Wedding Photography Bahamas Costa Rica Nicaragua Guatemala New York Hamptons Ottawa Calgary Banff Jasper Victoria Vancovuer British Columbia About FunkyTown Photography - Biography for Christina Craft Our latest news and photography on the FunkyTown Photography blog HTML Non-Flash Non-Multimedia version of the FunkyTown Photography website Visit the Multimedia wedding photography portfolio featuring weddings from the Caribbean, Mexico, Guatemala, Victoria, Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa & New York FunkyTown Photography Homepage - Wedding Photography
Craft > Yellowstone National Park is a U.S. National Park located in the states of Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho. Yellowstone is the first and oldest national park in the world and covers 3,470 square miles (8,980 km²), mostly in the northwest corner of Wyoming. The park is famous for its various geysers, hot springs, and other geothermal features. A series of lightning-derived fires started to burn large portions of the park in July of the especially dry summer of 1988. Thousands of firefighters responded to the blaze in order to prevent human-built structures from succumbing to the flames. Controversially, however, no serious effort was made to completely extinguish the fires, and they burned until the arrival of autumn rains. Ecologists argue that fire is part of the Yellowstone ecosystem, and that not allowing the fires to run their course (as has been the practice in the past) will result in an overgrown forest that would be extremely vulnerable to deoxygenation, disease, and decay. In fact, relatively few megafauna in the park were killed by the fires; and since the blaze, many saplings have sprung up on their own, old vistas are viewable once again, and many previously unknown archaeological and geological sites of interest were found and cataloged by scientists. The National Park Service now has a policy of lighting smaller, controlled "prescribed fires" to prevent another dangerous buildup of flammable materials. This image is shot vertical.
Craft > A red backed squirrel monkey with her baby (also called mono titi) at the Costa Verde Hotel in Costa Rica, Central America. These monkeys are rare and endangered with less than 1,000 left in the world. Costa Rican Wildlife photographed by a professional wildlife and nature photographer named Christina Craft.
Craft > A red backed squirrel monkey with her baby (also called mono titi) at the Costa Verde Hotel in Costa Rica, Central America. These monkeys are rare and endangered with less than 1,000 left in the world. Costa Rican Wildlife photographed by a professional wildlife and nature photographer named Christina Craft.
Craft > A red backed squirrel monkey with her baby (also called mono titi) at the Costa Verde Hotel in Costa Rica, Central America. These monkeys are rare and endangered with less than 1,000 left in the world. Costa Rican Wildlife photographed by a professional wildlife and nature photographer named Christina Craft.
Craft > A pair of wild scarlet macaws playing in the Osa Peninsula of Costa Rica near Drake Bay at Playa San Josecito. Costa Rican Wildlife photographed by a professional wildlife and nature photographer named Christina Craft.
Craft > A pair of wild scarlet macaws playing in the Osa Peninsula of Costa Rica near Drake Bay at Playa San Josecito. Costa Rican Wildlife photographed by a professional wildlife and nature photographer named Christina Craft.
Craft > A pair of wild scarlet macaws playing in the Osa Peninsula of Costa Rica near Drake Bay at Playa San Josecito. Costa Rican Wildlife photographed by a professional wildlife and nature photographer named Christina Craft.
Craft > A Capuchin (also known as white faced) monkey in Manuel Antonio Park in Costa Rica, Central America. Costa Rican Wildlife photographed by a professional wildlife and nature photographer named Christina Craft.
Craft > A curious Capuchin (also known as white faced) monkey in Manuel Antonio Park in Costa Rica, Central America. Costa Rican Wildlife photographed by a professional wildlife and nature photographer named Christina Craft. She does a documentary style of photography towards her subject.
Yellowstone National Park is a U.S. National Park located in the states of Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho. Yellowstone is the first and oldest national park in the world and covers 3,470 square miles (8,980 km²), mostly in the northwest corner of Wyoming. The park is famous for its various geysers, hot springs, and other geothermal features. A series of lightning-derived fires started to burn large portions of the park in July of the especially dry summer of 1988. Thousands of firefighters responded to the blaze in order to prevent human-built structures from succumbing to the flames. Controversially, however, no serious effort was made to completely extinguish the fires, and they burned until the arrival of autumn rains. Ecologists argue that fire is part of the Yellowstone ecosystem, and that not allowing the fires to run their course (as has been the practice in the past) will result in an overgrown forest that would be extremely vulnerable to deoxygenation, disease, and decay. In fact, relatively few megafauna in the park were killed by the fires; and since the blaze, many saplings have sprung up on their own, old vistas are viewable once again, and many previously unknown archaeological and geological sites of interest were found and cataloged by scientists. The National Park Service now has a policy of lighting smaller, controlled "prescribed fires" to prevent another dangerous buildup of flammable materials. This image is shot vertical.
Craft > Yellowstone National Park is a U.S. National Park located in the states of Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho. Yellowstone is the first and oldest national park in the world and covers 3,470 square miles (8,980 km²), mostly in the northwest corner of Wyoming. The park is famous for its various geysers, hot springs, and other geothermal features. A series of lightning-derived fires started to burn large portions of the park in July of the especially dry summer of 1988. Thousands of firefighters responded to the blaze in order to prevent human-built structures from succumbing to the flames. Controversially, however, no serious effort was made to completely extinguish the fires, and they burned until the arrival of autumn rains. Ecologists argue that fire is part of the Yellowstone ecosystem, and that not allowing the fires to run their course (as has been the practice in the past) will result in an overgrown forest that would be extremely vulnerable to deoxygenation, disease, and decay. In fact, relatively few megafauna in the park were killed by the fires; and since the blaze, many saplings have sprung up on their own, old vistas are viewable once again, and many previously unknown archaeological and geological sites of interest were found and cataloged by scientists. The National Park Service now has a policy of lighting smaller, controlled "prescribed fires" to prevent another dangerous buildup of flammable materials. This image is shot vertical.
Yellowstone National Park is a U.S. National Park located in the states of Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho. Yellowstone is the first and oldest national park in the world and covers 3,470 square miles (8,980 km²), mostly in the northwest corner of Wyoming. The park is famous for its various geysers, hot springs, and other geothermal features. A series of lightning-derived fires started to burn large portions of the park in July of the especially dry summer of 1988. Thousands of firefighters responded to the blaze in order to prevent human-built structures from succumbing to the flames. Controversially, however, no serious effort was made to completely extinguish the fires, and they burned until the arrival of autumn rains. Ecologists argue that fire is part of the Yellowstone ecosystem, and that not allowing the fires to run their course (as has been the practice in the past) will result in an overgrown forest that would be extremely vulnerable to deoxygenation, disease, and decay. In fact, relatively few megafauna in the park were killed by the fires; and since the blaze, many saplings have sprung up on their own, old vistas are viewable once again, and many previously unknown archaeological and geological sites of interest were found and cataloged by scientists. The National Park Service now has a policy of lighting smaller, controlled "prescribed fires" to prevent another dangerous buildup of flammable materials. This image is shot vertical.
See photo in gallery

Comments

|

New comment:

Name: Email: Link:


To foil spammers, enter this code: copy this text in this box: Code unreadable?



 

Thank you for visiting FunkyTown Photography. All images are copyright FunkyTown Photography 2008.