Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Deer’

Hello Folks,

I am pleased to announce that I will now be offering select wildlife images for print purchase. For those that love nature and the outdoors, these ready-to-frame prints will make a wonderful addition to your home or cottage.

All images will be printed off-site on Kodak Professional Supra Endura VC Digital Lustre Paper. Prints will be protected in poly bags and shipped in cardboard-backed envelopes to protect your purchase.

All prints are 8 x 10 -inches in size.

Pricing Details

Canadian Orders – $18.00 each (includes shipping)

United States Orders – $20.00 each (includes shipping)

International Orders - $25.00 each (includes shipping)

Order three or more prints and instantly save $5.00.

Payment

I accept Interac e-Transfer, PayPal or cheque.

To place an order, or to request more information, please contact me at:  Justin.Hoffman@rogers.com

Images Available For Purchase

New images will be added in the future. Watermark will not appear on your purchased print. Please allow 2 – 3 weeks for delivery.

Great Gray Owl - Print #01

Great Gray Owl – Print #01

Great Gray Owl - Print #02

Great Gray Owl – Print #02

Red Fox - Print #03

Red Fox – Print #03

Red Fox - Print #04

Red Fox – Print #04

Moose - Print #05

Moose – Print #05

Whitetail Deer - Print #06

Whitetail Deer – Print #06

Whitetail Deer - Print #07

Whitetail Deer – Print #07

Whitetail Deer - Print #08

Whitetail Deer – Print #08

Duck Hunting Dog - Print #09

Duck Hunting Dog – Print #09

Largemouth Bass - Print #10

Largemouth Bass – Print #10

Scenic River - Print #11

Scenic River – Print #11

Great Blue Heron - Print #12

Great Blue Heron – Print #12

Moose - Print #13

Moose – Print #13

Great Gray Owl - "Solitude" - Print #14

Great Gray Owl – “Solitude” – Print #14

Whitetail Deer - Print #15

Whitetail Deer – Print #15

Yours In The Outdoors,

Justin

(click on images to view full size)

Read Full Post »

Read Full Post »

Hello Folks,

Want to give shed hunting a try but don’t know where to start? Check out this video I put together detailing my tips and tactics to help you find more deer antlers this season. Shed hunting is a fun, healthy, and low-cost hobby that is sure to put hours of enjoyment into the winter and spring months.

Read Full Post »

Hello Folks,

It has been an exciting fall and winter this year following whitetail deer bucks with the camera. I was privy to some up-close behaviour, including rituals of the rut (fights, chases, scrapes and rubs) as well as following the progression of a handful of deer that I would routinely see on my hikes.

I have already found three fresh antlers, so shed hunting is now ready to begin. Always a fun time!

Here are some of my favourite images from the last few months. I hope you enjoy.

Blog7

Blog1

Blog5

Blog2

Blog3

Blog8

Blog11

Blog12

Blog6

Blog9

Blog10

Blog13

Blog15

Blog20

Blog18

Blog21

Blog19

Blog16

Blog17

Blog14

Blog4

Enjoy the Outdoors,

Justin

(click on images to view in full-size)

Read Full Post »

Hello All,

I am pleased to announce that my 2013 Wildlife Calendar – showcasing up-close and intimate portraits of nature, including moose, deer, grouse, a hummingbird, snowy owl and more, is now available for purchase. This calendar will make the perfect addition to the home or cottage for those that love wildlife. They also make excellent gifts for those on your Christmas list.

Each calendar is professionally printed using high-quality stock paper and measures 17″ by 11″ when open.

Cost per calendar is $22, which includes shipping within North America. In addition, $1 from each calendar sold will be donated to the Ottawa Wild Bird Rehabilitation Centre - whose primary mission is to assess, treat, and rehabilitate sick, orphaned, or injured wild birds before releasing them back to the wild.

Please find below the twelve images chosen and the month they each represent:

January – White-Tailed Deer – Gatineau Park, Quebec

February – Snowshoe Hare – Gatineau Park, Quebec

March – Mallard Duck – Ottawa River, Ottawa

April – Moose – Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia

May – Porcupine – Greenbelt, Ottawa

June – Ruby-throated Hummingbird – Merrickville, Ontario

July – Great Blue Heron – Rideau River, Ottawa

August – Ruffed Grouse – Greenbelt, Ottawa

Cover/September – Moose – Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia

October – White-Tailed Deer – Greenbelt, Ottawa

November – White-Tailed Deer – Greenbelt, Ottawa

December – Snowy Owl – Amherst Island, Ontario

I accept Cheque, PayPal, or Interac e-Transfer.

For more information or to place an order, please contact me at: Justin.Hoffman@rogers.com

Thank you for your interest.

Yours In The Outdoors,

Justin

(click on images to view in full size)

Read Full Post »

Hello All,

My time in the field over the past month or so has been an enjoyable one. Photographing deer is a passion of mine, and as the leaves change colour each season, capturing the big bucks of fall and their fully formed antlers is always a definite highlight.

I have been fortunate to have crossed paths with some impressive – and very photogenic - deer so far. From spike four-pointers to a monster eleven-point “king-of-the-woods”, each animal never fails to elicit a sense of wonderment and unmatched excitement.

The following images showcase a sample to this point. With the rut at peak, capturing some buck and doe displays or combatant buck interactions is next on the agenda.

Yours In the Outdoors,

Justin

(click on images to view full size)

 

 

Read Full Post »

Hello All,

With summer fading fast and September on the horizon, the big bucks are beginning to show off their impressive head gear. I am fortunate to have a protected place to shoot photographs a mere ten minutes from my home and the deer I began shooting this past spring have certainly grown and matured.

Tricky thing about these big guys. They come out to the bean field late in the evening, which is not the best for shooting images. And, when the really good shots become available, the light has faded too far.

