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READ THE LATEST NEWS FROM TRISTAN HOWARD

December 30, 2023

OUT OF TORPOR
It’s been 10 years since I posted news. Tristan Howard Productions may have been in a lethargic torpor like a western fence lizard in winter, but my natural history cinematography, photography, and sound recording efforts have continued. They’ve been slow, interrupted, opportunistic, and stifled by being a responsible fully-employed adult living in urban areas, but I’m back, and I have quite a few updates.

BUSINESS CARD
I created a new business card (see below) to help share my projects with various people who mistake me for a park ranger on my outings. The design below reflects the spirit of the future of Tristan Howard Productions. Note: My website URL and e-mail address have changed.

Tristan Howard Productions business card

INSTAGRAM
I also finally joined traditional social media by setting up an Instagram account this month. Feel free to follow me @expedition.tristan. Note: You do not need to be a member of Instagram or follow me to see my Instagram content. So far, my account mostly features the greatest hits from my early days, but there’s some content from the torpor times. I plan to eventually populate this with mostly current media.

Tristan Howard Productions Instagram screenshot

MAILING LIST REVIVAL
The old option so sign up for an e-mail list to get news updates is back. Click on the link below to fill out a form to sign up.

Tristan Howard Productions mailing list sign-up form

WILDLAND RETURN
I recently moved back to the wild Humboldt County coastal area in far northwestern California where I went to college, and I have new 4K HD video equipment. I’ve been building new video libraries, and I’m now close to the best redwood parks in the world as well as easily accessible elk, marine mammals, epic beaches, and wetlands. If you liked my Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park documentary, you’ll love the fantastic footage I’ve been capturing here. This area is a one-of-a-kind world-class biodiversity hot spot where you can easily have beaches and hiking trails to yourself.

Mad River Beach sunset

harbor seals near the Mad River in California

OLD FOOTAGE AND NEW PROJECTS
I’m developing new projects from older HD footage. The first of these is Pond Primeval, which focuses on the reptile, amphibian, insect, and bird life of lava rock ponds in southwestern Modoc County. This feature will likely debut next year. It will be like an extended HD version of the summer section of The Wildlife of Little Hot Springs Valley. After that, I plan to produce a documentary about mule deer bucks.

western pond trutle floats over log

WROTE A NOVEL
I wrote a full-length science-fiction novel over the last 10 years. It’s a time travel Western full of dinosaurs and well-researched science facts. It’s kind of like Michael Crichton meets Louis L’Amour and NPR science podcasts. The novel is Jurassic Frontier: A Lassen Malone Adventure. It’s available on Amazon and numerous other online vendors, including Barnes and Noble’s website. The e-book version is free to Amazon Prime members, and if you're not on Amazon Prime, you can still sign up for a free Kindle review copy by filling out the form below. Regardless of sales, I would love for anybody interested to be aware of and read my book.

Sign up for a free Kindle review copy of Jurassic Frontier.

Jurassic Frontier time travel science fiction novel full of dinosaurs and science facts.

Being immersed in the setting of the book and doing a ton of research made me knowledgeable about the ecology of the late Jurassic Morrison Formation. Reading the book will take you on a journey to a fantastic ecosystem well-preserved in the fossil record. Morrison Formation fossils show what dinosaurs and other organisms were living in the interior western U.S. about 150 million years ago. This time and place had superstar dinosaurs, like Brontosaurus, Stegosaurus, Allosaurus, Brachiosaurus, Diplodocus, and quite few other long-necked sauropods. And get this, dinosaurs have been on Earth for such a long time that this all-star dino cast lived about 84 million years before Tyrannosaurus rex. The dinosaurs in my book were long-gone fossils by the time T. rex tromped through North America in the late Cretaceous.

NEW PORTFOLIO WEBSITE
I created a new portfolio website to showcase a cross-section of my work from various disciplines. This is mainly for potential employers, and some things it includes that cannot be found on this site include numerous maps. One of the most interesting maps I made is a story map about the history of bighorn sheep in Northeastern California.

