2# A Photo of Nature
Having followed the foxes during the course of the summer, Geifman said, “I noticed two cubs, four or five months old, climbing a tree right before nightfall. It was the first time I’d seen two cubs climbing together while playing. Previously, I’d been used to seeing them climbing individually. I hadn’t managed to snap the pair when one of them teetered on the branch and tried to save himself from falling… Afterwards, the cub did fall to the ground but was unharmed.”
Photographer Ezra Hadad took first place in the Birds category, with this photo of a Eurasian Scops Owl, hidden in the folds of a tamarisk tree trunk in the Judean foothills.
The Underwater World category was won by Noam Kortler, who captured a dramatic shot of a diver dwarfed by a massive school of big-scale sand smelt off the Eilat coral reefs.
A fawn, separated temporarily from his mother, decided a camel would make as good a foster parent as any, at least until his mother returned. This family drama was noticed by a Bedouin shepherd who notified the local NPIA inspector — who happened to be photographer Eran Hyams. The shot took second place in the Conflict Between Man and Nature category.
Eyal Cohen’s photo of a common brown hare lunching the dunes at the Palmachin Beach was the bronze medalist in the Animal Portraiture category.
And she may not have intended to be funny but Roy Avraham’s picture of an inelegantly side-stepping Grey Heron took the silver in the Animal Humor category.
This year, the “Natural Kingdom” category was dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the Israel Nature and Parks Authority.Other categories in the competition included Mammals, Reptiles and Amphibians, Invertebrates, Nocturnal Animals, Animals In Controlled Environments, Urban Nature, Wild Kingdom, Families, a youth photography category, ongoing projects and a presentation of wildlife videos.
The two exhibitions, Wildlife Photographer of the Year and 2# A Photo of Nature – Local Nature Photography run from May 9, 2014 through August 30 at the Eretz Israel Museum Tel Aviv.
Rachel Neiman