Journeys and Challenges: From Washington to Mount Rainier | July 20 2025, 20:31

From Washington to Washington. Moments

From Washington to Washington. Moments. #mountrainier

I shoot three times a year, and it’s quite engaging. I wanted to say that carrying a heavy camera for 15 km (with an elevation >100 floors) while hopping on rocks in the mountains is not easy, until we met a girl there who walked the whole way barefoot.

A Close Encounter with a Scentless Fawn | June 04 2025, 15:13

I walked with Yuki and he passed by a little deer less than a meter away without noticing. This is a dog that can smell a hare running past the house by scent. It turns out that fawns are born almost odorless, and this saves their lives.

It is precisely because of their nearly complete lack of smell that does leave their young alone for extended periods. Mothers leave fawns for several hours at a time during the first weeks after birth so that their own smell does not transfer to the babies. During this time, the mother returns several times a day to feed her young. Although she may not be continuously near the fawn, she is usually somewhere close by, and surely worried about seeing us around her baby.

However, it’s not only the lack of smell that helps fawns remain hidden from potential predators. The white spots on their fur are another protective measure. When a fawn walks, the spots may seem obvious, but when the mother leaves it to hide in tall grass or other covers, these spots mimic dappled sunlight falling on the forest floor, as noted by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. Such spotted coloring, combined with the faint smell, makes it difficult for predators to find fawns. Typically, the spots disappear by winter when young deer are old enough to survive on their own.

It is said that fawns are born in late May-early June. Today is precisely June 4. They’re right on schedule!

Despite the fact that he is lying in the open sun in thirty-degree heat, overall, if necessary, he can move on his own. Fawns are born generally ready for life in the wild and are generally able to run immediately after birth (albeit poorly).