Northeastern California bighorn history story map screenshot

November 24, 2013
Objective: Complete! I recently acquired a fulltime job as a GIS specialist/planner. I now work for an environmental consulting firm in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. I can now check out plenty of amazing areas located within a half day’s drive. Yosemite National Park, the Owens Valley, various wildlife refuges in the Central Valley, and even my original home region of Little Hot Springs Valley are within striking distance.

In fall 2011, I largely put my natural history multimedia efforts on hold as I pursued a master’s degree and a steady job. Now, intricate planning and years of work have paid off. I feel very fortunate and appreciative.

Tristan Howard Productions may soon experience a revival because I now have free time to archive/post old materials and explore/document new terrain. Despite being busy, between graduation last spring and getting a job this fall, I managed to shoot some new HD video material. Highlights include a ferocious mule deer buck fight, a sequence in which a bald eagle successfully attacks coots, and shots of bighorns headbutting below high desert cliffs. So, plenty is in the pipeline. When will you see it? I do not know, but it is my intention to edit and share it eventually.

mule deer bucks battle_Tristan Howard Productions

October 21, 2013
Here are a few photos of amazing deer activity I have recently been seeing. I am still planning on making a new mule deer documentary, but several years may pass before it is completed.

Mule deer buck reaches for apple

mule deer bucks

mule deer buck eyes apples

June 7, 2013
The Wildlife of Little Hot Springs Valley (my first professional documentary) aired on northern California’s KIXE TV PBS station yet again on Thursday, June 6 at 10:00 pm. It first debuted in May 2008, so I find it remarkable that it is still being broadcast five years later. However, it is a quality production that has withstood the test of time.

May 25, 2013
Yes, folks. It has been awhile since I have significantly updated this place. However, I have a good excuse. I was earning (1) a Master of Science in Geography with an Option in Community and Environmental Planning and (2) a Certificate in GIS Sciences and Technologies. While diligently laboring at such endeavors, I was also a paid teaching assistant for two years, working on a thesis that is over 200 pages long, and maintaining a 4.0 GPA.

All epic tasks above have just been completed. I am now looking for a job. The scope of my job quest spans the entire American West. I am mainly seeking natural resource-related jobs in public outreach/education, GIS, and planning. I have primarily been looking into government agencies, conservation organizations, and environmental consulting firms. If you happen to be an employer, you would be lucky to have me—and I will tell you why.

I have a thorough education, a strong multimedia background, and a variety of software-based technical skills. I also stand out because I have excellent communication capacities, I am organized, I have a natural propensity to plan, and I have a logical mindset. If you are part of an organization that needs a geographer, writer, educator, mapmaker, planner, or just a general smart guy who is a good communicator, I am your man.

December 24, 2012
Today, I updated my online résumé and posted some of my publications. Last summer, I wrote three wildlife articles for the Kern Valley Sun (local newspaper in southern California). Furthermore, in August, the Idaho Chapter of the Wild Sheep Foundation published one of my articles in its newsletter. To peruse my articles, check out the new “PUBLICATIONS” button toward the bottom of the menu bar.

Additionally, I’ve greatly augmented and updated my bighorn disease info site since I announced it last spring.

 

May 25, 2012
Today, I launched an in-depth site covering the problem of Disease Transmission from Domestic Sheep to Bighorn Sheep. The new site ties into my current thesis research. Instead of wildlife documentaries, policy analysis is the latest output from Tristan Howard Productions. In addition to plenty of info on the biology and management of the disease problem, I also present write-ups on bighorns’: ranges and subspecies, devastation and restoration, and importance.

I also changed the formatting on a few pages on this site and added new images to the Welcome page.

 

 

November 26, 2011
Since August, grad school has been my primary priority, but I recently took a shooting trip for the first time since last summer. My write-up is below along with screenshots and a short video depicting a small sampling of what I saw. While order has been manipulated, this is raw video with no special sound effects or music. I recommend you watch this after reading my account.

