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Online Wildlife Photography Workshop with Cheryl Alexander

November 21, 2020 @ 10:00 am 11:00 am Pacific

Join Cheryl Alexander for a workshop on photographing wild wolves. Cheryl will discuss her work with a wild wolf, the challenges of photographing a wild carnivore, and what skills and attitudes are required of a wildlife photographer in the field.

This workshop will take place on Saturday November 21st at 10am Pacific time, 1pm Eastern time. This workshop is for girls and female-identified youth ages 13-18 (we do make occasional exceptions for age). The workshop is free.

For six years, Cheryl observed and documented a lone wolf, producing an award-winning film, Takaya: Lone Wolf. Cheryl’s book about Takaya, endorsed by Jane Goodall will be released in September 2020!

Follow Takaya’s Story on Instagram: @takayalonewolf
Facebook page for TAKAYA: @takayalonewolfTakaya
Cheryl’s other professional work can be found on WildAwake Images Webpage: www.wildawake.com and on Instagram: @cherwildawake

Please fill out the form below to register!

A Journey to Filmmaking

Filmmaker and storyteller, Amy Marquis, told Girls Who Click about maneuvering her way through the film industry and the different career paths she took to find herself there. Marquis also introduces us to her new project ARA, UNTAMED. In her new magical realism style documentary, Marquis follows her eight-year-old daughter, Ara, as she finds new wild and magical places in her manicured suburb, processing her ever-changing world during the current COVID-19 pandemic and BLM protests. Marquis documents Ara’s understanding of her community and the communities around her. The production of ARA, UNTAMED is happening right now. For more information on Marquis’ project, and Ara’s personal and relatable adventures, you can visit ARA, UNTAMED’s original Kickstarter page here.

Want to hear what Marquis had to say about her life journey leading her to her filmmaking career? Continue reading! 

Where did it all start? What drew you into becoming a director?

When I was 8 or 9, I had this little flatbed cassette recorder in my room that was just everything to me. I would write scripts, read them, record them, make all the sound effects — and those were basically my very early expressions as a filmmaker — having no awareness at the time, of course, that I actually wanted to be a filmmaker. It’s not that my parents didn’t encourage my art — I had great support and inspiration as a kid. My dad was a well-known professor at the University of Kentucky. I grew up in Lexington, and my mom was a second-language English tutor. We traveled all over the world because of my dad’s work, and I was exposed to a lot of really great things. But film wasn’t really their world, so I had to take a lot of baby steps to get there and figure that out for myself. If there had been something like [Girls Who Click] for me to engage in, and if I had actually been able to get a camera in my hands earlier and been encouraged to go out and tell stories, the path would’ve been a lot faster.

I went to Indiana University in Bloomington and started out in biology because I had this dream of swimming with the dolphins someday. I found out about halfway through that my brain just didn’t work that way. So I switched majors to journalism, because I thought it would be cool to be a reporter. That was a really good shift. I ended up getting a grant my senior year, and after graduation I spent two months in Malaysia and photographed and wrote about the endangered sea turtles. That’s when I started realizing that conservation isn’t black and white. You can’t just separate the wildlife and the environment from the people. You can’t just assign “good” and “bad.” That’s when I realized how powerful it is to witness the human struggle, and how it relates to these other things in the world that I cared about. I loved being “on set” — although that’s not how I referred to it at the time — but really, being on the ground, meeting people, finding the story, experiencing it for myself. That’s when I fell totally in love with that process.

After that summer, I moved to Washington, D.C., and kicked off thirteen years of magazine editing. I started off at the National Wildlife Federation as an assistant photo editor working for John Nuhn, who’s kind of a legendary dude in the wildlife photography world. We’d go to NANPA (North American Nature Photography Association) and I had met all these amazing photographers, so that was a very starry-eyed four years for me. But I needed more than photography alone, so I took an editing job at National Parks Magazine (part of the National Parks Conservation Association), and that position allowed me to write and edit writers and multimedia too. I had a really tough but kind editor who I credit almost exclusively for teaching me to tell a good story.  It was a safe and rational career path to start, and I don’t regret that. It was a safe place to try things and fail, to learn how and when to push boundaries. And I developed a lot of great team and leadership skills along the way.

