Photography - Grand Teton National Park


Greater Yellowstone - Images by Daryl Hunter
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Park Tours and Wildlife Safari Outfitters

Jackson Hole Wildlife Safaris Jackson Hole Wildlife Safaris We run guided wildlife and photography safaris into Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks. Our mission is to provide you with the highest quality wildlife safari available by combining our love for this area with a desire to share this passion with you. Jackson Hole Wildlife Safaris guides are the best in the business. Your guide will lead your safari with years of experience and first hand knowledge of this area that can only come from living and breathing Jackson Hole. Our vehicles are equipped with a pair of binoculars for everyone, a spotting scope, and a collection of natural history and wildlife books for use throughout the day. All of our trips include transportation, an experienced guide, snacks and a custom souvenir water bottle for you to keep. All of our full day trips include a gourmet picnic lunch served by your guide with homemade cookies for dessert. Join us in creating your perfect wildlife safari in and around Jackson Hole........................more info
The Hole Picture Safaris (Destination Photo Tours)

Escape from the routine and indulge your passion for photography in a  “The Hole Picture” photo tour Discover the spirit of place and the magic of light of our destinations. Refine your personal style. Hone your technical skills. Treat yourself to an experience where you are welcomed by others who are just as passionate at chasing light as yourself. You deserve it!................................more info

The hole Picture Safaris

Where to look for photos

Dirt Road, Grand Tetons, Grand Teton National Park
There are many out of the way dirt roads the spur off the main loop that can provide many great photo opportunities.

Grand Teton National is one of the most photographed parks in the National Parks System, and for good reason, Grand Tetons’ embarrassment of riches of beautiful mountain peaks, surrounded by pristine lakes and wide-open spaces makes it an excellent choice to take some award-winning images. Grand Teton is also considered the best national park to photograph wildlife as well.

The park is nestled along the Teton Range, a sub range of the Rocky Mountains and Jackson Hole; the valley that the Snake River meanders through. There are numerous turnouts throughout the park for scenic and wildlife viewing. Most are built to handle everything from bicycles to large busses. The Teton Range is often called America’s most spectacular. It is a very young range (10 million years old) and therefore still has very sharp features. Incredible landscapes abound, as does wildlife.

Keep in mind that you're going to get the best pictures during the two "magic hours," from a few minutes before sunrise until about two hours after sunrise, and from an hour before sunset until about a half an hour after sunset.

Some key landscape photo opportunities include however barely scratch the surface of opportunities.

Gross Ventre Road: A surefire spot to find wildlife is on the Gros Ventre Road about 10 miles north of Jackson. It travels next to the Gros Ventre River for a while wish presents moose opportunities and the elevated bench south of Blacktail Butte presents many opportunities to catch wildlife on the ridge with the Grand Tetons in the Background. The sagebrush plains of the Gros Ventre Road are surprisingly full of wildlife including Bison, Antelope, and moose all summer and elk, wolves and mule deer seasonally.

One of several picturesque barns to be found around Mormon Row.

Mormon Row: Go north out of Jackson into the park. After passing Moose Junction start watching the right hand side of the road, you will see a sign for Antelope Flats Road. Turn right, you will pass some roads going into residences; you are looking for a wide spot on the left where the road going north is chained off. Park here. Walk north on the dirt road for some good barn and mountain photos. There is another picturesque barn to the south of antelope flats road as well.

Schwabacher Landing: Go back to the main road and turn right, heading north again. Schwabacher Landing is not marked as you drive north (it is coming south though). The road is a small dirt road on the left side of the highway. This is a gravel road. There are two areas down here; it is the second one that will give you the best shots. There is a nice parking area here, and you will probably have plenty of photographers as company. Snake River Overlook: This overlook, on highway 89 near the Moran park entrance, made famous by Ansel Adams, who shot from here on assignment for the National Parks Service in the 1940’s. It is crowded each evening by photographers, who watch the sun go down. Try getting here before sunrise for a better shot when the sun comes over the eastern mountains, it illuminates the range with almost perfectly light.

This wolf was found chasing elk on Pilgrim Creek Road

Pilgrim Creek Road: The Pilgrim Creek Road is a good place to look for bears and wolves because it is good elk territory. It often turns up nothing, but I often start my mornings there just in case.

Willow Flats: Willow Flats just north of Jackson Lake Dam is like a takeout stand for grizzlies and wolves. If you are lucky enough, you may find wolves or bears chasing the resident elk that spend their summers raising their calves there.

