Mother and baby deer share kisses at a park in Kamloops.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/ Lyn MacDonald
August 19, 2024 - 6:00 AM
Most babies in the animal kingdom are no longer babies at this time of year, they are more like curious teenagers, but they still need their moms.
These touching wildlife interactions were captured by talented and patient photographers this summer in and around Kamloops and the Okanagan. While every species is very different, most of them have one big thing in common, the deep bonds between mothers and young.
One Kamloops photographer was able to snap a photo of a river otter with two young ones in tow, while another captured a mother black bear and her cub interacting at a river in Chase. The photographs of a variety of waterfowl show how much work it is being a parent out in the wilds.
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A mother bear in Chase interacts with her cub.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/ Ann Steenhuysen
A loon mum floats on Paul Lake with her chick on her back.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/ Doug Giles
A mother and two baby river otters were spotted in Kamloops.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/ Lyn MacDonald
Red-necked grebe gives baby a tasty spider on Paul Lake.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/ Doug Giles
A mother deer rests in the with her pair of spotted fawns in Kamloops.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/ Linda Dahn
An American coot feeds her chick on a lake outside Kamloops.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/ Valerie Walsh
A mother and baby owl in West Kelowna get some shut eye, side by side.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/ Dean Pratley
A couple of eared grebes care for a young chick on a pond in the Cariboo.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED/ Loekie Vanderwal
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