How do you get through that growth period of getting a lot of feedback (both good and bad)?

My understanding of the feedback process has matured so much in the last year alone. There’s constructive feedback, and then there’s just the useless and damaging kind that can sink you for days. If it’s constructive, take it seriously. Be tough, get your ego out of the way, and listen, because it’s going to make you better. But there is such a thing as really unconstructive feedback, and I think the sooner you can recognize which is which, the easier it is psychologically and emotionally.

In a perfect world everybody would understand the basic rules of giving feedback: Start with three compliments, then go into the problem solving. If everybody took that approach, that stage would just be so much more nurturing. Here is where that feminine energy comes. Here’s where we get to be leaders, and remind the men how to get it right.

Women make up a minority of professional photographers and directors. Why? Did you face any obstacles in your early path or as a child because you were a woman and how did you overcome it?

I spent years at these nonprofits observing how disproportionately white and male the conservation movement is. I couldn’t always articulate why or how that bothered me, but it was clear, even in my 20s, how easy it is for a workplace culture to ignore or not take seriously a young woman’s instinct and intuition about what’s out of balance in the big picture — and the radical shifts necessary to make change. 

I could only keep hitting that glass ceiling for so long — and having made my first films on-set in Yosemite in 2011, I was HOOKED. I ended up leaving the magazine in 2013. First thing I did was create an independent film series, “National Park Experience,” that amplified stories of non-white residents and visitors forging incredibly powerful connections to the national parks. That series ran for five years and weirdly, I got lumped into the “adventure filmmaker” tribe.. Women are vastly outnumbered there, and while the BIPOC community has grown within it, it just became another white male-dominated space I needed to find a way to break out of. I’m still in the process of doing that.

You know I think there was a point, maybe five or six years ago, where female filmmakers started getting more support. I remember going to the Mountainfilm festival in Telluride, and there was a coffee talk on women in film, and I remember rolling my eyes and thinking, “I don’t want to be a woman filmmaker, I just want to be a really good filmmaker.” But I showed up anyway, and I started to understand the systemic inequality that was so, so normal it’d become invisible to me. I swung way over in the other direction and started making conscious choices to work with and support my sisters in the industry. Because the truth is, we have to work a lot harder to find that support than our male peers. Not to say that these men aren’t also super talented and hardworking. But the systems are rigged in their favor.

For those girls out there who want to become pros: How did you become a professional videographer?

It was so organic. A calling so embedded in me I didn’t even see it at first. When I wrote articles, I’d pick music that matched the tone of the story and made me feel something. I’d do the same editing photos. When I did phone interviews, I’d hear the emotion in someone’s voice and feel so frustrated when that didn’t come across in print. Even though I couldn’t see at the time that I was thinking like a filmmaker, I started falling in love with the filmmaking process. 

NPCA was amazing in supporting this transition. When I hit my 7th year, I got to take a six-week paid sabbatical, and decided to go to Yosemite and make a couple short films. I found two young, talented cinematographers to join me, and we made two short films. It was the most incredible process — the hardest thing I’d ever done, but also the most exhilarating and rewarding. I knew at that point that it was just a matter of trying to figure out how to leave print and move into filmmaking full-time.

What is it like to run your own production company and control a project from start to finish?

Ha, I’m not sure you can call this a “production company,” especially when I compare it to legitimately staffed production co.’s some of my colleagues are running. I’m still very small and scrappy, and everyone I hire is a contractor — but we’re still doing very, very big things. 

Having control over my projects is really huge and incredibly empowering. I’m producing, pre-producing, directing,  shooting, sometimes running my own audio, and then I’m coming home and editing. I have to fundraise and figure out distribution all at the same time. It’s overwhelming sometimes,  and that’s okay. I’m still in the process of learning what I can delegate, not only to make my life easier but to make my films better, too. ARA, UNTAMED has been a brilliant manifestation of this. It is the most beautiful and balanced collaboration I’ve ever experienced on a film project. Just because I’m the director doesn’t mean every idea needs to originate from me, or that I can’t let others’ opinions influence my decisions in big ways. This film is absolutely a result of the right ideas coming through the right person at exactly the right moment. I’m so proud of that.