Oxbow Bend: Another famous spot to take pictures on the Snake River, just inside the Moran entrance, you'll see photographers milling around here...and for good reason. It's spectacular. Again, early morning or late afternoon/evening is best.

Jackson Lake Dam: Nice place to photograph at daybreak when the wind cooperates you get great reflections of the Grand Tetons in the water. Go to the south of the dam and park your car. Walk out onto the dam to photograph the lake and mountains in the background. Watch out for the birds.

Signal Mountain: Signal Mountain is a butte that is due east or Jackson Lake. A good road winds you to the top that provides some of the best views in the park, Jackson Lake and Mt Moran to the west and The Grand Teton to the southwest. Watch for the road just south of the dam.

Jenny Lake: The Jenny lake turnout provides some of the best Grand Teton photos; it is often possible if you start early or end late to find still water for fantastic reflections of the mountains in the water.

Grizzly Bears, Grand Teton Natonal Park
Two Grizzlies I found by Cunningham Cabin right off highway 89

Wildlife is abundant throughout the park. You will likely see American Bison, Moose, and Elk during all seasons. During the warmer months, waterfowl and White Pelicans are abundant. Osprey, Owls, Eagles, Wolves, and Pronghorn may also may be spotted. Bears are a real treat when they show up and that has been happening more often in the last several years. You will find the mountains snow covered from October through June with some traces still visible in July and August. This can lead to some amazing photographs. Peak fall color is late September and early October. The most significant tourist crowds are in July and August, especially around holiday weekends. Northern Wyoming can be bitterly cold during the winter months; Wyoming has the coldest average temperature in the lower 48 states. It can get below freezing at night during any season, but the winter is extremely cold with daytime highs often not exceeding zero degrees, so be prepared. Light
the most spectacular photographs in Grand Teton National Park are often taken from a half hour before sunrise to two hours after sunrise. In wintertime, the sweet light lasts significantly longer due to the low angle of the sun. Afternoons can bring dramatic clouds, and some excellent backlit mountain scapes are possible in the evening.

Grand Teton National Park can be accessed from the south via US 89, and Jackson, Wyoming, the east via US 26 and Dubois, Wyoming, and the north via Yellowstone National Park and US 89. The main roads are paved and maintained during winter. Grand Teton National Park is accessible twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year. There is an entrance fee of $20 per car for a one-week pass that includes Yellowstone National Park. If you are a holding a National Park Pass or a Golden Eagle Pass, entrance is free.

 


 

Use map to find places mentioned above - it has a zoom feature on it.

Photography Stories
 

Mad Dash For Yellowstone • By Daryl L. Hunter
Santa Clause was good to me this year, and a Canon 400mm 5/6L telephoto lens dropped down the chimney and this little boy couldn’t wait to put that hunk of glass to work. I had a long weekend for the New Year’s holiday, and the kids were out of school so a trip to Yellowstone was nearly possible if Murphy’s Law didn’t rear his ugly head.......................................Winter in Yellowstone is truly a wonderful thing to experience. Its deep snows, bitter cold, abundant wildlife and stark beauty can imprint memories that can last a lifetime, and I have been anxious to share it with my boys. Access to Yellowstone in winter has become problematic since it has become illegal to take a private snowmobile into Yellowstone. So instead of accessing Yellowstone from the south entrance, outside Jackson Hole close to my home, the trip mandated a mad dash for north Yellowstone’s winter road, an eight-hour drive away. I had a hunch that this might be a good time for serendipity to dish me up some wolves for my photo portfolio. --------------------------------------> More

Two Wolves Grand Teton National National Park

The Search For Serrendipity • By Daryl L. Hunter
Luck favors the prepared mind, as does serendipity. Webster's definition-Serendipity - an apparent aptitude for making fortunate discoveries accidentally. Audacious, is the photographer who chooses to make his living stalking serendipity from one location to another then back again hoping to capture light as it has never been captured before or tougher yet as they may have captured it in the past. But that is what we do, and that is what we live for.

Armed with our acquired knowledge of the magic hour, cloud diffused lighting, outdoorsmenship, storm lighting, instinct for peak action, wildlife behavior, camera mechanics, changes in seasons, composition, astronomy, etc., we set out to bring the natural world to armchair adventures, outdoor enthusiasts, publishers, and advertisers, and to do so we have to rely on serendipity. Accomplished photographers are serendipiters, a serendipiters are those with an aptitude for making desirable discoveries by accident--------------------------> More

Living A Richer Life Without Any Money • by Daryl L. Hunter
Since purchasing my first camera, I have been living a visual feast that has cost me a real estate career in a lucrative Southern California market. My scenery seemed to always be just over the next hill somewhere, cityscapes just were not my kind of inspiration, and I soon tired of local beach sunsets.

