Where The Wild Things Really Are

October 15th, 2009 by Sonya Leave a reply »

TMangelsen2 Where The Wild Things Really ArePhoto Credit: Thomas D. Mangelsen (United States, b. 1946), untitled, Cape Churchill, Manitoba, Canada, September 1996.  © Thomas D. Mangelsen.

Welcome to the first post of traveling greener, a new blog inspired by green travel ideas and information!

Planning a trip to Jackson Hole, Wyoming soon?  You may fancy the new exhibit The Natural World: Photographs by Thomas D. Mangelsen now at National Museum of Wildlife Art in Jackson Hole through April 25, 2010.

Named for the companion book, “The Natural World”, these panoramic images are drawn from 20 years of in-the-field photography created by award-winning, nature photographer Thomas D. Mangelsen.

Conservation is a key theme for Mangelsen.  He spends eight months of the year in the wild to capture his wildlife subjects in some of the planet’s wildest places.

“These animals, even the most seemingly insignificant ones, are the barometer of the health of this planet,” says Mangelsen.  “It doesn’t take long to realize that we are on that same chain, we are all linked in nature.”

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