You’re a mom. Many people think that it is impossible to do this career and be a mother mainly because women have different social expectations put on them as mothers. How do you shut out that pressure? How do you do it, and what encouragement can you offer to other women who would like to have both? 

I’m generalizing here, but moms are the nurturers. In most families, there’s way more of a demand on moms than dads, especially during the pandemic. But I hate the notion that choosing motherhood is a handicap to a woman’s career. I’m in a special situation though, because I’m divorced, so I have Ara three to four nights a week, and when she isn’t with me, I have that time to recalibrate and catch up on work. So even through divorce, I was able to find support for my career.

I can also get really neurotic about my filmmaking. Any artist can relate to this. But every time my daughter comes home, she grounds me. She’s a total diversion from work that I choose to drop in with as deeply as possible, every time.  That’s such a blessing.  I can’t imagine doing it any other way.  I’m a better filmmaker because of her.

Do you have anything you would like to add for young women who are looking to join this field?

It is so important for women and girls to come together and lift each other up. Emotionally, spiritually. Surrounding myself with more women in my work has been therapeutic. I’ve made leaps and bounds by dropping my walls with my sisters in this space, and I’m so grateful for the women in my life who understand what it takes to be a filmmaker and what I’m trying to do. 

But it’s about business, too. It’s learning the system, knowing what you’re up against, and where you have to fight and break through. If you want to be in this space, awesome. Now let’s figure out ways to make sure your art sustains you and the life you want to live. There’s the feel-good emotional pep rally of “you’re enough,” but there are real-world considerations too. 

And it can’t just be white women. It’s BIPOC women’s turn.  Because trust me — being a white, cisgender woman is a cake walk compared to what our BIPOC sisters go through. I’m multiracial. I’ve blended in enough to benefit from the system, and it’s been a huge wake-up call to realize that, and actively begin to disrupt what’s felt easy and comfortable for so long. It’s time for all of us to be disrupters.  As visual storytellers, and as women, we have a tremendous power to do so. Don’t ever forget that.


Edited by: Amy Marquis- amymarquis.com, Margot Moore- margotmoore.net

Free Online Filming Workshop with Erin Ranney

September 9, 2020 @ 1:00 pm 2:00 pm Pacific

Basics of Wildlife Filming, “How to start telling your story with video”. Join Erin Ranney for an online workshop on September 9th. Erin will teach you the basics of wildlife video.

1pm Pacific, 4pm Eastern

If you don’t know about Erin. Erin is a freelance wildlife camerawoman based in both Alaska and Washington state with a variety of field experience and has filmed on big landmark BBC Productions and more. Read more about her amazing life and work: https://www.erinranney.com/about

Parents / Guardians must sign the liability waiver: Click here to sign the online waiver.

Please fill out the Application below

ONLINE

Get Mentored by a Pro: Girls Who Click Launches the Ambassador Program

A letter from Suzi Eszterhas, GWC Founder and Executive Director

To our wonderful Girls Who Click Community,

As you may have seen on social media and on our website, in addition to offering our free online workshops, Girls Who Click is launching a totally new program this fall. This program will supercharge our ability to empower young women in nature photography

And I am SO excited to tell you about it.

The Ambassador Program is a dream come true for Girls Who Click. We have designed this program to propel diverse women into the professional arena and break the glass ceiling that has defined professional nature photography for too long. Through this new initiative, we will take a more personalized, long-term approach to supporting individual young photographers as they work towards their career goals and navigate the photography industry.

We are committed to reaching female or female-identified photographers from diverse cultural and socio-economic backgrounds, and, like all of our programs, the Ambassador Program is completely free for participants.

The Ambassador Program will guide young female or female-identified photographers/videographers ages 16-25 through a year-long mentorship. We pair each Ambassador with a professional photographer who will guide her in several key areas: developing a portfolio, breaking into the industry, and cultivating a network of supportive individuals. We welcome our Ambassadors to stay with us for years to come — even after their “official” mentorship has ended — and hope that one day they will join the list of Girls Who Click’s Partner Photographers as seasoned pros. GWC is in this for the long-haul!

