Like
an hammer
Picture and text © Bruno D'Amicis - all rights reserved worldwide
January, Central
Apennines, Italy
The ridge was now just
fifty meters above, I pressed on and made the last paces in apnea. It
was over: I climbed for almost three hours in the darkness, panting
and cursing my heavy backpack and the 500mm, camera and tripod
leaning on my right shoulder, to reach at sunrise the mountain meadow
where I had found so many wolf tracks the previous week. Before
getting over the ridge and thus reveal my human silhouette above the
horizon, I ducked, placed camera and tripod on the ground, dropped my
bag and crawled to the rim, binoculars in hand, to check the
situation first. I slowly scanned the surrounding grassy slopes
ending on that natural terrace: in the morning light a big herd of
deer and a family of wild boars were peacefully feeding on the
opposite side of the meadow. No sign of wolves. I retreated to change
my wet shirt and eat a snack in front of the grand landscape. The sun
was getting stronger by then. I moved back to the ridge and sat under
a big rock, resting my aching back against it, in plain view: I knew
it was over for that morning. The deer had immediately seen me and
were now all staring in my direction: 160 eyes following my actions
and making me feel naked. I had disturbed them and they started
moving higher and farther. But then I noticed what seemed a deer
resting alone and much closer. Just 100 meters from me and partly
hidden by a bush of juniper. I raised the binoculars: a spectacular
wolf in its prime winter coat was sleeping, completely unaware of my
presence! I could see its ribs rising with the breathing and its legs
moving frantically: it was dreaming. Although I could have
photographed it already from my position, I didn't think twice and in
a bunch of seconds I was already dragging my camera setup to find a
better and more open view of the animal, for a cleaner composition. I
moved carefully but I was completely visible: yet the wind was
blowing towards me and I was confident the wolf would not notice me.
Fast-beating heart and sweating hands, I was already tasting the
images I would take that morning.
Just ten meters to my
left and I could admire the wolf in its entirety. It did not move. I
checked it with my binoculars and I was shocked to see its amber eyes
fixed on me, more curious than afraid. Instead on freezing
immediatly, I hurried to setup my tripod and shoot. What a mistake!
The wolf was already on its legs when I could focus my lens; it
started running away as it heard the first burst of pictures.
It all had lasted a few
seconds and where before I was experiencing a precious wilderness
moment, now only emptiness and silence were around me. After the wolf
presence was gone and all the deer escaped, I was just in a mountain
meadow: I had ruined everything. And because of photography.
May, Grand Erg
Oriental, Tunisia
Three weeks of hard
fieldwork had already passed without any fennec sighting. Me and my
two assistants had criss-crossed 50 square kilometers of desert, just
to find empty burrows and unrelenting sand storms. In this time span,
I had taken maybe less than 100 images (mostly landscapes or wildlife
tracks) but my camera equipment was already full of grit. I had come
all the way from Italy to southern Tunisia to start a photographic
project on the fennec fox, but until that day all which could justify
my decision was a single fox track in the sand and the stories of my
guide, Bechir.
But things were now about
to change. We had moved farther from the village, to explore a more
remote patch of desert and make use of a military post and its nearby
well as base camp for ten days. Wind was blowing strong when we
arrived and for the next two days, the moral was low and we couldn't
do much else than sleep, read or play chess. Eventually on the third
morning the air was still and crisp: perfect for tracking. Full of
expectations, Almost immediately and not even one kilometer from our
camp I came across a fresh fennec track that looked as etched in the
sand. I whistled to my assistant and we started following it. We
followed it for one hour, up and down the small dunes. It took us
first to an old nomads' fireplace, then to a fresh pile of camel
dung, then to a gerbils' den (where the fennec had dug a hole) and
after a couple of loops almost back to where we first had found it
and then, it disappeared! “Impossible”, I thought, and once again
I let despair take over me. On that moment the whole trip, which was
supposed to be the beginning of a great project, instead started
looking like a big failure.
“Bruno, regarde ici!”,
Bechir called from behind a nearby shrub. He had found again the
track, which had been partly erased by a soft breeze and was now
going into another direction. We walked behind it as it kept going in
a straight line, as if purposefully towards something. It was
exciting and we started walking faster. Eventually it brought us to a
patch of small dunes covered in retam bushes and other shrubs. Ten
more meters and it disappeared again. But into a small burrow this
time. The fox tracks were also all over the place, crossed by the
smaller ones of its pups: we had found our treasure!