So it wasn't long before I was traveling farther a field, weekend trips to Big Sur, Lake Arrowhead, Yosemite, and yes, a three-day driving marathon to the Grand Canyon and Zion National Park. I decided that my weekends just were not long enough. I would just have to take more time off work, and then I could make it to Tahoe, the costal redwoods, and the Oregon coast.

All that driving wore out my car; it must be time to move to a prettier place-----------------> More

 

Magpies and ravens tormenting a wolf during dinner

Yellowstone In Winter • Yellowstone National Park is one of the world’s most popular natural areas. Every year, millions of visitors from around the globe flock to the park to view its scenic grandeur and abundant wildlife. And every summer, the park’s hotels, trails, campgrounds, and roads get clogged with gawking tourists. For the serious nature photographer, it is often difficult to get even a little elbowroom, let alone to find a spot to set up one’s tripod.--------------------------------------> more

Where I Find Photos
 
Ice encrusted Bison/buffalo
North Yellowstone’s Winter Road • By Daryl L. Hunter
Winter in Yellowstone is truly a wonderful thing to experience, its deep snows, bitter cold, abundant wildlife and stark beauty can imprint memories that can last a lifetime.......................Access to Yellowstone in winter is the problem, it has become illegal to take a private snowmobile into Yellowstone and very few of us have snow coaches of our own or are capable of marathon ski expeditions too access Yellowstone’s winter wonders, but it is not as inaccessible as many think..................................The snowmobiling destination resort of Cooke City and Silver Gate Montana need groceries regularly to keep its citizens alive so Yellowstone Park maintains winter access to these communities. US-212 can be accessed through Yellowstone’s north entrance in Gardiner Montana, so Yellowstone visitors can access a smidgen of Yellowstone’s treasures in winter by car. --------------------------> More
Regional Photo Galleries
 

The Hole Picture • (Swan Valley Idaho) Daryl L. Hunter's photography can be seen throughout, this publication "the Greater Yellowstone Resource Guide" as he is the publisher, at his online gallery you can buy framed or unframed photo art of his Greater Yellowstone scenics and wildlife. Daryl L. Hunter has been photographing the Yellowstone Region since 1987, when he packed up his 4X5 view camera, Pentex 6X7, and his 35mm’s and headed to Jackson Hole Wyoming to join hundreds of other wanna be photographers, where he learned the real meaning of poverty with a view. Perseverance has paid off though, bringing his photographers eye to web publishing has brought many new eyes to Daryl’s work.

 


Portfolio - Images by Daryl Hunter

 

Photography Workshops
 

The Hole Picture • Escape from the routine and indulge your passion for photography in a  “The Hole Picture” photo tour Discover the spirit of place and the magic of light of our destinations. Refine your personal style. Hone your technical skills. Treat yourself to an experience where you are welcomed by others who are just as passionate at chasing light as yourself. You deserve it!

Yellowstone Photo Workshops • Experience the American West like you have never dreamed. Yellowstone Photo Workshops makes it possible for you to become part of nature. Don't settle for just seeing the American West, LIVE IT! You will have the unique opportunity to travel with one of the Southwest's premier landscape photographers, J. L. "Woody" Wooden. He will take you on an awe inspiring journey and help you capture the secrets of the land. All trips have very limited amounts of space, so take a look at our upcoming events and reserve your place today!

Summit Workshops • The summit is the highest point of the mountain. And the Summit Workshops, we are told time and time again, represent the highest point in photography's continuing education world. Bringing together the best instruction in photography and new digital technologies with the highest levels of creativity and providing the best career networking available anywhere.

Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival • Autumn is Jackson Hole's most spectacular season! The colors, sounds and smells are resplendent as morning frost yields to the warmth of each golden day. Animals are tense and in motion as the landscape transitions toward the cold, dark months of winter. It is this backdrop of wild beauty that sets the stage for the ninth international Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival.

Photographers and Stock Agency's
 

Jess Lee Photos.com • Jess Lee Photos is a Stock and Assignment Agency located in Eastern Idaho, less than 2 hours from Jackson Hole and Grand Teton National Park. Even closer is the west entrance to Yellowstone National park.

The Hole Picture • Stock photos of the Yellowstone region, sports, landscape and wildlife
Daryl L. Hunter. Get yours at bighugelabs.com/flickr

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