Absolutely fabulous Max B. In ten minutes, from quote by Theodore Roosevelt, to the end of VLog, without talking noise you caught for me the truly amazing bueaty of Yellowstone National Park. As your statement says at the end. Your work that summer had to of been long, exhausting, and time consuming. Oh but you should be proud of it. For myself I have lived forty five years of my life, 150 miles from the East Gate Entrance. The park is too me what God must of made the Garden of Eden to be. Thanks you so much Max B.for your wonderful piece. Wyoming,Robert, 🇨🇦🇺🇸🇨🇦🇺🇸🇨🇦🇺🇸🙏🙏🙏🙏
A wonderful video and great editing of the many species this remarkable park produces. It was my third year of coming here from Quebec, Canada and one would think I would be tired of seeing the same animals, but as you know, every time we come here we are enthralled by the different interactions among the animals. Thanks for posting. Joan
Love the snake in the water at 3:20. The great grey owls at 5:35 and 7:00 are also fabulous. Lucky you got the chick. Foxes very nice as well. Thanks for sharing this superb presentation of Yellowstone wildlife.
Great video. Recently I visited Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks, it is absolutely amazing, I saw Bisons, Deers, Beaver or Muskrat or both(they look similar), Red Fox, Canada Geese, Trumpeter Swans, Elks, Raven I saw several birds, Might have seen : Golden Eagle, Barrow's Goldeneye, Three-Toed Woodpecker, Killdeer, Western Tanager I did not see others listed in this video at the ending in Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. I saw Mountain Goats and Black Bear in Glacier National Park, Glacier National Park is amazing too.
Unbelievable photography! You have to have the patience of a saint to get these shots. Really a fabulous video , will be looking for more,thanks. (Great musical background also)
Great job, I understand the hardship of the filming...lots of groundwork and editing. I film wildlife myself as well as landscape, Astrophotography, sunsets, Time Lapse etc. Kudos to all your hard work.
Very beautiful video. I particularly like the Bison cavorting around. Made me laugh because usually they so intent on eating in the fall when I have filmed them.
Loved every second of it! Great footage and nice mix of the close ups and landscapes. Especially loved the interactions of the different species so close together. Fabulous work! Too bad the fox and badger story did not end happily (I heard about this from others). It is tough out there. Look forward to seeing more of your film work.
Love the video! You need to add another species to the list of animals that you show. At 7:06, the bird that photo bombs the owl is a Clark's nutcracker. Then two of them fly through a few seconds later!
A very good glimpse into the wilderness livelihood of scenic Yellowstone! I used to be an experienced amateur photographer! Maybe the music invites many viewers, but the music doesn't make this Park anymore fascinating to me! But everybody expects bread with butter? If you could blink in captions about the species in view, and about the area, with focus variables of mtns & landscapes would help increase the unique value of your Vlog! Not being a critic, but just my opinion! Audio( natures)|music has much sound value! FYI. THANKS FOR THE Vlog!
Edward, thanks for the feedback. I remember back when I was doing these short compilations more regularly, I was debating whether to caption in time with the clips or not. Ultimately, I chose to go with more artistic presentations (thus the music as well), and save the IDs for later. If you see my more recent education-oriented videos, you'll see that I am trying to label the species as they appear. As for sound, I wish I had better audio recordings to accompany these clips, but a) my audio recording gear is subpar, and b) there's usually too much background noise (people talking, car engines, etc.) to be able to present any "pure" sound. Plus, setting these videos to music is one of my favorite parts of the editing process, so it may be tough to get me to give that up. ;)
Barbara, they've ventured down from the north into the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. As they are not native to the area there's a push to have them removed. I believe goats are being eliminated in the areas near Jackson already. In Yellowstone they're mostly seen in the northeast, but a few are occasionally seen along the west road in the park as well.
This was the day before it finally got the kits. They escaped on this attempt, but the parents dug a new den hole far too close to the old one (and with no back door through which they could escape), and the badger took advantage the next day.
Easier said than done in Yellowstone, given the crowds, especially without professional videography equipment. A good 90% of what's recorded here is done next to lots of other people, vehicles driving nearby, and camera shutters firing away. I'm sure you'll find some excellent programming with genuine audio recordings on Animal Planet, Discovery, and Nature. Alas, that's not my gig.
Absolutely fabulous Max B. In ten minutes, from quote by Theodore Roosevelt, to the end of VLog, without talking noise you caught for me the truly amazing bueaty of Yellowstone National Park. As your statement says at the end. Your work that summer had to of been long, exhausting, and time consuming. Oh but you should be proud of it. For myself I have lived forty five years of my life, 150 miles from the East Gate Entrance. The park is too me what God must of made the Garden of Eden to be. Thanks you so much Max B.for your wonderful piece. Wyoming,Robert, 🇨🇦🇺🇸🇨🇦🇺🇸🇨🇦🇺🇸🙏🙏🙏🙏
Music is top notch
Wonderful photography, great shots and fine music. Really nice and relaxing. Hope there's more and thanks.
Pure excellence!
What an amazing video!
Very nice 👍! Thank you 👍!
The nature that surrounds yellow stone, in its greatness, I'm sure she knows and keeps them in her deepest.
Great video. Plus the right king of music.no brass band to spoil the atmosphere. Really nice peaceful video with interesting shots. Thanks.
Awesome photography. Yellowstone is truly a wonder of this Earth.
Excellent Max!
