above the local landfills. The gate of the landfill was open, and I decided to walk in and ask if I could take some photographs.
What compelled you to tell this particular story through photography?
What I got to see inside that dump goes beyond words. It was something I had to share with the outside world. Photography seemed the only way to do it. Unfortunately, I don't speak Spanish and the people at the dump didn't speak any English which made communication very difficult.
In the end, it turned out I wouldn't get any permission. I cried so hard while driving back to our camping site. It took me two years to get permission, and when I got back to Spain after a 20-hour car drive, waving with a governmental permission, the door remained closed as all landfills are privately owned properties and therefore my governmental permission turned out to be useless. I don't recall ever being so frustrated with my work, with myself, with the world.
But still I felt that it was my obligation to tell the story, which in the end I did with the help of many Spanish and Portuguese friends. We were able to portray the symbol of new life, the white stork, as it is foraging by the thousands on the excretions of our human society.
In the end, the story wasn't really about storks anymore. Through the images I'm holding a mirror to human society by using the white stork as a character.
White storks gather by the thousands at landfills.White storks gather by the thousands at landfills. (Photo: Jasper Doest)
It's easy for conservationists to experience compassion fatigue. Did you experience it while working on this story? Do you have strategies for staving that off?
I think that if you believe in the necessity of the story being told, there is a way back. But you have to truly believe, and of course you run into all sorts of doubt. But then again, you never doubt the cause, so you keep on doing whatever you can to make it possible. People who give up have stopped believing. And when you lose your faith, holding on is difficult. So before I jump into any multi-year plan, I need to know if I believe in it's cause. If I do, I'm all in and no strategies for staving off compassion fatigue are necessary.
You're a fellow with the International League of Conservation Photographers. How has being part of this organization helped or shaped your environmental work?
I was invited to apply for iLCP back in 2008. However, I didn't feel ready, I was still discovering photography as a communicative tool. Five years later I applied, not knowing how I would be able to contribute to the organization but hoping I could learn how to make an actual difference through my photography.
Soon after being accepted, I flew to Washington for the annual meeting, and I was very pleased to find a passionate group of colleagues who are all on the same mission. Some very interesting discussions have been raised among the fellows, which were very inspiring for me. I think the fellowship has unique qualities to make a difference as a group, and I'm looking forward being part of that movement within the next years.
This award-winning image of a Japanese macaque is one of many unique portraits Doest has taken of these famous monkeys. This award-winning image of a Japanese macaque is one of many unique portraits Doest has taken of these famous monkeys. (Photo: Jasper Doest)
You manage to craft an extraordinary blend of fine art and conservation in your work. What is your thinking process behind creating an image that can capture emotion, art and a story in one frame?
I love the balancing game between fine art and photojournalistic work. Within this modern world, people seem to be getting used to all those hard-hitting images we get to see on a daily basis. They don't work as well anymore as they used to in the past. The most dangerous thing on this planet is when people stop caring. And that is something that is happening more and more — people don't seem to care anymore.
Why's that, you might ask. Well, there are multiple reasons to find. But one is that they are losing hope. They've lost faith in "the system" and as a result only care about themselves as they struggle for survival: their family, their pension, their healthcare. Throw hard-hitting imagery towards an audience that has given up... would that make a difference? I don't think so.
We have to make people care. We need them to fall in love with the subject we want them to care about, and once we're in, there is hope to make them care enough in order to make a difference. And I believe the aesthetic quality helps here. It helps people fall in love, and once you love something, you're willing to fight for it.
So what I do is place myself in a situation that has the conservation content, and I try to search for aesthetic ways to frame my images. I search for things that make my heart beat faster, not only content-wise, but visually. And over the years I find a home in this balancing act.
However, sometimes I fall off and find myself creating visually interesting photographs without any message, or images full of content but not visually pleasing. But that doesn't really matter, because I know that if I try long enough, I'll be back on that slack line again. It's where I feel most comfortable.
Joest has spent years photographing Japanese macaques. Doest has spent years photographing Japanese macaques. (Photo: Jasper Doest)
Your work photographing Japanese macaques particularly illustrates your ability to capture emotion and art in a storytelling frame  and you made a concerted effort to show them in a way never seen before. What was your approach to photographing these famous monkeys?
That's a question I have gotten many times, and I find it difficult to answer. I think I've just been myself and I've tried to get accepted for who I am. It's the biggest compliment in life when you get accepted [by an animal], and it takes a certain level of behavioral adaptation to make that work.
It means you need to read and understand the social dynamics, which seems to come quite natural to me. As I got to know this group of macaques better, it was easier to understand what I wanted to bring to the surface through my images. It's how I always work.
I'm not a fast photographer. I need time to submerge myself within a system, trying to find out what it is that makes me feel excited. Once I know, I start searching for aesthetic ways to bring these elements together.
Most people who have visited the monkeys have visited them only for a couple of days. That's like meeting somebody for the first time. You might feel a connection, but it's very difficult to bring out these unique distinct qualities that make this individual special.
Therefore you need to spend time, give the individual its personal space to move while you're there. You build a relationship, and once you've gained access, these special images you've been looking for start coming to you.
If you ask me, I didn't do anything special with these monkeys. It didn't feel like it took a lot of effort. These moments came to me, and I was able to anticipate and accept these unique moments while spending time with these individual monkeys.
Doest's photography is a blend of journalistic storytelling and fine art. Doest's photography is a blend of journalistic storytelling and fine art. (Photo: Jasper Doest)
Do you have other stories currently taking up your interest, or a topic you'd like to start working on?
There are many things that have my interest. In the past I've tried to force myself looking for new subjects. While working with the storks, I was afraid of the black hole that would appear if I would ever finish that story. I spent nights awake thinking about the moment that in the end never occurred. Would I do a story about mute swans? Or perhaps I could work with gelada baboons in Ethiopia. The list was endless.
In the end, an editor reminded me it is not a matter of subject. It could be anything as long as it's a story that you can't stop thinking about.
I couldn't see my next subject as my mind was occupied with the storks, and now that I've finished there are other things that have crossed my path. And as I'm doing my research on the topic, I can't wait to submerge myself again. Effortlessly, because I once again believe in the necessity to tell this story. These things do not come up when sitting behind the desk. It's love. I fall in love with my subjects.
And once you fall in love, there is no way back.
"Snow Monkeys" appears in the October 2016 issue of National Geographic Magazine. 