 

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Early Afternoon - November 23, 2011

Lolo National Forest: 20 Miles Southeast of Missoula, Montana

I trudged over snow and rock as I moved along a narrow trail on the south slope of a mountain gully. A mossy fir and pine forest blanketed the slope I traversed. Below me, a small creek gurgled through riparian shrubbery and leafless stands of aspen. Above the creek, steep grassy slopes (dotted with pines and rock outcroppings) stretched northward. A light gray, overcast sky hung above me as I heaved my substantial videography/photography gear pack off my shoulders and onto snow. 

I then glassed slopes to the north with binoculars and spotted about 20 distant bighorn sheep grazing. As I examined my subjects, I occasionally heard the light clinking of tumbling talus rocks. I decided to use my 100-400 mm lens with a 1.4x extender to shoot a distant ram and ewes. However, while preparing to switch lenses on my video camera, I caught sight of the source of the noise. About 60 yards across from me (very close in the context of bighorn photography), a mature ram chased a ewe on the slope opposite of my position. I only had two minutes left on the current tape in my camera, but I proceeded on. Tall trees blocked my view, so with a lens tucked in my wool-lined aviator jacket, and my camcorder/tripod setup over my shoulder, I moved downhill to reach a more open vantage point.

Rocky Mountain bighorn ram

In my excitement, I slipped on the snow and fell backward. My camera gear nearly tumbled toward a rocky mangling, but my jacket cushioned its impact as it slammed into my chest. The slope was steep with mossy rocks and slushy snow, so my landing was a walloping surprise but not painful. With my back on snow—and active, photogenic bighorns nearby—I awkwardly pulled out a fresh tape and inserted it in my camcorder. I tried to stay low for fear of alarming my subjects. With a new tape loaded, I got up and extended tripod legs as I set up to shoot the bighorns. I soon focused my 28-300 mm lens on a mature ram with large horns. He seemed distracted by something on my side of the gully. 

Rock clinked, and I quickly glanced right. A substantial bighorn ram with thick, curling horns moved down my slope. This boy was big—with horns much larger than those of the first ram I spotted. At one point, he was only about 40 feet away from me. I believe that was the closest I have ever been to a mature bighorn ram. The ram seemed to come out of nowhere, and he was a welcome surprise. Luckily, he wasn't in a bad mood. As I quickly fathomed the positive shock of my most prized quarry practically stumbling into my lap, I spun my camera right and recorded the ram as he moved downslope, strode uphill, and evicted the smaller ram from the vicinity. The big ram then courted ewes and struck great poses as I recorded the action. I was close enough to occasionally hear the ram emit low bellowing noises.

Rocky Mountain bighorn ram

The large ram soon disappeared, moving west over the top of a hill. I then continued up the trail. About five minutes later, I was surprised to see two yearling bighorns and a lamb cross the trail ahead of me. They may have been perhaps 70 feet away. I recorded them before they moved out of sight behind trees. I've most often shot bighorns in open high desert or alpine terrain, so I was surprised to see wild sheep habituated to such a forested area. 

By early evening (after more hiking and no new sightings), I moved back to my original success zone. I soon turned around and saw a huge ram standing alone on rocks far uphill to the northeast. I photographed and recorded the impressive ram. His horns were severely gouged and missing notable layers of keratin—likely from ferocious clashes with other rams.

The gouge-horned ram moved west to join up with the ewes and lambs I'd seen earlier in the afternoon. The original big ram also returned, and both male sheep tried to court ewes. They interacted and postured as if they might fight. However, if they had problems with each other, they were probably settled earlier. The rams seemed pretty relaxed, and no fight occurred. This is the peak of the breeding season for Rocky Mountain bighorns, and one would assume fights could be common—with equally matched rams competing for ewes. However, I've read that most hierarchy is established before the rutting season. That’s when most head-butting is supposed to occur.

Rocky Mountain bighorn ram

After getting one last shot of the gouge-horned ram, I realized that dusk had progressed so far that low light levels were yielding poor quality footage. It was time to go, so I packed my gear and headed back down the trail. As I traveled toward the iced-over parking lot hosting my car, I felt grateful that I finally lived in an area where I could casually shoot great footage of a huge group of bighorns that was far from major roads, far from crowds, and in a quiet location I had all to myself.

