Greater Yellowlegs at Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge

A Greater Yellowleg On The Hunt For Food

Wildlife photographer Steve Creek shares photos and facts about the Greater Yellowlegs shorebird spotted at the Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge in Oklahoma.

A Close Encounter with Well-Hidden Wilson’s Snipes

Wilson's Snipe Perfectly Matching Its Surroundings

A wildlife photographer describes a serendipitous bird photography experience, spotting and photographing elusive Wilson’s Snipes at close range from his truck.

A Photographer’s Mystery Solved: The Buck’s Alarm Revealed

Coyote Looking The Direction It Was Headed

In part two of this blog post, the photographer details a close encounter with a coyote and white-tailed deer buck at the Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge.

How to Get Your Wildlife Photos Seen and Published

Two deer in floodwaters, featured in Louisiana Wildlife Insider Spring/Summer 2020 issue

Join Steve Creek, an Arkansas-based Wildlife Photographer, on an exciting journey to unlock the secrets of getting your wildlife photos seen and published.

What Alarmed the Buck at Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge?

Whitetail Spike Buck Running Across Field

Wildlife photographer Steve Creek recounts an exciting encounter with a young deer buck while hiking at Oklahoma’s Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge.

Photographing the Pre-Rut and Rut at Sequoyah Refuge

Whitetail Buck Near A Very Large Cottonwood Tree

Explore wildlife photography tips for capturing white-tailed bucks during the rut at Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge, including vehicle-based techniques.

Deer Traversing Reeve’s Slough in Sequoyah Wildlife Refuge

Two White-tailed Does Crossing Reeve's Slough

Wildlife photographer Steve Creek describes capturing white-tailed deer crossing Reeve’s Slough at the Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge in Oklahoma.

Frosty Northern Harrier | How Birds Cope with the Cold

Northern Harrier Cover In Frost

A wildlife photographer shares how he captured a photo of a frosty Northern Harrier and explains how birds adapt to survive cold winter temperatures.