bigeyephoto > The Crocodile man of Tarcoles, Costa Rica feeds a 12 ft. female American Crocodile.  He feeds up to 12 different crocs a day.  Although it is not natural to feed wild animals these crocs have been protected by their ability to generate revenue for the local town. With this protection the Rio Tarcoles has become the most densely populated place in the americas to see american crocodiles in their natural habitat.
bigeyephoto > Pacific tree frog resting on grape leaves in San Louis Obispo County, CA.
bigeyephoto > American White Pelican floating on a freshwater pond in Northern San Diego County.
bigeyephoto > A young coastal horned lizard basks on a rock to get warm.Riverside County, CA
bigeyephoto > A close encounter with a gray whale calf in Magdalena Bay.  It's eye is looking straight into the camera whilr she tilts on her side.
bigeyephoto > " Come On In ... Were Closed" I haven't shot much in the city, but I stayed across the street from the gates of Chinatown in San Francisco.  One Sunday morning I woke up to find the gates still welcoming even though the city was very much asleep.
bigeyephoto > The Pacific spotted dolphin was leaping from the quarter wake of a ship off Costa Rica.
bigeyephoto > Great Egret photographed in San Diego County.
bigeyephoto > A young gray whale surfaces to breathe in the warm lagoons of Magdalena Bay.
The Crocodile man of Tarcoles, Costa Rica feeds a 12 ft. female American Crocodile. He feeds up to 12 different crocs a day. Although it is not natural to feed wild animals these crocs have been protected by their ability to generate revenue for the local town. With this protection the Rio Tarcoles has become the most densely populated place in the americas to see american crocodiles in their natural habitat.
bigeyephoto > The Crocodile man of Tarcoles, Costa Rica feeds a 12 ft. female American Crocodile.  He feeds up to 12 different crocs a day.  Although it is not natural to feed wild animals these crocs have been protected by their ability to generate revenue for the local town. With this protection the Rio Tarcoles has become the most densely populated place in the americas to see american crocodiles in their natural habitat.
The Crocodile man of Tarcoles, Costa Rica feeds a 12 ft. female American Crocodile. He feeds up to 12 different crocs a day. Although it is not natural to feed wild animals these crocs have been protected by their ability to generate revenue for the local town. With this protection the Rio Tarcoles has become the most densely populated place in the americas to see american crocodiles in their natural habitat.
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