iN PHOTOS: Wild animals go bottoms up in Kamloops, Okanagan

There isn’t always a full moon in the sky but these wild animals are captured mooning the cameras on the ground at all times of the month in Kamloops and the Okanagan.

While it is nice to get photographs of wildlife head on, often they disperse too quickly, leaving their furry and feathered behinds in full view.

This photo collection includes the big fluffy tails of the white-tailed deer in Kamloops, the short, black-tipped tail of a bobcat in the Shuswap and fuzzy rump of bighorn ram in Okanagan Falls. 

iNFOnews.ca is looking for early springtime photographs conveying new beginnings and cheerful blooms to be published in a late March collection. Submission deadline is March 28, please send photos to news@infonews.ca.

iN PHOTOS: Wild animals go bottoms up in Kamloops, Okanagan | iNFOnews.ca

A pair of white-tailed deer have their tails up as they leap across a field in Kamloops in February. iNFOnews.ca/ Lyn MacDonald

iN PHOTOS: Wild animals go bottoms up in Kamloops, Okanagan | iNFOnews.ca

A bighorn sheep ram is caught bottoms up in Kamloops in March. iNFOnews.ca/ Ann Steenhuysen

iN PHOTOS: Wild animals go bottoms up in Kamloops, Okanagan | iNFOnews.ca

A mule deer in Kamloops appears to moon the camera. iNFOnews.ca/ Facebook/ Joe Jones

iN PHOTOS: Wild animals go bottoms up in Kamloops, Okanagan | iNFOnews.ca

These chukars in the Kamloops area have their feathered butts to the camera. iNFOnews.ca/ Lyn MacDonald

iN PHOTOS: Wild animals go bottoms up in Kamloops, Okanagan | iNFOnews.ca

The bobbed tail of a bobcat in the Shuswap looks like it has been dipped in ink. iNFOnews.ca/ Ann Steenhuysen

Join the Conversation!

Want to share your thoughts, add context, or connect with others in your community?

Shannon Ainslie

Shannon Ainslie brings a background of writing and blogging to the team. She is interested in covering human interest stories and engaging with her community of Kamloops.