Cwm Ceffyl Ranch is thrilled and privledged to share our part of the Bijou Basin with a great variety wildlife residents. Look below for wildlife photos taken on or very near Cwm Ceffyl Ranch.

These bald eagles supervised my cattle feeding operation during the winter of 2010. I see one to four bald eagles almost daily in the winter. They are shy enough that it is difficult to get a really good photo. These were taken with a 300 mm lens.
Photos by Chuck Hughes, January 2010

Check out the prairie dog in this eagle's talons. Bald eagles prefer fish, but if fish aren't available, the prarie dogs will do just fine.


The most comonly seen raptor at Cwm Ceffyl Ranch is the red tail hawk. This one was watching for its favorite meal, prairie dogs. At right is the same hawk in flight. It's quite obvious how it got its name!
Photo by Chuck Hughes 27 August 2010


Photos by Chuck Hughes.
Great horned owls are fearless raptors and efficient nocturnal hunters and can be approached fairly closely. This one stood it's ground as one of our Border Collies charged it while barking.
Memo to barn cats:
"Look out! This is not your average bird."

The highly nocturnal burrowing owl uses the prairie dog holes for their nests. We see them with regularity in the summer, but not often during daylight hours.
Photo by Chuck Hughes 19 August 2010
This photo of some beautiful mule deer was taken on an early February morning from the front deck of the ranch house. The deer are often seen going between the cover of the trees to the west of the house and the water in West Bijou Creek to the east of the house.
Photo by Chuck Hughes

This mule deer fawn is still sporting spots. It was one of twins, but this is only one I caught in the photo.
Photo by Chuck Hughes

At right is a herd of North American pronghorn. We see them almost daily at Cwm Ceffyl Ranch, in groups both large (in late summer, fall, and winter) and small (in spring and early summer).

This pronghorn buck is so familiar to the ranches in our area that we call him Fred, or Fast Freddie. He's a welcome and frequent visitor to Cwm Ceffyl. These photos were taken right in front of the Cwm Ceffyl Ranch House

It's always fun to see a doe pronghorn with her fawn. Even the very young ones can cover some ground.
Pronhorn photos by Chuck Hughes
Bald eagles are seen almost daily in the winter hunting from the trees along West Bijou Creek. The two at pictured at the left were watching me feed the weanling calves in February 2008. Unlike great horned owls, who will often stay put even when closely approached, the bald eagles take off before I get close enough for a really good photo.
Bald Eagle photo by Chuck Hughes.

These two are rare sights. This photo was taken by Jim Adair of two bobcats working on providing themselves with their favorite lunch of cottontail rabbit.
Bobcat photo courtesy of Jim & Arletta Adair

At left is a golden eagle swooping down off the cross that we put on the ridge to the west of the ranch house. Golden eagles are seen year round and have nests in the forest and ridges to the west of west of Cwm Ceffyl and there is one big nest in a tree next to West Bijou Creek. We like to watch them help reduce the prairie rat population. To the right is the same eagle perched on top of the cross west of the ranch house.
Golden Eagle photos by Chuck Hughes

At right and below are photos taken in July 2009 of a Swainson's Hawk. Both shots were taken from the house deck. Swainson's Hawks are known for their long migrations between South and North America. They are smaller in size than the more common Red Tail Hawk, but have a greater wing span. 
Photos by Chuck Hughes


Kestrel photos by Chuck Hughes
Kestrels are seen with some regularity at Cwm Ceffyl as they help with controling the rodent population. They are the smallest member of the falcon family and are amazing aviators. They can fly quite fast and can also hoover just like a hummingbird. At one time they were mis-named the sparrow hawk, but are not a hawk at all. They are a falcon. This kestrel was hanging out on the ranch house deck railing during a wet April snowstorm.

There is a growing and thriving group of wild turkeys in the forest just to the southwest of Cwm Ceffyl Ranch. This photo of a hen turkey looks like she is trying to become invisible.
Turkey photo by Chuck Hughes
In addition to the above species, we also see mountain lions (a.k.a. puma, cougar, or catamount), several hawk species, prairie falcons, coyotes, and badgers. We also have plenty of western prairie rattlesnakes, racoons, skunks, porcupines, and prairie dogs, but we don't revel quite as much when we see them.