Hammond Raffetto Art 1 Shopify Url Banner Logo Url
  • Home
  • Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Portfolio
    • Landscape
    • Fauna
    • Flora
    • Structures
    • People & Places
    • Miscellaneous
    • Stock
    • Videos
    • Limited Editions:Coming Soon
  • Find
    • Search
    • Our Latest
    • •
  • Blogs
    • Our Journal
    • Tips & Articles
  • Tools
    • Software
    • Equipment
    • Traveling
  • Acquisition
    • Why Buy From Us?
    • Collector's Guide
    • Client Dashboard
    • Your Faves
    • Gallery Prints
    • The Coffee Table Book
    • Gallery Shopping Cart
  • Admin
    • About Us
    • FAQs
    • Contact Us
    • Newsletter
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Policy
    • Terms of Service
    • Returns & Refunds
    • App Marketing

Reflections in a Golden Eye

July 15, 2023

Leopard Photography — Africa's Pardos

My first visit to Africa was all Namibia, with a focus on landscape work. I actually did not expect to enjoy the wildlife part of the trip and shooting. Seeing it? Absolutely! But photographing it, well, that did not interest me as much. My indifference was short-lived. Getting images of rhinos at night, giraffes, zebras, and elephants by day, was endlessly exciting. Hearing lions roar close by and miles away at night was spine-tingling. Seeing cheetahs up close and personal was extraordinary. I was hooked.

While at Sossusvlei, we heard that a leopard had been spotted high up on the rocks near us. Our guide took us to the spot and we waited. For hours. With no reward. It was, in a word, disappointing.

The Pardos Series — Namibia, Zimbabwe, and the Chobe River

But on this trip, which included lions in Zimbabwe, Victoria falls, the Chobe River,  and finally Savute, we were blessed. We saw several leopards, including this gorgeous young female, who we watched for hours. We first spotted her ambling through the brush. Eventually, we parked under a tree she had been spotted in before. She glided silently through the grass, approached the tree until she was alongside the jeep, and in a startling flash of speed and power, she leapt past us. her first bound took her higher than the jeep, and soon she was above us. She was indifferent to us. We were in awe of her. The heading shot shows the reflection of the tree in her left eye.

Pardos is the ancient Greek word for leopard. It's what this series will be named. Others in the series are set out below.

Related Posts

More of Africa's leopards, this time as twin cubs high on Leopard Rock in Tanzania.

From another visit to Africa, a very different subject: an African Golden Weaver guarding his nest among the thorns on the Serengeti.

From yet another trip to Africa, a very different encounter: the diamond-mining ghost town of Kolmanskop in Namibia.

Fine Art African Wildlife Photography Print

Provenance: Nikon Z7 | Nikkor 10-400mm

DSC9842_1_Blog_Post_Image_for_Web_Pardos2
Enlarge
Comments

© Hammond Raffetto Art. All rights reserved.

This site uses cookies only if you accept them. For more information, see our Cookie Policy.
AcceptDecline