Filmmaker Jake Davis left eight high-end cameras inside a bull alk inside the Weatherprofuof camera trap box, which died after being hunted by wolves.
Davis says that his career began with focus on the wildlife of Greater Yelostone Ecosystem. He grew up spending his summer in Jackson Hole, Vyoming, where his time was surrounded by his time, right peaks and abundant wildlife, not only cultivated a love for nature at a very young age, but also had a desire to share and preserve it. Today, Davis worked as a cinematographer on Natural History Productions BBC, National GeographicDisney, Netflix and apple; His most recent project included five months filming snow leopard in Mongolia. BBC“Planet Earth.”
“At a time where people get away from the rhythm and balance of the natural world,” he says about his work. “My hope is that my work rewrite a relationship with Junglee works.”
For this project, just the second that he is hosting his new———–has by Youtube channel, Davis says that he came in the so-called “Wolf Kill” in a chance encounter, but decided to take advantage of the situation. His experience with wildlife knowledge informed them that this area would be extremely active with predators and would give them an unusual rare opportunity to catch high quality footage of the site.
In the video, Davis shows its detailed setup which included around $ 100,000 in the device and included an array of high-end distance cinema cameras-which she says that she is the same gear for which she uses for BBC And National Geographic Productions and Sony Alpha cameras appear to be. After installing the camera and the sensor, Davis says he had left them for more than a month and “a rare and intimate look at the wolves and his role in this complex ecosystem was described as his role,” says Davis.
“The camera mesh captures weeks of activities on the corpse from golden eagles and red foxes to coints, revenue, magpees and finally, Volves.”
When he returned to the site, the footage he captured, he blew it.
“When I returned to check the cameras, I was surprised,” says Davis. “Wolves are incredibly intelligent and alert. It is intimately rare to film them. It is some special footage that I have ever captured, and it shows the wolves beautifully in the ecosystem.”
This episode mixes cinematic, documentary-quality footage, which contains the back and forth views. Captured footage features a fox feeding a wolf pack, a golden eagle and a fox on the alk’s remains. Additionally, a wolf also tries to close with one of Davis cameras.
Can be found on more than Davis His YouTube channel And on Instagram,
Image Credit: Jake davis