Saturday 24 December 2016

KIND is... Transformation of Hearts


Show you care by joining www.care2.com and help change the world by signing petitions and sharing with others.  You earn rewards as you do so and can redeem them to support your favorite charities!

Here is an article from their blog about their favorite resources!

Some of our favorite resources

It can be difficult to keep a pulse on all the injustices facing people, animals, and the world. Sometimes we don’t hear about a problem until it’s too late to do anything about it. Or, we hear about it only once many people and animals have already suffered. So we put together a list of some of our favorite resources to educate ourselves on important topics of social justice. We hope you’ll use these to find issues to build campaigns around. You can amplify a cause by creating a petition, organizing a rally or putting pressure on decision makers.
Enjoy, and comment with your favorite resources too!
Animal welfare:
Human rights:
Civil Rights:
Women’s rights:
LGBTQ rights:
The Environment:
UK (various):



Some of our favorite resources

COMMENT in support of this video and 5$ will be donated!

https://www.facebook.com/telus/videos/10154864872452608/

This is Lynelle, a brave Canadian teen who stood up to cyberbullying and joined us on the WE Day stage to help youth #RiseAbove. You too can help youth #RiseAbove cyberbullying. For every comment in support left on this post, we’ll donate $5 to the WE Movement.

WE is a movement that brings people together and gives them the tools to change the world. Our unique family of organizations empowers people at home, around the world and with our social enterprise.

The movement isn’t complete without you! Get involved and learn how you can Live WE everyday.
Our unique family of organizations empowers people at home, around the world and with our social enterprise.

WE Charity empowers change with resources that create sustainable impact. We do this through domestic programs like WE Schools and internationally through WE Villages.

With ME to WE, our social enterprise, we create socially conscious products and experiences that allow people to do good through their everyday choices. Half of all ME to WE’s profits are donated to support WE Charity, while the other half is reinvested to grow the mission of the social enterprise.

WE Day is a powerful, life-changing experience with world-renowned speakers and performers, mixed with real inspirational stories of change. This year alone over 200,000 young people will come together in 14 stadiums across Canada, the U.S. and the U.K. Plus, millions will tune in to our live televised broadcasts.