How do you become an Ambassador? It’s simple. Complete our online application and send us a portfolio of 40 images. We want everyone who is interested to be able to apply. You don’t need references, you don’t need anything fancy, we just want to see your photos (or videos), learn about you, and hear how this program will help you meet your career goals. And, if you have any questions or need any help, you can email us at info@girlswhoclick.org at any time.

Who are the Ambassador Program mentors? We have brought together a dedicated group of professional photographers and videographers, all women, who want to share their knowledge and skills with the next generation. Many of these women are also GWC Partner Photographers.

There’s more. In addition to being mentored by a pro photographer, Ambassadors will also get access to all Girls Who Click workshops (in person or online), a free camera bag from our sponsor ThinkTank, promotion of her work through Girls Who Click social media and website, and the opportunity to do a week-long takeover of GWC social media to highlight her photography or videography. What’s more, two lucky ambassadors will receive a complimentary year-long membership to our sponsor Wild Idea Lab.

I founded Girls Who Click in 2017 to empower girls to enter the male-dominated field of nature photography and use their work to further conservation efforts around the world. I am so moved by the diverse community that has built up around Girls Who Click. Without these amazing professionals, volunteers, donors, and of course our wonderful participants and families, the Ambassador Program would not have been possible. Thank you.

Here’s to the next generation of talented and strong women in nature photography!

With gratitude and excitement,

Suzi Eszterhas,
Founder and Executive Director, Girls Who Click

Q&A with Krista Schlyer: How imagery is fighting against the border wall

Do you feel empowered to know that images can foster conservation and societal change?

So do we.

That’s why we’re so excited for you to meet with Krista Schlyer, a conservation writer and photographer, as well as a GWC photographer!

For over a decade, Krista has been working on the Borderlands Project, a visual storytelling campaign that is fighting against the border wall. In doing so, she has brought poignant narratives from the US-Mexico borderlands to millions of people, protected a very rare borderlands habitat preserve called the Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge, and instilled in all a greater understanding of the impact of walls on wildlife, ecosystems, and people.

Read on to learn more about Krista’s inspiring work with the Borderlands Project, and the true power of imagery in creating change.

GWC: Why did you decide to start the Borderlands Project?

Krista Schlyer: The Borderlands Project started in 2008. I started it because I had been working on this conservation story about a transboundary herd of bison. They lived on the border of US and Mexico, and was, at the time, one of only 5 free-ranging herds of wild bison left in North America.

While I was there, I was up in an airplane with a scientist, and we were taking pictures of the bison. And we happened to see them right as they were crossing the US-Mexico border. 

After the flight, we started talking to the landowners on both sides of the border. They said that the bison on the north side came over for a special type of grass that was in a pasture on the north side. On the south side, they were mostly coming to a pond that was one of the only year-round water resources from anywhere for many many miles. 

So their food and water resources were split by the border, and this was about two years after the US Congress passed a bill called the Secure Fence Act, and that bill mandated that the Department of Homeland Security build 700 miles of border wall.

At that time, it became clear to me that not only were the bison going to be harmed if this wall was built through their habitat, but all of the thousands of species that were along the border were going to be harmed. And I didn’t hear a lot of people talking about that.

So I decided that it would be a good thing to work on. At the time, I didn’t think that I was going to spend more than a decade working on it. I thought it would maybe be 6 months to a year.

But the more I worked on it, the more important it seemed, and the more I got engaged to the different stories of different wild species, people, and just all different facets that were going to be impacted by this huge 2000 mile long construction project.

The US-Mexico border wall at the Pacific Coast, separating Tijuana from San Diego. California, USA. February 2011. Photo by Krista Schlyer

GWC: What was the first project that you did for this campaign?

Krista Schlyer: I went to the International League of Conservation Photographers, which I had just joined that organization not long before. And I asked them  if they would let me organize an expedition of their member photographers to go to the border for a month, travel the whole border, take photographs, and then create outcomes from those photographs. 

I got 12 photographers and myself who agreed to go travel the border with me. And we were out there for a month in 2009.

When we finished with the expedition, I gathered photographs from all the photographers, and I put together an exhibit. The result was a 30 piece fine-art exhibit that I worked with members of Congress to bring that exhibit to the House of Representatives and the Senate, as well as some briefings on Capitol Hill to get experts to talk about the impacts of the border wall on wildlife and the land.