I will be following this herd over the next few months and hope to share some rutting and mating behaviour. The best is definitely yet to come!

Yours in the Outdoors,

Justin

(click on images to view full size)

Read Full Post »

Hello All,

A favourite pastime of mine is photographing deer. With prime hiking territory close to home, interacting with many of the same animals week after week is a rewarding and educational experience.

As the summer months progress and antler growth continues, I will be showcasing my continued interactions with this fascinating species.

The following are a collection of images taken during the month of May. Enjoy!

I have also been fortunate to have enjoyed a great spring of shed (antler) hunting. Nine sheds (seven that were kept) have made for a great collection and display. These were found after hiking a total distance of 191 km’s over 16 hikes during the months of March, April and May.

Yours in the Outdoors,

Justin

(click on images to view in full size)

Read Full Post »

(click on images to view full size)

Read Full Post »

Hello All,

I am quite fortunate to have a variety of wild spaces to explore so close to home, and most within the city limits of Ottawa. One favourite spot is seven minutes down the road and borders our busiest highway. The wildlife this area holds is vast, and when you wander off the beaten path a little, the rewards can be astonishing.

I headed out this past Tuesday in hopes of getting some turkey and deer images. However, it was a couple of extremely friendly – and inquisitive ruffed grouse – that truly made the day.

Not long into my hike I flushed out a bird from a distance away. A fairly common occurrence with these usually “people wary” forest inhabitants. But a second bird stayed around, and while I slowly approached, continued to go about her business. I spent the next 25 minutes less than ten feet from this curious grouse. Each time I would sit down on the ground she would rush towards me and prance back and forth – most of the time within arms reach! Of course, my camera was firing constantly, and I was rewarded with some extremely close up shots of this beautifully-detailed bird.

I continued my walk, and less than 500 yards away, encountered my second grouse that was equally friendly.

After twenty minutes of “hanging out” I bid farewell and continued on.

Through all of my years spent in the outdoors, a goal has always been to find a deer shed. For those that aren’t aware, a “shed” is another term for antler and is used to describe this discarded mass of bone that a buck loses each winter or early spring. They are not easy to locate, and if not found fairly quickly, porcupines, mice, and squirrels make easy work of them by chewing this calcium-rich treat.

And then it happened. Sitting in an open area of grass lay my very first shed! To say I was excited was an understatement!

This antler was in great shape, other than a few small nibbles on one end of a tine, and judging from its conditions (and since I had walked that area only a week earlier) I am fairly certain it had been recently dropped. Although I searched the area thoroughly, I came up unlucky finding the other.

As I made my way back to the truck, with my new treasure strapped securely to my back pack, I reflected on what an amazing experience this day in the woods had been.

The next morning I invited my Dad to join me and we headed back into the woods shortly after 9am. No sooner had we walked 50 yards when six deer bounded across the path in front of us. If that isn’t a good sign I’m not sure what is!

Although we did flush a grouse from one of the areas I had found them in the previous day, it took us some time to find our first “tame” bird quite a distance away in a new spot. Acting just like the previous two, this bird delighted us by feeding at our feet, prancing around, and posing merrily away.

This bird was much different from the last two, though. As we continued our hike….it followed us!! If we managed to get too far ahead, it would race forward to catch up. At one point, it jumped on my Dad’s foot while we walked! This continued on for 20 minutes, across open spaces of fields, thick brush, and forested areas. It is something we have never experienced – and perhaps never will again. I did to begin to worry about the little girl, as she made herself very vulnerable when away from cover, and an owl or hawk would have made quick work of her if they had spied her on the ground.

She did lag behind at one point and it was then, I’m assuming, she decided she had had enough. Funny enough, some hours later as we made our way back to where we originally found her, their she was again, greeting us and along she came for another short walk! Simply amazing!

Although we didn’t find another deer shed on this outing, we did manage to see a couple of more deer, a large flock of cedar and bohemian waxwings, and a lone porcupine sleeping in a tree. Not a bad little outing.

I decided that night to head back once more come morning. I had a feeling the matching deer shed had to be close by, and with the aid of my GPS, working a grid search of the surrounding area just might bring me some luck and the reward I was searching for.

I went to sleep that night dreaming of grouse and deer antlers – the things only a nature nut might fixate on!

The next morning was a crisp and cool one, meaning a toque and gloves were along for the hike. I walked past the usual grouse haunts but unfortunately our new friends didn’t seem to be home. As I made my way down to the area of my previous deer shed find I came across a flock of turkey and several deer.

I began my grid search and worked the land hard. With no luck I decided to expand, and on a hunch (and after doing some research the previous nigh) I headed to an area approximately 600 yards east. This spot is a forest of evergreens which would make an ideal bedding area for deer. And which is often the case, antlers are knocked off while deer are bedding down for the day. I worked the outside perimeter, the inside, then walked around the most easternly edge – a spot that bordered a small marsh. As I made my way around a tree I spotted the shed – glistening in the sun and laying just a few feet from the edge of the conifers. I raced up to it with pure excitement!!!

You can see from this following image exactly where it was found.

This shed was much larger in diametre, more stocky and aged, and had a neat drop back tine. It was also six points in comparison to the other that scored four. After getting home and comparing the two, I quickly decided that these came from two separate bucks, which means their are at least two more sheds to be found!!!

What an amazing three days spent in the woods! I hiked a total of 26.4 km’s over that time – and every step was definitely worth it.

I’ll be back out again next week – searching for more sheds, photogenic grouse, and anything else the wonderful world of nature has to offer.

Yours in the Outdoors,

Justin

(click on images to view full size)

 

Read Full Post »

Older Posts »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 150 other followers

%d bloggers like this: