10 Reasons to Join my Women in Wildlife Photography Spring Grand Teton Workshop

Grizzly Bear stands in a field of wildflowers in Grand Teton National Park.

  1. Travel with other women photographers.

Women empowerment

When you travel with other women you kind find a sense of comradery that you may not get when traveling in a mixed group. It can provided a safe space for women to explore freely, build strong connections with other women, feel comfortable being themselves without gender pressure, and potentially access unique experiences., all while fostering a sense of empowerment and independence. 

2. Baby Animals

Late spring in Grand Teton National Park is baby season. Elk, Pronghorn, Bison, and many more animals are having their babies. Is there anything cuter than a baby animal?

3. Grizzly Bears

Bears are just emerging from hibernation. Many of them are toting new bear cubs with them. In Grand Teton National Park many of the Grizzly sows have adapted a technique to keep their young cubs alive by staying closer to the road and away from male bears. This make them easier for photographers to see them.

Grizzly 399 teaches her cubs how to cross the road.

4. The teton mountain range

One of the most breathtaking mountain views in the country is right at the door step of Grand Teton National Park. It is a landscape photographers dream.

Schwabackers Landing 

5. SongBirds

Colorful songbirds have return for the summer.

6. The historic town of Jackson Hole

All-female run

Margaret Simpson named the town in 1893 so that people from the east could forward mail west. The town was incorporated in 1914, and the first women's government was noteworthy because it was all-female.

7. Bison

Grand Teton is considered one of the last remaining wild bison herds because the bison population there largely stems from a small group that escaped from a fenced wildlife park in the mid-20th century, allowing them to roam freely and re-establish a natural herd in a protected area, unlike many other bison populations which were heavily hunted and decimated in the 19th century

Baby bison also known as a Red Dog

8. Wildflowers

As the snow melts, the landscape bursts into life with colorful wildflowers carpeting the meadows and hillsides. Arrowleaf balsamroot, Lupine, and glacier lilies add splashes of color to the scenery.

Wildflowers in front of the Tetons

9. Wildlife

From foxes to chipmunks, there is a whole lot more to photograph than just the landscapes and mega fauna in this park.

10. historic buildings

Grand Teton National Park has a great deal of historic buildings to photograph, including a number of barns and churches.

Barn on Mormon Row

Join us this Spring in Grand Teton National Park, May 31 - June 5, 2024. There are only 3 spaces remaining, so don’t wait.

Jennifer Warner