Being empowered to change the world is what the WE Movement is all about.
WE is a movement that brings people together and gives them the tools to change the world. Join the movement at WE.org




Baby Monkey is Best Friends with Goat

Thanksgiving on the Space Net at "Gobble Gobble Bitches, Yeah"



Help reduce CO2 emissions and fight global warming! Plant trees for free by simply clicking on the link. Reduce carbon emissions and fight global warming. http://ecologyfund.com/
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.http://www.care2.com/click-to-donate/rainforest/
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When You Plant It Forward, You Change Lives.
https://info.ecosia.org/what
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When you choose the activity you want to support and click the "Donate" button, Brother will make a donation of one yen (about one cent USD) per click on your behalf.
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#changelives #letsgetplanting #SaveEarth #natureheals #ourplanet #treehuggers #treelovers

Slackladder: Alex Mason Takes on 8 Slacklines in the Hawaiian Jungle



Help reduce CO2 emissions and fight global warming! Plant trees for free by simply clicking on the link. Reduce carbon emissions and fight global warming. http://ecologyfund.com/
http://caretoclick.com/…
http://therainforestsite.greatergood.com/
.http://www.care2.com/click-to-donate/rainforest/
http://www.care2.com/click-to-donate/global-warming/
When You Plant It Forward, You Change Lives.
https://info.ecosia.org/what
http://cannecy.free.fr/iforest/en/
http://www.landcareniagara.com/index.php
http://www.answer4earth.com/index.php
http://www.klimatbalans.se/klicka.html
http://www.diewaldseite.de/
When you choose the activity you want to support and click the "Donate" button, Brother will make a donation of one yen (about one cent USD) per click on your behalf.
http://www.brotherearth.com/en/top.html
#EcoFriendly #GreenLiving #green #grow #growtrees #trees #plant #planttrees #deforestration #forests #ecology #forestration #ClimateChange #botany #environment #EnvironmentalScientist #SaveThePlanet #ReduceCO2 #MakeADifference
#changelives #letsgetplanting #SaveEarth #natureheals #ourplanet #treehuggers #treelovers

Slackladder: Alex Mason Takes on 8 Slacklines in the Hawaiian Jungle



Help reduce CO2 emissions and fight global warming! Plant trees for free by simply clicking on the link. Reduce carbon emissions and fight global warming. http://ecologyfund.com/
http://caretoclick.com/…
http://therainforestsite.greatergood.com/
.http://www.care2.com/click-to-donate/rainforest/
http://www.care2.com/click-to-donate/global-warming/
When You Plant It Forward, You Change Lives.
https://info.ecosia.org/what
http://cannecy.free.fr/iforest/en/
http://www.landcareniagara.com/index.php
http://www.answer4earth.com/index.php
http://www.klimatbalans.se/klicka.html
http://www.diewaldseite.de/
When you choose the activity you want to support and click the "Donate" button, Brother will make a donation of one yen (about one cent USD) per click on your behalf.
http://www.brotherearth.com/en/top.html
#EcoFriendly #GreenLiving #green #grow #growtrees #trees #plant #planttrees #deforestration #forests #ecology #forestration #ClimateChange #botany #environment #EnvironmentalScientist #SaveThePlanet #ReduceCO2 #MakeADifference
#changelives #letsgetplanting #SaveEarth #natureheals #ourplanet #treehuggers #treelovers

Calling all kids....Help save Big Cats!

CALLING ALL KIDS

Mommy first click this link to help feed the Big Cats!  Click the bone,lol 

Tiger cub plays ball
If you are a kid, or have a kid, or are just a kid at heart, this page is for YOU!
Check out the following pages for lots of free fun things to do:
Big Cat Fun has free games, free puzzles, free craft kits, free ecards and more.
There are hundreds of free fun and games on this site too right here:  Fun and Games
Kid’s Tours if anyone is under 10 

What can Kids Do for the Big Cats?


See what other kids have done to help big cats

Kids us Cheetaro leopard as their adopted mascot for a Paws For Peace project: http://bigcatrescue.org/000news/Advocat/2007/advocat200710.htm

Friday 23 December 2016

Click Everyday pour les Animaux - PetsRescues

Click Everyday pour les Animaux - PetsRescues

How one photographer's foolishness is saving endangered wildlife

Conservation photographer Morgan Heim took a flying leap into a new project to help the endangered fishing cat. Here she talks about her work, and how being foolish can lead to brilliant things.

