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Sandesh Kadur
Pre-focusing a camera phone can help kids catch tricky shots of small, can't-stay-still animals, like this red-throated anole in Hawaii.
By quietly observing wildlife interactions, kids can capture sweet moments between animals, like these small Indian fox pups playing outside their den.
A camera trap image of a clouded leopard, captured during the filming for Sandesh Kadur's documentary India's Wild Leopards – part of National Geographic Wild's Big Cat Week, which begins on February 3rd.
Sandesh Kadur photographs one of a pair of clouded leopards that were seized from a market as kittens, raised in captivity, then released into the wild.
On the trail of the snow leopard in Ladakh.
The camera trap: the ever-more advanced tool of the wildlife photographer's trade. Most are triggered by infra-red sensors that trip the camera's shutter when tripped by a passing animal.
“You’re just letting go of all the things that might distract you. You’re just waiting.” Camera at the ready, Kadur waits in a hide.
"India is a strange country – but there is a thing here called reverence.”
Testing a camera trap in the Dampa region of northeast India. The diligence paid off with a series of insightful images of one of India's most mysterious cats, the clouded leopard.
"It's not just the big cats that make my heart leap – and the small cats are more difficult that the big cats to find, and to film.” Kadur filming on the Deccan plateau, India.