August 6, 2011
I recently arrived in Missoula, Montana. I like the area, and it feels comfortable, though I anticipate winter will freeze up some of my positive attitude. I’ve already seen velvet bucks close to my apartment, and I have plenty of room to roam. This is the best place I’ve lived since I left Little Hot Springs Valley.

University of Montana & Missoula, mountains east of town, whitetail bucks just outside of town

thunderstorm over Missoula

Western Montana is grand, but so was the trip here. I saw epic plains, badlands, and dinosaur fossils in Wyoming, extremely high mountain country along the Beartooth Highway in the Wyoming/Montana border country, and abundant wildlife in Yellowstone National Park.

Wyoming and Montana scenery

Carnegie collection at Glenrock Paleontological Museum

In the brief time I traveled through Yellowstone, I saw mountain goats, deer, elk, bison, and two grizzlies. One grizzly dashed off a steep slope and ran in front of my car at dusk. I got a good look at it and watched it trot into darkness before disappearing in a riverbed. I also encountered a bison jam in the dark. Bison stood on the road, and I was close enough to see headlights shine off hooves and glossy snouts.

Mammoth Hot Springs

The Missoula region is the most like my home terrain out of all the places I’ve lived. Finally, I’m surrounded by mountains again. Vegetation diversity is notably greater than the Colorado Front Range, and this area feels a lot like the Pacific Northwest. Though I’ll be busy with grad school, I’m confident I’ll get plenty of good photos and videos right from the open country surrounding Missoula.

Missoula at dusk

June 19, 2011
I finally posted newspaper articles that cover The Wildlife of Little Hot Springs Valley’s initial 2008 TV broadcast and its first theater screening. The articles are on the
Print Publicity page, which is in the “SCREENINGS & BROADCASTS” section.

July 22, 2008 Mountain Echo newspaper article

May 30, 2011
I recently implemented the most significant website update since I revamped the whole site last year. I finally added 31 natural sound clips. You can listen to 19 wildlife audio clips and 12 ecosystem ambience clips. Each wildlife clip is about 30 seconds long, and the ecosystem ambience clips are about 3 minutes long. Below is one of my favorite clips. I recorded it in Colorado last October.

I planned on adding a sound section to my site from the beginning, but I never got around to it. Recording, organizing, labeling, and listening to dozens of hours of sound can be time-consuming. I only recently finished listening to the majority of my sound library. Cinematography and photography have generally been a higher priority for me than sound recording. The sounds on my site were recorded over the course of about 5 years.

I also recently augmented two wildlife photo galleries. I added new elk and bighorn photos to the Large Mammals gallery, and I added a snapping turtle photo and garter snake photos to the Reptiles & Amphibians gallery.

Rocky Mountain elk bull

In addition to updating wildlife galleries, I posted a new landscape gallery: Meadows and Fields. I also removed my “Mount Shasta” gallery. It seemed pretty weak compared to the other galleries. Some of the Shasta shots have since been absorbed in the new “Meadows and Fields” gallery, and others will likely show up elsewhere in the future. I also added a page called: Photo Enhancement Notes. There, I briefly describe the types of digital treatments I give some of my photos.

I also recently put all my Flash video clips into superior, new player skins that allow full-screen expansion.

May 21, 2011
I recently added three spectacular landscape photo galleries: Rocky Mountain National Park, Redwood National & State Parks, and California’s North Coast. I acquired most of
the redwood forest and coastal shots while attending Humboldt State University from
2005-2009. I shot the Rocky Mountain National Park photos from June to November 2010. The park isn’t far from my current location in Colorado. I also augmented my Southeastern Oregon gallery with more recent shots.

coast redwoods

Today, I also enhanced my site with a new wildlife photo gallery: Dinosaurs. I’ve wanted to photograph dinosaurs for years. What wildlife photographer wouldn’t want to capture images of the most fantastic creatures to have ever walked the Earth? I was born about 65 million years too late, so I settled for the next best things: museum models, fossil skeletons, detailed replicas placed in natural settings, etc.