JAYMI HEIMBUCH
January 23, 2014, 8:56 a.m.
mountain lion in suburban yard photo
All photos: Morgan Heim
Morgan Heim is a talented conservation photographer whose work I have admired for several years, and whose joyful, generous personality I admired from the moment I first talked with her. It takes a particularly optimistic, driven person to become a conservation photographer, and throwing in a bit of deliberate naïveté always helps to get projects on the right track (or at least, going forward in the right direction). Heim certainly has those characteristics.
Recently Heim gave a TEDx talk about how she got her start in the field and launched her largest project protecting fishing cats, called Cat In Water. How did it really get started? Through a healthy dose of foolishness. In fact, Heim praises foolishness as one of the most important factors in making things happen. You can't help but be inspired by what Heim has started through sheer will power and a sense of humor. I spoke with her about her work and her take on the profession, and here's what she had to say.
MNN: After studying biology and environmental journalism in school, how did you decide that your real calling was conservation photography?
Morgan Heim: It was sort of a two-part process. Since childhood I’ve been fascinated by nature and exploration and photography. I was always out “saving” things, and loved the idea of taking pictures. One year when I was about 9, my mom gave me this pink and gray Polaroid camera. Film was expensive. I only had one packet, so I’d just wonder around taking pictures with no film in the camera. It didn’t matter. I loved it. So aspiring to live a life that somehow combined these in a purposeful way were deeply ingrained from early on.
For a while I thought my path involved being the scientist. But the more I worked in the field, the more I realized I fit somewhere else in the equation. I kept seeing the information go into someone’s filing cabinet or landowners getting confused on what we were doing when we were working a site. I had incredible access to nature, and would always bring my camera with me, but it was hard to take pictures except on our down time. I wanted to record and share these stories, begin putting them into context beyond the science, and I was far too curious about different subjects to dedicate my life to one niche. Science and scientists are so important, but I felt I could better serve them and the public by acting as a storyteller.
pronghorn near industrial area photo
A favorite quote explaining conservation photography comes from Joel Sartore: "The typical nature photograph shows a butterfly on a pretty flower. The conservation photograph shows the same thing, but with a bulldozer coming at it in the background." What is conservation photography to you? How do you explain it to others?
I love that quote by Joel. It so cleanly describes the difference between a nature photograph and conservation photograph. There are some who would say, “Well a pretty nature photo can also accomplish conservation.” I think if you asked 100 different photographers, you’d get 100 different definitions. But for me it comes down to this: application with purpose.
No matter what style of photography you do, conservation photography is defined by what you do with the photos after you take the picture. There are of course a lot of other things that come into play, especially with the reasons for taking the photo in the first place and the ethics of how you get the images. But it’s the “after” part that really tips photography into that realm of conservation.
I’m talking about deliberate, meaningful, direct contribution to conservation success. This is not about sharing photos with friends and growing appreciation. That is good, but that’s not conservation. All the conservation photographers I know are hitting the pavement, working with NGO’s, doing presentations, meeting with legislators, directly helping to establish protected areas, or train youth to pick up a camera and embark on their own projects.
manatees under water photo
These projects don’t have to be huge. It could be something like what James Balog is doing with "Chasing Ice" and the Extreme Ice Survey, or it could be a group of students who photograph a Bio Blitz in their neighborhood to help a nonprofit showcase an area that needs attention.
Every photographer I know is absolutely dogged in their efforts. They are strategic and resourceful. They spend far more time implementing the results of their photography than they do necessarily in the field. Conservation photography brings these messages out into the world in force, making the issues present, relevant, proximate and absolutely stunning.
Conservation photography is meant to be a catalyst, or a shot of adrenaline to conservation movements. The pace of destruction happens so fast, we need to do everything we can to help all those other facets of conservation move forward.
rock under the stars photo
Foolishness was the center of your recent TEDx talk. You discuss how, had you not been foolish, you never would have done what you have with the fishing cats conservation project, Cat In Water. Can you talk more about the importance of not knowing what can't be done and how that has helped Cat In Water?
For me, being foolish is about embracing that idea that you’re capable of more than you give yourself credit for, and you have faith in your abilities to adapt and handle the challenges that come your way. You accept that you might fail and you might do so spectacularly, but you decide the reason for doing what you do is more important than that fear of looking like a fool.
I think that’s something we can all relate to. How many times have you been faced with an opportunity or a change, and almost immediately listed 100 reasons why it might not be a good idea? I do that all the time. The world puts up a lot of barriers and people can put up a lot of barriers against themselves. It’s so easy to talk yourself out of something, especially as we get older.
If you’re foolish, it gives you the courage to sort of dismiss those fears. You don’t have to waste energy rationalizing why to go for something because if you tried, you’d probably end up talking yourself out of it. Overall, we’ve stacked the deck so high on the side of caution, I say, embrace your foolishness. It might bring you back into balance.
We were definitely foolish. We had skill sets and training, but we didn’t have a lot of resources: financial, technical or logistical. When my friend Joanna and I started Cat in Water, I was at a point in my life where I needed to do something big and ambitious and see if I could actually make a difference with something. I didn’t want to take baby steps and hope someday I’d get to a point that someone else would think I was ready to work on a big project. Conservation can’t wait around for that and neither could I. So we just started.
fishing cat portrait photo
Quite frankly, I was surprised no one tried to talk us out of it. We were going someplace incredibly foreign to us on a mission where the odds were definitely not in our favor.
A lot can go wrong, and a lot did. Shortly after arriving in Thailand, I got so sick from drinking one fruit smoothie that I thought I was going to die. Joanna and I were in a bungalow with no electricity on a beach that was a 20-minute drive from another human. We didn’t have a car. Joanna couldn’t get our international SIM cards to work in our phone. When she did get the phone working, she was trying to speak to a groggy, half-asleep person who didn’t speak English. Joanna was mispronouncing words from a Thai language book that she was reading by headlamp. It would almost have been funny if it weren’t for the fact that I was so weak I couldn’t even lift a bottle of Gatorade to my lips. Joanna kept her wits about her and just kept at it until the person came and took us to the hospital.
We learned though that by being foolish we were capable of a lot more than we thought. We picked up a ton of new skills. We made a lot of friends both at home and in Thailand, and Cat in Water is being effective in ways that we didn’t expect. You learn that you just figure things out. We’ve raised money for fishing cat research and renting habitat, exhibits are in the works both here and in Thailand, articles are coming out in the media. People are starting to know about the fishing cat, and our friends in Thailand feel good about what they are doing. https://youtu.be/upLhFxTCLMU

