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News / Life / Pets & Wildlife

Photographer finds elusive lynx after long search

By Brooke Baitinger, The Charlotte Observer
Published: April 28, 2023, 6:48am

It had been years since Wesley Berg had last encountered a lynx, and the wildlife photographer was eager for another sighting.

Back in 2016, he had been cross-country skiing with his wife and stopped for a break when he heard a twig snap behind him. He turned to see two lynx, one female and one adolescent, wandering along his ski tracks, he told McClatchy News.

He snapped some quick photos with a point-and-shoot camera he had with him.

“That motivated me to get into wildlife photography,” he told McClatchy News. “I always dreamed since of finding another lynx and having a high-quality camera with me.”

His chance finally came on April 11, after seven years of searching. This winter, he’d seen some tracks in the snow but no lynx.

“After years of searching, I finally came across a lynx this morning,” Berg wrote on his wildlife photography Facebook page. “Not only that, but it was very cooperative as I spent over an hour hanging out with it while it mostly ignored me.”

Berg wasn’t sure if the lynx he spotted was male or female, but he could tell it was an adult, he said on Facebook. He added that it was a beautiful animal.

It’s one of the rarer wildlife encounters in Colorado, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s Southwest Region.

“A truly special sighting in the San Juan Mountains,” Colorado Parks and Wildlif officials wrote on Twitter.

At one point, lynx disappeared from Colorado due to trapping, poisoning, and loss of habitat, Colorado Parks and Wildlife said in an entry about lynx conservation on its website.

The department began its own seven-year lynx-related quest to reintroduce the animals back into the San Juan Mountains in the 1990s, officials said. The effort was an “astounding success,” and now Colorado is home to between 150 and 250 lynx.

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