NikonGear'23

Images => Nature, Flora, Fauna & Landscapes => Topic started by: Ann on June 10, 2019, 06:28:53

Title: Hip Hippo
Post by: Ann on June 10, 2019, 06:28:53
"Up close and personal" in Botswana:

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619060215-718124.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619060217-71931.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619060217-720626.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619060214-7172189.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619060213-716265.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619060219-7211880.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619060220-7221441.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619060212-7151251.jpeg)


Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: PeterN on June 10, 2019, 13:05:09
Wow. That is close! It must be spectacular to see hippos in the wild.
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: atpaula on June 10, 2019, 13:11:06
Peter Potamus does not look very friendly.
The third one is special.
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Thomas Stellwag on June 10, 2019, 15:20:19
super, I agree the third one is stellar, but as well the forelast "Ralley version" , I like much
Ann, how far have you been away?
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: armando_m on June 10, 2019, 15:27:32
Impressive images of  such a powerful animal
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Ann on June 10, 2019, 15:59:48
As Aguinaldo noted, these guys are not friendly — in fact they are the most murderous of all of Africa's creatures.

I took these with a 200-400mm lens from a small boat with a powerful out-board motor operated by an exceedingly skillful and watchful boatman.

He got me in as closely to the animals as he dared but these unwieldy-looking creatures can suddenly charge at 30 mph on land (and about 8 knots in water) and those massive 8-inch incisors can rapidly make pretty good mincemeat of one.

Eight of us had rented a houseboat on the Chobe River for a week on which we could sleep and eat between spending our waking hours taking photographs from the little boats which we towed behind the houseboat.

The delightful girl who cooked for us during this trip was looking at my photos late one night after she had finished cleaning up in her galley. Everyone else had turned in for the night but I was editing photos in the saloon and she asked to have a look because although photographers are on board all the time she had apparently never seen any of their pictures.

When we came to the Hippo shots, she mentioned how much she feared Hippos and told me that her grandfather had been killed by one. He had apparently been fishing from the river bank when a hippo emerged from the river and charged at him. He ran but tripped and that was fatal.
 

Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Frank Fremerey on June 10, 2019, 16:18:18
Much more dangrous than sharks but look much friendlier!

Superb series. The one with the birds on top is my personal favourite!
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Ann on June 10, 2019, 19:41:10
Frank:
I have chased Great Whites too but Hippos look positively cuddly compared to those Sharks!

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619193023-723878.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619193820-724923.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619193820-7242064.jpeg)


Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: pluton on June 10, 2019, 21:03:54
As a set, these photos tower above all the hippo shots I've ever seen, including assorted wildlife/art photo books and the overrated National Geographic magazine.  I agree with Frank about the one with the birds on top .  An instant classic!
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Frank Fremerey on June 10, 2019, 22:13:27
Frank:
I have chased Great Whites too but Hippos look positively cuddly compared to those Sharks!

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619193023-723878.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619193820-724923.jpeg)

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-100619193820-7242064.jpeg)




I guess images can be misleading. Hippos are the wild animals killing the most humans per year...

Ahm. not

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-36320744

but deadlier than sharks, not as deadly as mosquitos though and crocodiles
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Frank Fremerey on June 10, 2019, 22:17:59
lovely image if three Hippos running into the water
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: CS on June 10, 2019, 22:18:55
Superb series, Ann! Number 3 looks like he could be  a malevolent Star Wars character.
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Randy Stout on June 10, 2019, 22:45:04
Great set Ann.  Number 3 is my favorite as well, and you can easily see the connection that hippos have to whales in it.

I appreciate your bravery, but having spent a lot of time in small boats, I certainly would be careful, as outboards can fail at the most inopportune moments, no matter how skilled the pilot.

Randy
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Ann on June 11, 2019, 00:33:03
Thank you everyone for your extremely kind comments

I also see the Whale-connection (which Randy mentioned) in the way that Hippos can open their mouths so widely as well as in their sheer bulk. When you see a Hippo charging along the river at full speed and making a wake like a powerful motorboat, it is certainly awe-inspiring. These animals can both swim and also run along the river-bed fully submerged.

Many of the villagers who live along the river still use traditional dug-out canoes and those frequently get attacked and overturned by the Hippos with inevitable fatalities.

The Nile Crocodiles, which inhabit the Chobe and the Zambezi in huge numbers and grow to enormous size there, are another hazard for those who live besides these rivers although Hippos have been known to kill Crocodiles too.
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Mikes on June 11, 2019, 04:40:36
Great captures, Ann. You were lucky to get to see them on dry land. We saw many whilst in Kenya and Tanzania last year, but they were usually submerged except for their eyes and nostrils. The ponds in which they lived were foul, and the stench often overwhelming if you happened to be downwind.

Not to be messed with - two tourists were trampled to death near their lodge while we were there - a penalty they paid for ignoring the advice of the locals and getting up close to photograph them.
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: mxbianco on June 11, 2019, 07:15:45
Great captures, Ann. You were lucky to get to see them on dry land. We saw many whilst in Kenya and Tanzania last year, but they were usually submerged except for their eyes and nostrils. The ponds in which they lived were foul, and the stench often overwhelming if you happened to be downwind.

Not to be messed with - two tourists were trampled to death near their lodge while we were there - a penalty they paid for ignoring the advice of the locals and getting up close to photograph them.

Getting up close -virtually- is a snap if you have a long lens.

The birds should be Buphagus sp. (possibly Buphagus erythrorhynchus for the completely red beak)

Ciao from Massimo
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Erik Lund on June 11, 2019, 11:52:07
Entertaining and amazing captures! Thanks for sharing ;)
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Akira on June 11, 2019, 13:28:35
Yet another vote for #3!  I think this series shows different characters of a hippo and I like the friendly side of him.
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: mxbianco on June 11, 2019, 18:57:33
My personal best is #3, too, and runners-up are #4 and #8

Ciao from Massimo
Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Ann on June 12, 2019, 05:05:46
Here is a different aspect:

I was staying at TandaTula and we had just come back to the Lodge after the evening game drive.

I was feeling hot and dusty and wanted to return to my tent for a quick shower before Dinner so the manager grabbed his rifle and a powerful torch so that he could see me safely to my tent.

As we stepped off the verandah, the sweeping beam from his torch fel upon this sight right in front od us. Hippo was on the lawn and almost in the lodge and was between me and my tent (which lay close to that lantern which you can see just beyond the Hippo.

No shower but I did get this shot of his retreating rear end.

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-120619050351-7261896.jpeg)

Title: Re: Hip Hippo
Post by: Mikes on June 12, 2019, 07:00:42
As we stepped off the verandah, the sweeping beam from his torch fel upon this sight right in front od us. Hippo was on the lawn and almost in the lodge and was between me and my tent (which lay close to that lantern which you can see just beyond the Hippo.

No shower but I did get this shot of his retreating rear end.

(http://nikongear.net/revival/gallery/0/1358-120619050351-7261896.jpeg)

Wow, that's a bit too close for comfort!

Can't decide which end of the hippo is ugliest...