Being a conservation photographer seems like an enviable job, traveling the globe and being creative all day long. But that's certainly not the whole story, or even most of it. What have you sacrificed in order to pursue the conservation work that your photography is part of?
Health. Stability. Sanity. Weekends. Vacations. Time with family. My credit score. Sleep. Weekends.
I was just talking with a friend of mine who is a photographer and book editor with National Geographic. He was telling me about an article he read that was all about how photographers are too broke to work. Often when you get an assignment, you still have to cover the cost of doing the assignment up front. When you finish one assignment you have to move on to the next. You still haven’t been paid for the last one, but you have to cover the cost of the new one. Pretty soon you’re in a tough financial situation because incoming resources are all out of whack with outgoing ones.
Besides that, with conservation photography, there are so many roles you have to fill. You’re like a one-man band running a marathon. You’re the fundraiser, the idea person, the project manager, the admin person, the researcher, the logistics planner, the webmaster, the director of marketing, the CEO, the field tech, and then you get to be the photographer. You also have to spend a lot of time convincing people that what you do has value as an industry. It’s hard. I’m lucky if I get to a point where I know enough jobs and funds will be coming in to make sure I can pay rent for the next three months.
It’s the worst business model in the world. I’m working on developing a better one for myself. For many of us, it’s sheer will that keeps us going. That, and the support of family and friends. I don’t think I can ever repay the love and support and sacrifices the people I love have made.
young sealions photo
What are the difficulties that have popped up with photography projects you've pursued?
When you finally have a project up and running, so many things can go wrong. You can go into conflict zones, countries where there is no such thing as press freedom. Your gear gets stolen or broken. Natural disasters happen. With Cat in Water, we flew into Bangkok during the worst flooding in 50 years. Everything was in chaos, but we couldn’t afford to change our trip. We’d already paid to do that once and time was running out to be with Namfon (the fishing cat conservationist). She was going to have to leave because her visa was about to expire. (Namfon is Thai, but in the process of attaining U.S. citizenship.)
Our field time with Namfon shifted drastically. She was rescuing people and animals stranded in Bangkok. That had to take priority. Instead of a few weeks together, we had four days. There we were after a year of planning and fundraising in a swamp and nobody spoke English. These challenges weren’t anyone’s fault. They were from a confluence of unforeseeable events.
fishing cat tracking
Somehow, we all banded together and figured out how to find this endangered fishing cat. By the end of the trip, we were fixing electronics together, speaking a broken hodgepodge of Thai-English.
My favorite part of any assignment or trip, no matter how much fun I have in the process, is coming home. My husband is my absolute favorite person in the world. I’m really a homebody who loves to explore the world. So I am thankful for things like Skype and Google Hangouts and mobile USB hotspots. We’ve both done trips where you’re cut off from communicating. (He works on summer field ecology projects.) When things get hard emotionally, you have doubts or just a bad day, you both more-or-less have to handle things on your own. So if you have the chance to make a call, even if it’s just for one minute to say, “Good morning. I love you,” that makes the distance somehow easier.
fishing cat near home photo
What responses have you seen by viewers of your photographs, that let you know you're making a difference?
Sometimes it’s seeing the faces of those involved go, “Wow!” You see they feel kind of special and a little more proud about what they are doing. It makes them feel good that someone noticed. I believe that doing what I can to make them feel appreciated and empowered can make a difference.
One of the best responses I got was from a woman who attended my TEDx talk. She sent me this email that made it clear that she was not someone who spent a lot of time thinking about conservation, but she said that my presentation, my way of presenting, really resonated with her. I had just reached someone beyond the choir. I was blown away. She taught me that I could find ways to make what I care about more universal.
Sometimes the effectiveness shows up in dollars and numbers. People decide to donate to Namfon’s research, or to rent fishing cat habitat or to help us keep our efforts going. They give us venues to get the message out there. In one case, a film I worked on helped a conservation nonprofit exceed its fundraising goal by almost 20 percent at a gala event. That’s a wonderful, tangible result.
Anytime I get another person or group to invest of themselves, either financially or through action, I know we’re on the right track. I’m still working on that true feeling that we’ve made a difference with the fishing cat. I want the fishing cats to have a home. I want the villagers to feel good about it too. That’s my goal.
shrimp being sorted photo

