Frequently Asked Questions

General photo club help

Great Blue Heron

When you hear someone mention your name.

Pileated Woodpecker

Pileated Woodpecker making impressive excavations

Beautiful

Lovely photo and description. --- Timestamp: 2026-04-18T20:37:29.689Z Page: https://photoclub.canadiangeographic.ca/feedback User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/147.0.0.0 Safari/537.36

Bath Time

A red fox kit takes a moment in between play fights to clean its belly. Judging by the dark spot on its lower stomach, this is a male fox kit (female kits will not have such markings on their stomach). He is part of a skulk of 10 and seems to be between six to eight weeks old. Cleaning, though, wasn't an elegant process. Still in their clumsy stage, it was quite the effort this kit had to make to reach its belly. Insta: @danidmedia

Brown hawk

We know he is around but we never see him, this brown hawk has been here for a few years as our background has become his feeding ground since we feed around 200 birds daily.

Only the Nose Knows

Two fox kits siblings greet each other by touching noses, otherwise known as "nose boops." The kits are between six and eight weeks old and are part of a skulk of 10. It was a very warm day this spring when the little ones appeared from their den's hole. But instead of going into their usual play fighting, the heat made them a bit sluggish. So instead it was a greeting as they emerged from the hole before they laid sprawled out in the heavy brush. Foxes touch noses for several reasons, among them communication, as a greeting and a way to show trust and affection. Insta: @danidmedia

Camouflage

This is my first time seeing a moose in the winter time. We almost missed this bull moose with all the branches and greenery. I loved how he looks like hes peeking while chomping on branches.

Catch of the Day

This otter had a difficult time bringing this fish onto the ice. When it was fully out of the water, the fish was almost as big as the otter!

Cagey

Snapped this fellow as he was setting up an overly-complicated trap at the side of the trail.

Long-Eared Owlet

This fledgling has feathers coming in nicely.

Dancing Sharp-Tails

Two males eye to eye, with one of them a bit jumpy.

Winter Weasel

I was driving down a road slowly when I spotted this fellow. With no snow on the ground it was easy to see it.

Whooping Crane Landing

I was sitting there watching as one family of three chased another family of three towards me. Got this shot of an adult after landing closer to me. This image has a large crop, as they were still a long ways away.

Eastern Coyote

I think she knows I am here but she pays no never mind to me a very co-operative subject to photograph

Eastern Coyote

look closely and you can see the tuff of the squirrel's tail which was all she could manage to get as the squirrel got away

Green Frog at Dusk

A common Green Frog is seen gazing at the sunset, amid a symphony of it's own kind.

Eastern Coyote

totally focused on a potential meal in the distance

Eastern Coyote

A regular morning visitor to this garden hunting squirrels or whatever it can catch

National Bird of New Brunswick

Say hello to the national bird of New Brunswick! A Black-capped Chickadee rests in a sun ray, perched on a branch.

THE SPOTTED WOODPECKER

Photo taken with a Leica 106mm lens on a Panasonic Lumix FZ-40 camera, with a monopod. (this lens is equivalent to a 600 mm mounted on a 35 mm full-frame DSLR) exposure: 1/500 sec at f/5.6

Photo contests and competitions

Great Blue Heron

When you hear someone mention your name.

Pileated Woodpecker

Pileated Woodpecker making impressive excavations

Beautiful

Lovely photo and description. --- Timestamp: 2026-04-18T20:37:29.689Z Page: https://photoclub.canadiangeographic.ca/feedback User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/147.0.0.0 Safari/537.36

Bath Time

A red fox kit takes a moment in between play fights to clean its belly. Judging by the dark spot on its lower stomach, this is a male fox kit (female kits will not have such markings on their stomach). He is part of a skulk of 10 and seems to be between six to eight weeks old. Cleaning, though, wasn't an elegant process. Still in their clumsy stage, it was quite the effort this kit had to make to reach its belly. Insta: @danidmedia

Brown hawk

We know he is around but we never see him, this brown hawk has been here for a few years as our background has become his feeding ground since we feed around 200 birds daily.

Only the Nose Knows

Two fox kits siblings greet each other by touching noses, otherwise known as "nose boops." The kits are between six and eight weeks old and are part of a skulk of 10. It was a very warm day this spring when the little ones appeared from their den's hole. But instead of going into their usual play fighting, the heat made them a bit sluggish. So instead it was a greeting as they emerged from the hole before they laid sprawled out in the heavy brush. Foxes touch noses for several reasons, among them communication, as a greeting and a way to show trust and affection. Insta: @danidmedia

Camouflage

This is my first time seeing a moose in the winter time. We almost missed this bull moose with all the branches and greenery. I loved how he looks like hes peeking while chomping on branches.

Catch of the Day

This otter had a difficult time bringing this fish onto the ice. When it was fully out of the water, the fish was almost as big as the otter!

Cagey

Snapped this fellow as he was setting up an overly-complicated trap at the side of the trail.

Long-Eared Owlet

This fledgling has feathers coming in nicely.

Dancing Sharp-Tails

Two males eye to eye, with one of them a bit jumpy.

Winter Weasel

I was driving down a road slowly when I spotted this fellow. With no snow on the ground it was easy to see it.

Whooping Crane Landing

I was sitting there watching as one family of three chased another family of three towards me. Got this shot of an adult after landing closer to me. This image has a large crop, as they were still a long ways away.

Eastern Coyote

I think she knows I am here but she pays no never mind to me a very co-operative subject to photograph

Eastern Coyote

look closely and you can see the tuff of the squirrel's tail which was all she could manage to get as the squirrel got away

Green Frog at Dusk

A common Green Frog is seen gazing at the sunset, amid a symphony of it's own kind.

Eastern Coyote

totally focused on a potential meal in the distance

Eastern Coyote

A regular morning visitor to this garden hunting squirrels or whatever it can catch

National Bird of New Brunswick

Say hello to the national bird of New Brunswick! A Black-capped Chickadee rests in a sun ray, perched on a branch.

THE SPOTTED WOODPECKER

Photo taken with a Leica 106mm lens on a Panasonic Lumix FZ-40 camera, with a monopod. (this lens is equivalent to a 600 mm mounted on a 35 mm full-frame DSLR) exposure: 1/500 sec at f/5.6