Allen Bargen Photography

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A pod of Hippos enjoys the afternoon sun on the bank of the Chobe River. Shot taken from a raft as we drifted past them. This male, content that we meant no harm allowed us to pass without incident.
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A pod of Hippos enjoys the afternoon sun on the bank of the Chobe River. Shot taken from a raft as we drifted past them. This male, content that we meant no harm allowed us to pass without incident.

Hippos08C83372000

  • Untitled photo
  • A sleepy female eats marsh grasses as she munches
  • Same female, chest high in grass and reeds, her feet in water as she eats. Note the Egret on her back.
  • A Squacco Heron fishing on the banks of the Okavango River.
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  • Untitled photo
  • Male with mssing tusk, most probably lost in a fight during mating season
  • Tourists go for a Mokoro ride
  • Lioness and one of her two cubs drinking from the Chobe River in Botswana in the last rays of a setting sun. May 2011.
  • Lioness with her two cubs drinking from the Chobe River in Botswana in the last rays of a setting sun. May 2011
  • A Male Hippo bellows his disaprovement at our proximity. Botswana.
  • A Male Hippo bellows his disaprovement at our proximity. Botswana
  • Baboon chastising one of their troop for some transgression. Taken from the Chobe River, Botswana near Kasane.
  • A pod of Hippos enjoys the afternoon sun on the bank of the Chobe River. Shot taken from a raft as we drifted past them. This male, content that we meant no harm allowed us to pass without incident.
  • Elephants in Chobe say goodbye to us in their own special way
  • A young male Elephant drinks, taken at sunset on the banks of the Chobe river in Botswana.
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  • A young female Kudu looks at me as she discovers humans, perhaps for the first time. Near Kasane, botswana
  • Mature Male Kudu, taken on the banks of the Chobe River, Botswana
  • This is one of Africa's greatest showpieces, the Kudu is a member of the Antelope family. Their magnificent spiral horns often reach 1.8mm in length. The Males form loose batchelor units and leave to find a suitable female herd after they are 6 years old. I shot this one in Botswana on the banks of the Chobe river as he came down to drink.
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