Spinosaurus

I shot most of the dinosaurs in northeastern California, The Field Museum, the Dakota Dinosaur Museum, University of Wyoming’s Geological Museum, and the Utah Field House of Natural History State Park Museum. Over the years, I’ve visited 9 museums (in 6 states) that feature major dinosaur exhibits. The new gallery showcases a small sampling from more recent visits.

May 11, 2011
I recently designed a new banner for my site. The new graphic features a western fence lizard, Mount Shasta, and a Rocky Mountain bighorn ram. I photographed the lizard in Little Hot Springs Valley in March 2009. I got the Shasta shot in July 2005 while high in the Big Valley Mountains. And, I shot the bighorn ram in northern Colorado last November.

autumn oaks

I also added two substantial new photo galleries to my site. A Grand Teton National Park gallery is now under my “Western Landscapes” heading, and an autumn colors gallery is now in the “Little Springs Valley” section. I captured the Teton images in fall 2009 when I camped in the park while volunteering at the Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival. I shot the brilliantly colorful oak trees, maples, and walnut trees in October 2009.

The “WELCOME” page has also been slightly modified with image and text adjustments.

April 17, 2011

MOVING TO MONTANA

I’m now certain on my graduate school plans. This fall, I’ll be attending The University of Montana (UM) in pursuit of a Master of Science in Geography with an Option in Community and Environmental Planning. I’ll also be working part-time because the UM Geography Department awarded me a teaching assistantship.

Colorado (my current location) has impressive scenery and wildlife, but the portions of the state I’ve experienced are far too crowded and ecologically barren for my tastes. Despite my acquisition of real work and the presence of two universities suitable for my goals, I’m eager to leave Colorado.

Montana’s a different story. It contains much more intact ecosystems, sustainable populations of wolves and grizzlies, and over 4 million fewer people than Colorado. According to the 2010 U.S. census, Colorado has about 5,029,000 people while Montana has about 989,400 people.

I’m fascinated by many wildlife species, but my primary interest is often in North American big game animals. As accomplished wildlife photographer Peggy Bauer states in Erwin Bauer’s Horned & Antlered Game (1986): “Montana, with Wyoming, is the premier state for the horned and antlered mammal enthusiast.”

Glacier National Park

UM’s location in Missoula will put me near virtually every large mammal species I’ve videotaped and heavily researched. Finally, I’ll be near bighorn sheep, mountain goats, elk, pronghorn, bison, mule deer, white-tailed deer, moose, black bears, grizzly bears, and gray wolves. I’m near some of those species now, but I’m not fond of driving through Denver’s north sprawl to see whitetails, and I don’t enjoy navigating a swarm of Interstate 70 traffic to maybe see bighorns above the road.

With world-famous wildlife havens nearby like Glacier National Park and the National Bison Range, Missoula will give me unprecedented opportunities for fantastic wildlife cinematography and photography. I’ll also be near exemplary wildlife habitat in northern Idaho. However, my main focus will be on my education and teaching work, so I probably won’t get out nearly as often as I’d like.

March 5, 2011
SOP TV (Southern Oregon Public Television) broadcast The Wildlife of Little Hot Springs Valley yesterday at 5:00 a.m. I would have written of the airing beforehand, but I unexpectedly learned of it late the night before. Sure, 5:00 a.m. isn’t a great timeslot, but I’m glad a documentary I finished nearly 4 years ago is still being aired on a PBS station.

SOP TV schedule screenshot

January 22, 2011

I also updated the Natural History Research Links page with a link to the U.S. Forest Service’s Silvics of North America Manuals (thorough references for virtually every conifer and hardwood tree in the U.S.). Furthermore, I augmented the Physical Geography Research Links page with a link to the website of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). The USGS’s site has a fantastic array of geographic and geological information, and much of it can be found in the USGS Publications Warehouse.

Additionally, I added photographic banners (one of which is below) to all my research link pages.

Giant Crater Lava Field

TO READ OLDER NEWS, VISIT THE "NEWS ARCHIVES" PAGES