What projects have stemmed out of what you learned from your first big steps into conservation photography with Cat In Water? 
Cat in Water has continued to grow. We’re getting ready to launch a film to help fundraise for conservation. We’ve got some articles coming out in a few magazines, and hope to go back to Thailand and other fishing cat projects that have cropped up in Sri Lanka and other places. It all depends on funding. That’s one thing the project has taught me is to really get smarter about funding.
The project also inspired me to work on something closer to home. I have a couple of project ideas that I’m exploring. One has to do with urban wildlife conflict. We have so much wildlife in Boulder, literally in the city. Even though that project is still taking shape, it led to an opportunity to help on an article that Steve Winter was doing for National Geographic about mountain lions.
I was a student at the Missouri Photo Workshop with Kathy Moran as my instructor. She’s the natural history photo editor at National Geographic magazine. She told me how Steve was trying to get a photo of a mountain lion in a suburban or urban setting, and I offered to set my trap up in Boulder since we have so much activity. I had learned to camera trap for Cat in Water. I set the camera up at a friend’s house and two months later, got this photo of a mountain lion as he came up their steps onto the back patio. I couldn’t believe it. Everyone was thrilled.
The photo wasn’t in the story. Steve ultimately got this shot of a cougar in front of the Hollywood sign. It doesn’t get more iconic than that. But I passed a personal hurdle, set a challenge and proved I could deliver.
Since Cat in Water, I also had the opportunity to assist Joel Sartore when he came out to Colorado to work on his Photo Ark project and a story about zoos for National Geographic. I never knew getting vomited on by a vulture and pooped on by a turkey could be fun. Joel gave me lots of tips and opened up an opportunity for me to edit a little one-minute film for the staff at the magazine. It was like this crazy intense crash course in producing something for them. We had three days to put it together. Joel would call me at 5 in the morning with edits. I loved every second, even though I was terrified of messing up the whole time. You just have to say yes, push the fear to the side and work your butt off.
I guess what I’m saying is that one project can lead to a learning opportunity, which can lead to another learning opportunity, which can lead to another project. I’ve been working on a big film series about the impacts of bark beetle with the U.S. Forest Service and University of Wyoming’s Ruckelshaus Institute for the last six months. It’ll be coming out this spring. I hope to launch another project in the next few months.
industrial waterway photo
Who are your heroes?
This list is so incomplete. But here goes: Joel SartoreCristina MittermeierPaul NicklenClay BoltKrista SchlyerDouglas AdamsJane GoodallDavid Quamman, Namfon Cutter and the fishing cats without a doubt. I could keep going. The list is long. But everyone I mentioned and many I didn’t are so talented and honest in their pursuits. I’m inspired everyday by what I see others doing.
If you are going to recommend just one piece of advice for budding conservationists, what would it be?
Besides turning your boots upside down, or don’t drink fruit smoothies in Thailand? Follow your passion. Work hard. Be foolish. There, that’s three.
spider on web