Chitika

Friday, November 13, 2009

New concept for attracting crowds in a zoo!

Look at pic below..the old couple was really lovely and BRAVE as well..they were not scared by the presence of the lion. They can even smile and stare at the lion while the lion was only 1 metre away from them..Brave huh..


But that was actually part of the attraction in a new zoo at Werribee Open Range Zoo, in Melbourne, Australia which allows visitors to get incredibly close to the lions.

The back part of the jeep, up to where the windscreen should be, is actually on the outside of the reinforced glass cage. The bonnet is on the inside, and covered with meat to entice the lions closer.
We've never been so close to such incredible animals before. You don't realise just how big they are until they are staring you in the face like that.


Thursday, November 5, 2009

Wild animals captured in stunning studio photographs

They say people should never work with animals - but one look at this cuddly, sleepy panda and it's easy to see why a team of wildlife photographers ignored the advice.


The baby panda is among hundreds of the world's rarest and most stunning animals which have been captured in studio images in an astonishing look at wildlife.


Photographer Eric Isselee and his team are behind the ambitious project, and take their portable studio to the animal kingdom.

The patient photography team travel throughout the entire world looking for animals, both domestic and wild, and insist on photographing them in their own environment.

The animals, including adorable Menari the baby orangutan, are often born into breeding programmes from zoos and conservation centres across the globe.

But despite not being born in the wild, Isselee wants the pictures of captive animals to highlight the plight of their endangered cousins.



From huge hippos and rhinos to dainty ducklings and even beetles, the subjects come in all shapes and sizes.


Chitika

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