Continental Divide exhibit on display. Photo by Krista Schlyer

GWC: So what happened next?

Krista Schlyer: The exhibit was before the election where Barack Obama was elected. The hope was after he was elected that they would stop building the border wall. 

Unfortunately, that’s not what happened. The border wall construction continued.

So the project continued, and it’s sort of been this ongoing search to find ways to get to news outlets. I wrote a book about the ecology of the US-Mexico Borderlands, I started doing lectures across the country. I made a short film with a crew about the border and some of the issues that related to wildlife and ecosystems.

Desert cottontail (Sylvilagus audubonii) at the border wall during construction in southern Arizona. USA July 2008. Photo by Krista Schlyer

By 2015, there was no more wall that was being built at that point. There had not been any wall approved by Congress the Secure Fence Act. It seemed that we weren’t going to be building any more wall. 

But then the presidential election rolled around, and Donald Trump made it a real centrepiece for his campaign. When he was elected, I tried to figure out what more I could do to try and get the word out about it.

So the first project that I did was to create a StoryMap on the US-Mexico border, with ESRI’s StoryMap’s team, the Audubon Society, the University of Arizona, Sierra Club, Centre of Biological Diversity, and a bunch of other groups. The goal was to make it a tool for educators who were trying to talk about the impact of walls and other barriers on wildlife, and journalists who were trying to get some background on what had already happened in terms of border wall construction as they were covering this new attempt by the Trump administration.

Shortly after that came out, I did some talks about that StoryMap and about the border and I started having some conversations with some filmmakers that are friends of mine. We decided that we were going to make a feature film about the border and border wall. 

From 2017 to 2019, I worked on a film called Ay Mariposa, in collaboration with Morgan Heim (a GWC partner photographer!) and filmmaker Jenny Nichols. Ay Mariposa means “Oh butterfly”, and the film follows three characters, an immigrant woman, the head of the National Butterfly Society, and the butterfly, and looks at what it means to be building a wall in this place. We’ve been doing screenings across the country, and that now is the latest outcome of the Borderlands Project.

GWC: That’s amazing! How important is it to have collaborations with other photographers and non-profits in a campaign like this?

Krista Schlyer: I think to me, collaboration is essential to everything that I do. 

I mean, there’s no way I could do what I do without collaborating with nonprofits and NGOs and government and other organizations. Because I don’t have that kind of reach. 

There are all these people that have been focusing their lives around how to make change, or the environment, to conserve what we have and try to rebuild what we’ve lost. To not cooperate and collaborate with those folks and those organizations would just mean that the reach of the project would be minuscule in comparison to what it could be when you cooperate. So I’ve always really believed so strongly that collaboration with organizations is just foundation to any kind of a project like this.

And collaborating with photographers comes with its own value. I think because you get to hear the ideas and see the visual viewpoint of different people that you really respect and find ways to communicate that you just wouldn’t think of on your own. So that I think was an important decision to make at the outset, to reach out to other photographers and nonprofits and see what we could do together.

Sometimes one of the things that’s hard for people when they’re starting out doing this kind of work is that you don’t always get a responsive person at an organization. But when you do find that person who sees the value of this kind of collaboration, then it doesn’t just open one door, it opens as many doors as that person knows people, and their connections.

So you know, making those connections can really be one the hardest parts of this work, but once you kind of get that ball rolling, it really does take on a life of its own.

Great kiskadee with a granjeno berry. Photo by Krista Schlyer

GWC: What motivates you to keep going and to keep doing more projects?

Krista Schlyer: Sometimes I wonder about that myself. But I have times when I feel despair, and I feel very sad, and I just can’t do it anymore. But then I just give myself a little time to rest and then I start again and keep trying.

I think for me what it all goes back to, is that when I spend time taking photographs of wild creatures in particular, I feel a sense of responsibility towards them. And you know, whatever else happens, however else I might feel about my ability to be successful at this work, I can’t stop, because no matter what, that responsibility is always there.

I just try to find new ways and, you know, just don’t give up. I just can’t give up.

