New Report: New York City, NE USA and Quebec
Here’s a first report from Mihir Zaveri summarising some of his better mammal sightings over the past 4 years around the northeast of the USA and Quebec. Nice photos too! Nor
Another walrus in NW europe
There seems to be another walrus on the move in the North sea. So eyes pealed if you move along the coast. Hopefully it will end better for this individual then it did for Freya. h
New Trip Report: Colombia
A fun report from John and Karen Shrader who were in Colombia looking for Mountain Tapirs with Wild About Colombia. Great pictures plus – if that wasn’t enough –
Wild and Rugged Highland County
Highland County rests on the eastern escarpment of the Allegheny Plateau in the western corner of Virginia. Highland is one of the most beautiful places in the east, but it is a we
New Trip Report: Mongolia
Karl Van Ginderdeuren had a spectacular trip to Mongolia and – as always – took great photos. Mongolia, 2022: Karl Van Ginderdeuren, 17 days & 19 species including
ID of common dolphins
Hey all. In the 1990s Common Dolphin was split into long-beaked and short-beaked forms and counted as two different species. Currently they are lumped. According to Bernardo Alps (
New Trip Report: The Gambia
Another report from Cheryl Antonucci, who was in The Gambia in May. The Gambia, 2022: Cheryl Antonucci, 10 days & 19 species including Guinea Baboon, Patas Monkey and West Afri
Southwestern Research Station in Portal AZ
Hi, I’m trying to book a cabin at Cave Creek Ranch for this coming April but it is currently full. I wonder if the Southeastern Research Station is a good alternative in term
Advertising: Tai National Park, Cote D’Ivoire, March 2023
Pictus Safaris are delighted to once again be visiting Tai National Park in Côte d’Ivoire in late March/early April 2023. We have run several successful trips to this fantasti
New Trip Report: Great Squirrel Safari, USA, 2022
And a second report from Coke Smith, of a mammoth 12,000 mile road trip across 14 states. His daughter almost certainly now holds the world mammal list record among pre-schoolers.