With the belly full of
butterflies, we winked at each other and quickly made our way back to
camp to not disturb the den: I would have gone back in the middle of
the day, alone and with my camouflage tent, in the hope to watch the
foxes coming out at dusk.
At noon the breeze grew
stronger soon becoming a fierce wind, blowing sand into nostrils and
eyes. Although I knew it was risky for my equipment to take pictures
in such conditions, I went to the den anyway, if not just to glimpse
its residents and finally see my first fennec! I walked softly, on
bare feet, and concealed myself under a shrub and behind a dune some
200 meters from the den, terrified at the idea of disturbing them.
Like most of the canid species, in fact, fennec foxes do immediately
move their pups to a different den if threatened.
The hours passed slowly,
then evening came and with it another gorgeous sunset, but the wind
was blowing hard, making it difficult even to keep the eyes open. If
something was living in the burrow, I could not see nor hear.
Besides, all my worries were for the equipment sadly full of sand.
All this struggle for nothing, I kept on thinking.
That night, the dinner
was a silent one. We were all tired from the previous weeks and
desperately in need of a breakthrough.
On the next day, I was
already up one hour before sunrise and walking carefully towards the
den and the lookout point of the previous day. It was a peaceful
morning. When the sun rose I had not seen anything, so I approached
the den to check if there was any sign of activity. The sand around
the burrow was untouched and I was then sure the foxes had moved
right after we had found it. It was enough and I was ready to go back
home: I was wasting my time there. Back to camp, I recall Bechir and
Zyed, my other assistant, breaking my stubborn silence and begging me
not to give up but to try again the coming evening, which looked
promising because of the wind absence. “Le fennec n'aime pas le
vent” kept on saying Bechir. More to please them than with a real
purpose, I took equipment and water and walked the distance to the
den, this time hiding among some vegetation a little closer to the
burrow. “At least, I will be a little more comfortable...” I
thought.
It was again a long
waiting and I was sweating copiously under the camouflage blanket in
the afternoon heat. Dozens of flies kept on harassing me as long as
the temperature didn't decrease at sunset. Thirty minutes after the
sun had dropped beneath the horizon, the sky and the highest dunes
were still pink. It was then when I glimpsed a little whitish shape
apparently flying on the ground. The first fennec fox of my life was
an adult one returning to its pups. It was much smaller than I
thought; beautiful as it ran with its incredibly light pace, which
almost didn't move the sand grains under its paws. I guess my face
blushed for the deep emotion as my hands trembled when I tried to
follow the fox in the viewfinder. An istant before it reached the
burrow, two fluffy balls bolted out from it. I don't like to use
human adjectives to describe animals, but those two fennec pups were
THE cutest thing I had ever seen in my life. In a fraction of a
second, they were already lying under the mother suckling milk. I was
so grateful and could not believe my luck, because I was watching
something that few humans had ever witnessed, let alone photographed!
I “woke up” and started taking pictures, although the dim light
was asking for dramatically long exposures. But, in the fossil
silence of the Sahara, the shutter of my camera sounded like an
hammer against the anvil. No matter if I was using the “silent
mode” and that my camera was engulfed in a cumbersome blimp: its
noise was still impossible to conceal. After two single frames, the
female was already looking into my direction. And, although I was
well concealed, she could figure something was not right. One more
frame and she flew behind a dune; the pups diving back into the
burrow. I should have been happy: I had finally seen and photographed
my first fennecs, documenting a unique moment of their life! But,
once again, I felt as the magic was over. Sure enough, the female
moved her pups overnight and it took me five more days to locate the
new burrow. I could carry on my work, then, but with more care than
on this first encounter. Still, a moment like that didn't repeat
itself anymore during my stay and I wondered if I should have enjoyed
it without taking pictures instead.
Now, these are just two
stories among many, but as usual my pen took me much further than
these pages allow. I lost count of the times when I regretted being a
photographer. Once it is the pathetic weight of the backpack to ruin
a walk; once it is the noise of the camera to scare an animal;
sometimes it is the worry for the safety of the equipment to curse a
journey, but above everything is the urge of taking good pictures
that can often spoil our best moment. Photography claims for such a
high attention for details, in fact, that sometimes it can be a
serious obstacle to a direct experience of Nature and makes me often
think to give up on it.
But, then, I wonder:
would I ever climb for three hours in complete darkness with twenty
kilograms on my back or spend four weeks roaming a desert, if there
would be no challenge of making an experience timeless and accessible
to everyone else through the impact of a good picture?