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In The Wild With Team Husar; A Cause Served With Great Images
With compassion and empathy for our wildlife, Lisa and Mike Husar of Wisconsin are dedicated to educating us all about the importance of earth’s wild creatures. Whether it is zebras at a watering hole in Kenya, a mother panda and her cub in China, or a polar bear with her triplets in Canada, photographing animals around the world has become their passion.
Gracing the cover of the 2006-’07 National Wildlife Federation calendar,
a tiny owl photographed by Lisa grabbed my attention. The little guy, only about
6” long, lives at a wildlife rehab center, as he has a permanent injury
and cannot fly. He is also an ambassador who goes out on educational programs
that help people learn about wildlife.
Today Team Husar is among the most prominent producers of wildlife images
and is regularly featured in publications by World Wildlife Fund, the Sierra
Club, Defenders of Wildlife, and National Wildlife Federation as well as in
the Smithsonian Institution’s Museum of Natural History in Washington,
DC.
“The more you study and photograph animals,” she advises, “the
more you are able to read their behavior. You want to know when that animal
is stressed and that you are not causing the stress.”
Big cats like mountain lions are almost impossible to photograph in the wild
and most of the gray wolves that Team Husar photograph are born and raised in
captivity. Lisa is quick to add that it is rare that animals will attack unless
they are starving and a wolf attack is unheard of. “It is just not their
normal behavior to attack humans,” she says.
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