Well-intended people do stupid things and most of them aren't photographers. So the State must step in to make it safe for all.

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Mark Garfinkel

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People's behavior around young wildlife leads to restrictions at Bombay Hook


It's a sure sign of spring: wildlife having babies.

However, this annual miracle of nature was becoming too much of a "tourist attraction" at Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge east of Smyrna. The actions of some visitors around an adult female fox and her baby foxes (known as "kits") have led to temporary restrictions.

Management of the refuge said Wednesday that the foxes have drawn an "extensive number" of visitors to the Bear Swamp Loop. Some of them have been blocking the main road, parking illegally, and setting up lawn chairs to try to see and photograph the foxes.

There have also been reports of people blocking the mother from returning to the kits, and even attempts to lure the foxes with dog toys.

At least one accidental death of a fox has been reported. According to a social media post from Coastal Delaware National Wildlife Refuges in late March, a mother fox was trying to escort its young kit off the road back to safety as people stopped in their cars, but the baby fox ran under a stopped car and was struck and killed as the driver started to move.

Temporarily, Bear Swamp Loop is off-limits to motor vehicles, cyclists and hikers. The action was taken for the protection of the foxes as well as to prevent any visitors from being injured by vehicular traffic - or by wildlife that may become defensive or angry and go on the attack.

Bombay Hook also offered this guidance when encountering wildlife while visiting a refuge:

1. Give wildlife their space. At least two car lengths.

2. If you stop, pull off the road. Don't stop in the road.

3. Don't stop right next to the wildlife if they are right next to the road. They could wind up under a car.

4. Don't speed on the refuge. Don't get or be in a hurry on the refuge.

5. Stay on the road or trails.


"Remember why you came here. To slow down and reconnect with nature. Not to put nature in peril," their statement said.
 
Only last week in the UK I saw a Richard Attenborough TV programme where it showed somewhere in Africa that wildlife safaris had made one habitat look like New York in the rush hour! The programme went on to say that the local wardens have noticed that the wildlife is suffering in that nests and dens are found abandoned and breeding appears to have been adversely affected too.
 
I've known about that kits for about 3weeks but didn't go. I was meeting a friend of mine at Bombay Hook this past Monday for something else and thought I'd swing around at sunrise. There were already 5 cards parked. I got out for an hour and by then there were 20 singing cars parked when i turned around so i left.

One more was run over about 2 weeks ago. Bombay Hook should have closed the loop then. Shane on then for letting it get like that.

I live only about 50 min from Bombay. A friend love about 15 min and it there a little more often then i an these days. We both know the admin of the FB Group We Love Bombay Hook and I told him to reach out to him and he should make a policy of no fox kit pics till at least June 1st. As location specific groups like this basically throw spot lights on them. Someone i know on IG from Long Island posted initiates from there. I asked and she said she saw of on the above mentioned FB group.

The admin of the group today made that policy i mentioned above. But why does it have to take something like this to do that? People are mostly 💩 as why post image or sensitive subject like this on location specific groups and why the race to out then up? Way till they leave the dens or just put on your own feed or general wildlife groups?

This is why i didn't give locations of anything anymore. Especially to sensitive subject like Fox kits and owls
 
They probably don't want to expend the resources, but I imagine it would be doable if they closed the road and allowed hiking groups guided by a ranger in. Of course the animals aren't there for our convenience, so I'm OK with a total closure.
 
Too many selfish people wanting to post their own National Geographic moment and brag on social media how they connected with the the mother fox and blah blah blah. Never mind that they were standing there with twenty other people and negatively impacting the animals. It’s gotten crazy out there, beyond “tourons,” with a warped sense of connectivity to nature and wildlife.

Totally agree with the comments regarding not posting the locations of sensitive subjects. I am also for managed access to areas that are being loved to death. At one of my favorite locations, the reserve biologist is considering a docent program during the Snowy Plover nesting season to help protect the birds. Can’t happen fast enough.

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State and National Parks should theoretically be accessible to all (meaning cheap or even free). However, given the crowds and the bad behavior of a certain sector, I am almost to the point of thinking they should be priced higher since my intuition is that would keep out those who have less respect for the parks. There is no easy solution, though making some auto routes accessible only by foot or park shuttle could be a partial solution.
 
The problem is the human species is functioning collectively like a plague of locusts. We are the direct cause of the extinction of a large number of species to the point where biologists are referring to our current era as the Sixth Extinction. Individuals have conscience but collectively little or nothing is done to stop it.

I live in Seattle which I thought when I moved here was close to the frontier of human expansion in this area of the world. I thought there was a massive, forested wilderness area that extended from about 90 miles north of the US border with Canada all the way up through British Columbia and most of coastal Alaska.

I became a boater and began to explore those areas I quicky discovered that virtually every water-accessible area had been extensively logged. There was very little virgin forest that remained anywhere in British Columbia. I found that the logging industry learned early on that it is cheap to log by cutting trees and dumping the logs into the water where they can be gathered and towed to sawmills.