Javelina at the border wall in the San Pedro River Valley. Photo by Krista Schlyer

GWC: So do you find that your passion for this, the passion that you put into your projects, is maybe why you think this narrative touched so many people?

Krista Schlyer: That’s the key to any project like this. People can see when you love something, and if you show them that you care so much about this place or this animal or this cause, and you’re willing to kind of put that out there. In my experience, people really respond to that. They learn to care about a place or an issue or an animal through you. 

And some of them, maybe they feel that through you, and then it becomes their own thing. They do, whether it’s about the same issue or a different issue, they find a path of their own to care and to take responsibility. It’s really powerful, that’s what I’ve found over the years, that it’s a powerful thing to show that you care about something, and that you’re willing to take responsibility.

GWC: So if someone wanted to follow your footsteps and make their own visually powered action campaign, what kind of advice would you give to them?

Krista Schlyer: Gosh there’s a lot. I think one thing is to find something you really love. Find something that speaks to you, and not only speaks to you, but you think maybe that other people don’t – haven’t thought about it in the way that you’re thinking about it.

And then, think about who is the audience you think you need to affect most of all. For the Borderlands project, it’s really changed throughout the project because there’s so many audiences that play a role in what’s happening. Sometimes I’ll focus more on decision-makers, like members of Congress. Sometimes I’ll focus more on the press. Sometimes more on the general public. And in some instances, some issues, you might find that only one of those audiences or a different audience altogether is what matters, but some issues might be all of them. 

And then think about: what is the best way to convey a message? Is it a magazine story? Is it an exhibit that you put in a particular place? Is it doing a talk? You know, one of the audiences for the Borderlands Project that I never even imagined I would need to speak to was the national non-profits agency. Because I thought to myself, well the conservation organizations are surely all going to be on-board, they don’t need to hear from me. But didn’t turn out to really be true for some complex reasons. So sometimes one of the things I do is do my presentations to conservation organizations, and try to get people on board within these organizations so that they would then get the organization more invested in the issue. 

Mammals like this kit fox have started feeling the impacts of climate change in the borderlands. They may soon need to start moving north to find hospitable habitat. Photo by Krista Schlyer

I could literally go on forever about it. But really, just taking the first step I think is the most important thing. You know, you take a step, and then you take the next, and then you have a life, like the project has a life. And it just starts to become, you know, if you’re invested in it and you care about it, it starts to become what it needs to become.


Responses have been edited for length and clarity

To learn more about Krista’s work against the border wall visit: https://kristaschlyer.com/borderlands-2/

Written by Alice Sun 

Growing up, Alice’s dream was to become a National Geographic photographer. This passion led her to spend much of her high school years photographing and sharing stories of wildlife in her own backyard, which earned her a spot in the 2016 NANPA High School Scholarship Program. She then went on to pursue a degree in environmental biology and a graduate certificate in environmental visual communication, sharpening her skills and building a foundation for a career in visual storytelling. Today, she is a freelance science communicator and conservation storyteller based in Vancouver, Canada. Inspiring young people to pursue the same dream she had is something that Alice is passionate about, and why she’s extremely be on the Girls Who Click team! Visit Alice’s website (alicesun.ca) to see the stories she has told over the years. 

Free Nature Photography Workshop with Melissa Farlow

Learn from the best. Melissa Farlow is renowned for her work photographing horses in the American West.

Join us to hear Melissa’s stories about America’s wild horses in the American West, how to recognize and understand wild horse behavior, and her trial and error of experiences while photographing mustangs!

Please fill out the application below and have a parent/guardian send us the signed Liability Waiver

Free photography workshop with Joanna Pinneo

Join Joanna Pinneo for a free online photography workshop. Take your photography to the next level as you learn how tell stories with your photos. Learn how to develop a photo story that you can use for projects, pictures of friends or pictures of your family. What goes into putting together a photo story? What are the different things you want to think about and how do you plan ahead?

This workshop is for girls and female-identified youth, ages 13-18 (though we do make occasional age exceptions). This workshop will take place on Zoom on Wednesday, August 5th from 10:00 to 11:30pm PDT. This workshop is FREE.

