Clay Bolt Nature Photography

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People in Nature { 22 images } Created 20 May 2009

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  • Local Fisherman like Capt. Jim Yergin depend on healthy oyster reefs to protect marine species. Approximately 130 species use the reefs for protection.
    cbolt_12072009_DSC7920.jpg
  • Eastern Box Turtles ( Terrapene carolina carolina ) are found throughout most of the Eastern, United States. They prefer woodland areas, and eat fruit, insects, worms, and fungus. They can be quite time but will often completely hide within their shells if threatened. Males typically have red or bright orange irises and females have duller, brown irises.
    cbolt_08042007_boxturtle.jpg
  • The Nature Conservancy's Nine Times Preserve in Pickens County, South Carolina is rich in herpefauna. An amateur herpetologist and nature photographer Alex Garcia searches beneath boulders for reptiles and amphibians.
    cbolt_07172009_DSC6214.jpg
  • TNC Marine Restoration Specialist Joy Brown Measures Oyster Growth against the rising tide, five months after the oyster castles were first installed.
    cbolt_12082009_DSC7973.jpg
  • European Hornets (Vespa crabro) were introduced to the United States. In early spring, the queen emerges from estivation and looks for a suitable nesting spot to start a new colonly. Although they are fierce in appearance, they are typically not very aggressive unless harassed. They fly both during the day and at night.
    cbolt_03282009_DSC2472.jpg
  • Sandy Island is a preserve owned and managed by The Nature Conservancy. Due to its unique soil composition, it harbors a number of important plant species as well a healthy population of the federally endangered Red-cockaded Woodpecker (Picoides borealis). A gullah community still lives on the island and it is the only place in South Carolina where students much take a School-Boat to get to class.
    cbolt_01062006_sandyisland.jpg
  • The Nature Conservancy's Nine Times Preserve in Pickens County, South Carolina is rich in herpefauna. An amateur herpetologist and nature photographer Alex Garcia searches beneath boulders for reptiles and amphibians.
    cbolt_07172009_DSC6218.jpg
  • Botanist and TV personality Dr. Patrick McMillan discusses plants with group during The Nature Conservancy's Nine Times Preserve Dedication Ceremony. Dr. McMillan was one of the first to do a botanical survey of the site and discovered many rare and important species during the process.
    cbolt_20090501_DSC3313_sepia.jpg
  • South Carolina's Mountain Bridge Wilderness is a diverse landscape full of natural diversity and scenic beauty. A hiker observes the Cathedral; a sheer cliff along the Naturaland Trust Trail, which is close to Raven Cliff Falls.
    cbolt_10122008_DSCF0018.jpg
  • A picnic between a father in son in a grassy meadow
    cbolt_20070812_DSCF0078.jpg
  • Man, Walking on the Appalachian Trail, Shenandoah Valley, Virginia
    cbolt_pin_1_cd.jpg
  • Birdwatching is a very popular activity in coastal South Carolina. The A.C.E. Basin is an amazing coastal wetland system in SC that is comprised of thousands of protected acres due to the efforts of concerned citizens and lawmakers. It is incredibly important as a nesting ground and migration point for many species of birds.
    cbolt_pin5_cd21.jpg
  • A little boy holds beans that he grew in his first vegetable garden.
    cbolt_06262007_DSCF0275.jpg
  • South Carolina Park Ranger and Mountain Bridge Wilderness Naturalist Tim Lee Discusses Freshwater Bio-Diversity with a Converse College Student along the Middle Saluda River, Jones Gap State Natural Area, South Carolina.
    cbolt_080726_DSCF0045.jpg
  • South Carolina Park Ranger Tim lectures to Converse College students on Freshwater Invertebrates taken from the Middle Saluda River, which runs through the Jones Gap State Natural Area.
    cbolt_080726_DSCF0076.jpg
  • Mountain Bridge Wilderness, Trail Marker, Trail 14 Naturaland Trust Trail. This marker, which has been chewed by a squirrel, is in the Dismal Forests.
    cbolt_10122008_DSCF0169.jpg
  • An active senior lady, volunteering at a Nature Conservancy event in Upstate, South Carolina
    cbolt_20090501_DSC3331.jpg
  • Father and Son, Hiking in Sumter National Forest, South Carolina
    cbolt_20070526_DSCF0101.jpg
  • A College of Charleston Student Stop Net Gap Testing along Spartina Marsh where Oyster Castles (reefs) are being constructed by the Nature Conservancy and the SC Dept. of Natural Resources.
    cbolt_07142009_DSC5944_sepia.jpg
  • SC Park Ranger Tim Lee lectures on what plant and animal life Converse College students can expect to find in the Middle Saluda River during their Outdoor Freshwater Ecology Class, Greenville, SC
    cbolt_080726_DSCF0028.jpg
  • The Nature Conservancy's Marine Restoration Specialist Joy Brown Measures New Oyster Growth on Oyster Castles (Crassostrea virginica), Five Months After installation, Jeremy Island, South Carolina, USA
    cbolt_12072009_DSC7944.jpg
  • Birdwatching is a very popular activity in coastal South Carolina. The A.C.E. Basin is an amazing coastal wetland system in SC that is comprised of thousands of protected acres due to the efforts of concerned citizens and lawmakers. It is incredibly important as a nesting ground and migration point for many species of birds.
    cbolt_pin4_cd21.jpg