We are changing the climate and thus eroding the very foundation on which our own existence depends.

I think in evolution species that behave like ours themselves eventually become extinct. Unless we as a species learn and apply the value of collective self-restraint there is no hope for us.

I am old and will not live to see the worst consequences. I will take the time I have remaining to document the great natural beauty we still have and share that beauty with others.

This is a remarkable world we live in. Hopefully enough of that will get through somewhere and the human species will finally learn to curb it rapacious appetite.
 
Neat, a thread where everyone can compete on how much more ethical they are than the rest of the species.... We havent had one of these threads in at least a week.

In all seriousness if you make a "park" or "nature area" for people to enjoy. It should come to no surprise when people go there and disturb the wildlife. Luckily the fate of these species dont hinge on 1 or 2 locations.
 
There are many places where I don’t go anymore to photograph because of some people doing stupid things and where some park rangers don’t do their job and make sure the regulations are respected. I am not talking here about USA, where the rangers in National parks try their best to protect and educate people, even sometimes it is so hard for them (I am talking here from personal experience after travelling to more than 25 N.P. In US in the last few years).

Last October, I went to do safari in Tanzania and Kenya. It was supposed to be in the low season, so less people. Even with that there were so many. What really made me sad, to see the clients wanted to be too close to wildlife to take close shot with their phone. And the Safari car drivers had to take them close , otherwise they would not get tip on which they rely. I was even so mad and frustrated with my two photographer friends who came with me on Safari, when they insisted on the driver to get out of the road and drive in the bush to get close to mother lion with her tiny cub. The mother was so stressed and the cub tried to hide. Then we heard from behind us, the father lion screaming, so we had to get quickley out of the area before we were attacked. All what I could see on my friends face their satisfaction. They kept telling everyone about how wonderful was that experience. They did not seem to realize how much we disturbed this family of lion. I decided that they will remain my friends but I will never travel with them anywhere.

Story like this, we can tell a lot of them. Antarctica is so popular now! How much is going to be the impact on its fragile ecosystem with the number of tourists getting higher every year? It is going to be the next Galapos with the more impact because of the low number of species and biodiversities

I believe there is always a good way to travel to any destination if people respect the wildlife and the rule for their safety and the safety of animals, so we all can enjoy this beatiful and fragile heritage for many generations to come. I also believe as a conservation wildlife photographer, the well being of my subject and the protection of its habitat is my priority number one The shot I want to take, it has to be taken in a way that doe not disturb my subject in any way. That is why most of the time, I go alone to remote areas to photograph far from tourist or others and I remain at a respectful distance from my subjects. I tried to obey by the philosophy of leaving no trace.
 
Neat, a thread where everyone can compete on how much more ethical they are than the rest of the species.... We havent had one of these threads in at least a week.

In all seriousness if you make a "park" or "nature area" for people to enjoy. It should come to no surprise when people go there and disturb the wildlife. Luckily the fate of these species dont hinge on 1 or 2 locations.
I mean...yes, but I take a different look.

There's a massive difference between watching from a distance and driving right up to them and disturbing them. I'm all for parks and all, but they have signs saying "do not disturb wildlife" for a reason. And a lot of the places I go to (luckily) the wildlife is on the other side of a water feature/etc where it's near impossible to get to so they can't be disturbed as easily by...shall we say, less aware members of the general public. The common clay of the west.
 
Every contributor to this topic has made excellent points. It all boils down to 3 things…
1. Respect for wildlife
2. Restraint by visitors
3. Enforcement of regulations and restrictions that address the impact of people, vehicles, noise, proximity, and hours that wildlife are subjected to our intrusion.
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This is a remarkable world we live in. Hopefully enough of that will get through somewhere and the human species will finally learn to curb it rapacious appetite.

The problem today, is the current administrations do not punish anyone for wrong doing! People don't take responsibility for themselves, they just blame someone else, for everything! Until people are held responsible for things they do, as they were proir to 2020, the human race will continue to devolve, until we're back like the days of the wild wild west. Until folks are given consequences for their actions, things will just get worse!
I too am old, but I worry for my children, grandchildren, and all to come.
 
Last fall I went to visit a friend in Door County, Wisconsin. There is a very twisty S curve road thru a beautiful forested area. A true photogenic area. On the day we traveled that road cars and people lined the shoulders on both sides,. Cell phones in hand. There was no place to stop and take pictures. However what really took the prize for KARENISM was the woman laying in the center of the bussily trafficed road taking pictures. If she was waiting for a traffic free shot, it must have been a long wait or a long ambulance ride to a hospital.
 
I am old and will not live to see the worst consequences. I will take the time I have remaining to document the great natural beauty we still have and share that beauty with others.

This is a remarkable world we live in. Hopefully enough of that will get through somewhere and the human species will finally learn to curb it rapacious appetite.

Interesting comment, do share with us too, Your gallery here is empty
 
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