DENVER — A Colorado photographer captured a series of snapshots he called “once in a lifetime” atop Blue Sky Mountain on Thursday.
The photo shows a herd of mountain goats, a bald eagle, and a yellow-legged marmot all in the same frame.
Dominic Weskamp We shared our amazing photos in the Denver7 “Discover Colorado | Through Your Photos” group on Facebookand we had to call him to find out. He said he never expected the scene to unfold like this.
“If I went on a trip and managed to photograph a moose, a bighorn sheep and a moose all on the same day, I called it a trifecta,” he says. “I never dreamed I’d get all three in the same photo.”
Hear about Weskamp’s incredible photography in the video player below.
Colorado photographer captures ‘once in a lifetime’ photo that captures bald eagles, mountain goats and marmots
Westkamp drove up Blue Sky Mountain on Thursday to look for the mountain goats and marmots that the peak is famous for. When he and his wife reached the peak, they saw goats “everywhere” near the parking lot, he said. Hoping to get a photo of the goats away from the parking lot and restrooms, they followed the goats up a nearby ridge.
“My wife noticed a bald eagle soaring up, and I was sitting there trying to follow it, and finally the eagle landed on the top of a ridge,” Weskamp recalled. “It stayed on the ridge for a while, and next thing I knew there was a marmot right next to it. [Then] A little herd of goats comes over the ridge and they’re all there.”
“Just sitting there and watching it was just amazing.”
Weskamp was friends with Michael Rhino. A person who filmed a video of a goat climbing onto a Subaru has been creating a lot of buzz recently.The two share the responsibility of posting wildlife photos. Douglas Land Conservancy Social media pages.
“That’s the shame that made me go up there,” Weskamp joked Friday. “Mike’s doing some great videos up there. I’ve got to go up there and get some photos. I’ve got a chance.”
Westkamp, who calls himself a “bald eagle photographer” and says the national bird of the United States is one of his favorite things to photograph, didn’t expect to see a bald eagle on Thursday. He said it was a pleasant surprise because the bird has special meaning to him.
“I’m a veteran, so I’m very patriotic. I love bald eagles,” said Weskamp, who served in the U.S. Army for 10 years and the U.S. Public Health Service for 20 years before retiring in 2020. “If you go looking for a bald eagle and you find one, that’s great. But if you’re not looking and you find one, it’s just amazing.”
The photo Weskamp took Thursday, and many others he’s shared with photography groups over the years, are stunning, but reflecting on his Denver 7 photo, he said he hopes his work shows everyone can get outside and experience Colorado’s natural beauty.
“I’m a disabled veteran, so most of my photos are [taken from] “I don’t hike the long trails anymore, so I’m pretty close to the road,” he says, “so these photos are all just for the average person who doesn’t want to climb a 14er or hike miles and miles.”
“You just need to get out there and keep an eye out.”