Thanks, Dan!
A wonderful video and great editing of the many species this remarkable park produces. It was my third year of coming here from Quebec, Canada and one would think I would be tired of seeing the same animals, but as you know, every time we come here we are enthralled by the different interactions among the animals. Thanks for posting. Joan
Absolutely stunning.
Love the snake in the water at 3:20. The great grey owls at 5:35 and 7:00 are also fabulous. Lucky you got the chick. Foxes very nice as well. Thanks for sharing this superb presentation of Yellowstone wildlife.
Very Beautiful...Thank you for posting
Great video. Recently I visited Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks, it is absolutely amazing,
I saw Bisons, Deers, Beaver or Muskrat or both(they look similar), Red Fox, Canada Geese, Trumpeter Swans, Elks, Raven
I saw several birds, Might have seen : Golden Eagle, Barrow's Goldeneye, Three-Toed Woodpecker, Killdeer, Western Tanager
I did not see others listed in this video at the ending in Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks.
I saw Mountain Goats and Black Bear in Glacier National Park, Glacier National Park is amazing too.
Yellowstone is beautiful :)
Unbelievable photography! You have to have the patience of a saint to get these shots. Really a fabulous video , will be looking for more,thanks. (Great musical background also)
Great production, Professional quality! Thank you!
Wonderful! Thank you so much for sharing, Max..
What an amazing beautiful video!
That was spectacular!
Great job, I understand the hardship of the filming...lots of groundwork and editing. I film wildlife myself as well as landscape, Astrophotography, sunsets, Time Lapse etc. Kudos to all your hard work.
Awesome video Max, we really enjoyed it!
Owl's are the coolest things ever.
...thank you for sharing such spirit. Keep shining. :)
What a great video. That was a tremendous amount of work to properly frame, wait, and watch to get so many good video clips. Loved it!
Well done Max, excellent catch on the long eared owl :D
Couldn't stop watching this, when did 10 minutes pass?
Glad to see there are still small parts of the world that are unharmed by humans.
Very beautiful video. I particularly like the Bison cavorting around. Made me laugh because usually they so intent on eating in the fall when I have filmed them.
Great video !! 😃😃😃😃
Foxes and wolves are my favorites.
Loved every second of it! Great footage and nice mix of the close ups and landscapes. Especially loved the interactions of the different species so close together. Fabulous work! Too bad the fox and badger story did not end happily (I heard about this from others). It is tough out there. Look forward to seeing more of your film work.
Awesome
Love the video! You need to add another species to the list of animals that you show. At 7:06, the bird that photo bombs the owl is a Clark's nutcracker. Then two of them fly through a few seconds later!
Good point. I forgot about the nutcrackers!
Love video
2:22 What are the otters eating, please?
Superb footage! How is this possible? Have you entered some kind of pact with the wildlife?
Those are leeches!
@@MaxWaughPhoto ! Badass otters! 🤗
Thanks!
A very good glimpse into the wilderness livelihood of scenic Yellowstone! I used to be an experienced amateur photographer! Maybe the music invites many viewers, but the music doesn't make this Park anymore fascinating to me! But everybody expects bread with butter? If you could blink in captions about the species in view, and about the area, with focus variables of mtns & landscapes would help increase the unique value of your Vlog! Not being a critic, but just my opinion! Audio( natures)|music has much sound value! FYI. THANKS FOR THE Vlog!
Edward, thanks for the feedback. I remember back when I was doing these short compilations more regularly, I was debating whether to caption in time with the clips or not. Ultimately, I chose to go with more artistic presentations (thus the music as well), and save the IDs for later. If you see my more recent education-oriented videos, you'll see that I am trying to label the species as they appear. As for sound, I wish I had better audio recordings to accompany these clips, but a) my audio recording gear is subpar, and b) there's usually too much background noise (people talking, car engines, etc.) to be able to present any "pure" sound. Plus, setting these videos to music is one of my favorite parts of the editing process, so it may be tough to get me to give that up. ;)
Wow that's was beautiful comment if you think so
Where did Roçky Mountain Goats come from?In the Rockies they only lived as far south as the Sawtooth's in Idaho.
Barbara, they've ventured down from the north into the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. As they are not native to the area there's a push to have them removed. I believe goats are being eliminated in the areas near Jackson already. In Yellowstone they're mostly seen in the northeast, but a few are occasionally seen along the west road in the park as well.
No Pronghorn?
I believe you'll find some in the video I made from the following spring: ruclips.net/video/uJqpkwXJrig/видео.html
Looks like footage of the badger when he got the fox kit. I was there then, taking stills. Sad to watch the helpless adults.
This was the day before it finally got the kits. They escaped on this attempt, but the parents dug a new den hole far too close to the old one (and with no back door through which they could escape), and the badger took advantage the next day.
6:38 its rutt and time.
Just realized Max your last name is Waugh, l apologize for my error in other comment.
💯👍❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🙌😘👋
Don't like the music but great video.
جميل
👎🏻 stop the music. We want nature sounds
Easier said than done in Yellowstone, given the crowds, especially without professional videography equipment. A good 90% of what's recorded here is done next to lots of other people, vehicles driving nearby, and camera shutters firing away. I'm sure you'll find some excellent programming with genuine audio recordings on Animal Planet, Discovery, and Nature. Alas, that's not my gig.
Yellowstone is anything but dead.
I'm glad I don't hunt any more.