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Discover the incredible stories of life on our planet through powerful photography and expert insight.
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A shapeless lump of puffed-up black: that’s what the figure looked like, squatting in the middle of a snow-covered road in Jasper National Park, Alberta, in the heart of the Canadian Rockies.
As John drove slowly towards the feathers, he realised it was a raven. ‘I fully expected it to fly off at any moment, but it just sat there, looking as though it had just got out of bed.’ John cruised slowly by and stopped some 30 metres away to photograph the bird. ‘Looking through the images afterwards, I laughed out loud.’ Fluffing up may look like a bad-hair day to a human, but if a male does it to a female raven it signals an invitation to take note or even to party, though a good fluff does also keep out the cold.
Discover the incredible stories of life on our planet through powerful photography and expert insight.
Tickets on sale now.
Canada
John has a career spanning three decades and has had images published by National Geographic, BBC Wildlife, Canadian Geographic, McLean’s and Reader’s Digest. He’s an Associate Fellow with the International League of Conservation Photographers, a Canon Ambassador and the co-founder of the Exposed Wildlife Conservancy environmental non-profit. John’s produced eight coffee table books and prides himself on being a conservation photographer known for photographing wilderness scenes and wild, free-roaming animals in their natural habitats.
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