ZoologicallyDepraved
Well-Known Member
What I mean by this is what wild animal have you photographed farthest from home, or what animal is in your opinion one that stands out from other species you've photographed?
Tapirs and a lot of the South American critters are bucket list animals for me to see in the wild. That's very cool!It's worth noting that "photographed" in this case means "picture I took with my phone", but I would say a Baird's tapir is up there.
Quite a diverse list! When using the word "exotic" I'm talking about something that might be considered more unusual than your typical species, or maybe something that doesn't even live in your home country. An animal either with a striking appearance or features, an animal that is rare, or an animal that lives far from home.What does exotic mean?
I photographed a Brown Booby in Wisconsin, which is probably the rarest thing I've seen in the wild from an objective standpoint.
If you're asking the species I've literally photographed furthest from my home, that would be a Great-tailed Grackle.
The species that stand-out the most? Greater Prairie-Chicken, Brown Booby, West Indian Manatee, Roseate Spoonbill, Botta's Pocket Gopher, Gray Hawk, Rivoli's Hummingbird, to name just a few that came to my head instantly.
California sea lions in San Diego. Photographing a wild marine mammal felt like a huge departure from the usual for my doubly-landlocked self.
Beluga.
So many marine mammals! Cetaceans and pinnipeds are definitely a goal for me.Easy peasy! Taken more or less over the boundary between the continental shelf and the deepwater channel in the middle of Monterey Bay, which is approximately 5,340 miles (8,600 km) from my home. The word 'exotic' is not the first word I would choose to describe a blue whale, but it certainly has a striking appearance and features too