Please fill out the application below and have a parent/guardian send us the signed Liability Waiver

Wilderness Living

by Janet Kleyn

Click here to sign up for Janet’s FREE smartphone photography workshop on June 27, 2020 at 9am PDT!

You don’t have to actually live in the wilderness to be a wildlife photographer.  You could, as most photographers do, travel between different destinations and return home between trips.  

This is how I used to work until I was offered a permanent position as a photographer in a remote wildlife reserve in Botswana.  Accepting this position would mean living far from the luxuries and conveniences of towns and cities.  It would be an adjustment, but after years of working as a freelancer, I was excited for the opportunity to work and live in the wilderness.

I have now been at Mashatu Game reserve, in the South Eastern corner of Botswana, for over three years.  The nearest town to where I live is 60 miles away. This is a very small town with only a few shops selling basic amenities. If I need more, I travel 120 miles to the nearest city.  

But living on a beautiful game reserve with wild animals including lions, leopards and many large herds of elephants more than makes up for the lack of shops nearby. I stay in a staff village where all the staff that work at the lodge where I’m based live.

Being part of a small community, living and working so closely together, it is very important to have good relations with your colleagues. Team work and respect are vital for surviving in the wilderness.  Here, when something goes wrong you rely on each for help.  If your car breaks down you can’t call the AA, if you’re out of supplies and can’t get to town you’ll need to ask your neighbors. 

Many people think our life is a vacation – it’s not.  It’s a good life but it is hard work and as a woman perhaps more so.  I was fortunate to have been trained to work in this industry and part of my training covered the essential skills required like 4×4 driving on all terrains, how to change a tyre and emergency repairs on a vehicle.  I am often out alone on the reserve and these skills are imperative if I don’t want to be stuck out there.

The great thing about working on one reserve for such a lengthy period of time is that I have come to know the area very well and also some of the individual animals and their specific behavior.  This is a great advantage when photographing animals as I am better able to anticipate what they will do and get into the right position to get the photo.

This is part of what my job is – assisting visiting photographers to get into the right place and position for photographing wildlife. I’ll try anticipate behavior of animals and ensure guests are ready when the action happens – perhaps as the leopard pounces after its prey, or the elephant squirts water from his trunk. 

At Mashatu we have a hide (blind), that has been specially adapted for photography. This is a container sunk underground in front of a waterhole. Here we can take photos of animals at eye level as they drink.  This is my favorite place on the entire reserve but also comes with its own work.  The animals, especially the elephants, roll around in the mud and make the waterhole bigger and that needs to be contained or they dig up the water pipes which needs fixing.  For this we bring in heavy machinery to help us. I have to keep the hide clean, dust free and free of critters such as scorpions and frogs so that our guests are comfortable when in the hide.

My average day starts at about 4:30 am so that I can meet the guests before the sun rises.  We need to be out in time to catch the good morning light.  We’ll spend the morning looking for good photo opportunities or going to the hide and waiting for animals to come in.  By late morning when the sun is too bright and the animals move to shady areas , we head back to camp for breakfast with plans to meet again in the afternoon.

I spend these few hours between drives to download and edit photos, keep up to date with admin work and social media which has become a big part of a wildlife photographer’s life.  I also use this time to go out and clean the hide, fuel my vehicles and deal with any maintenance issues I may have.  

In the afternoon we head out again, hoping to catch some more action, hopefully during golden hour when the light is best.  By the time we get back to camp it’s dark already.  Most nights after dinner and before heading to bed I like to take a few minutes quiet time where I sit outside on the porch and just take it all in.  It’s these quiet times that are my best-loved.  I think about the incredible sightings I’ve seen during the day and listen for the sounds of the nocturnal animals.  If I’m lucky I hear a leopard rasping in the distance or some lions calling as they head out for the night, leaving me wondering what natural wonder awaits me the following day.

Free Photo Processing Workshop with Katie Schuler

Join Katie Schuler for a free online photography workshop. Take your photography to the next level as you learn how to edit you photos.

This workshop is for girls and female-identified youth, ages 13-18 (though we do make occasional age exceptions). This workshop will take place on Zoom on Friday, July 17th from 12:00 to 1:30pm EDT. This workshop is FREE.

Please fill out the application below and have a parent/guardian send us the signed Liability Waiver