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Leo and Dorothy Keeler.
About the Photographers: |
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On Sunday, August 13th, 2000, the Anchorage Daily News showcased Leo and Dorothy Keeler and their work with the Toklat wolves of Denali National Park. Click here to see a copy of the article. Leo Keeler was born in Bisbee, Arizona. He completed his first solo overnight backpacking trip at the age of 9 and began studying wildlife through the live capture of ground squirrels. Dorothy Keeler was raised in San Jose, California. Her parents tolerated the assortment of pets she cared for, including alligator lizards, horned toads, show horses, frogs, cats, turtles, fish, dogs, and a pet piranha named Fang. They met in 1988, and found their business evolved from sharing similar goals. Their mission: to provide quality, affordable images that inspire, entertain, educate and provide encouragement to conserve and protect our world and its creatures. Their work has been featured in national ad campaigns that have been published in National Geographic, Smithsonian, Newsweek, Life, Sports Illustrated, Field and Stream, TV Guide, People and Alaska Magazine, as well as the Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and The Washington Post. They have served as wildlife consultants for several filmmakers in Denali National Park and been featured on "Men's Journal," produced for ESPN, "Living Dangerously," produced for BBC, and "Alaska - Walk on the Wild Side," produced for the Travel Channel. The Keelers were leaders of the private, non-profit group Friends of McNeil River for 10 years, dedicated to protecting the world famous McNeil River brown bears. They were instrumental in establishing the 119,000-acre McNeil River Refuge. In 1995 the Keelers were featured on CBS News' "Eye on America" with John Blackstone twice when they led a drive to thwart a bear hunt in the refuge by encouraging people to apply for a permit and stay home if their names were drawn. It worked. Six of the eight permits were awarded to people who had applied for a hunting license to save the bears' lives. The Keelers later led the effort that closed the refuge to brown bear hunting. The Keelers assisted Defenders of Wildlife, The Alaska Wildlife Alliance, and Friends of Animals in protecting the famed Toklat wolf pack in Denali National Park. The Toklat wolves are one of the most famous, most viewed, most photographed, and the first and longest studied group of wild wolves in the world. (Click Here to see why they are so special.) On November 2, 1999, CBS Evening News with Dan Rather featured the Keelers and the Toklat wolves in a special segment of "Eye on America." If you'd like to see it Click Here. If you'd like to learn more about these incredible wolves, we invite you to visit: http://www.savetoklatwolf.com Dorothy Keeler's successful account of creating a petition to protect the Toklat wolves of Denali National Park is the lead story in MoveOn.org's book entitled, "MOVEON'S 50 WAYS TO LOVE YOUR COUNTRY: How to Find Your Political Voice and Be a Catalyst for Change." On February 3, 2000, the Keelers received the Ginny Hill Wood Award from The Alaska Wilderness Recreation & Tourism Association for their photographic contributions to the wildlife conservation efforts in Alaska. On June 3, 2003, The Alaska Conservation Foundation awarded the Keelers the coveted Daniel Housberg Wilderness Image Award for Excellence in Still Photography. In October, 2005, the Keelers were given the honor of being selected as two of the 40 founding members of the International League of Conservation Photographers (ILCP). (http://www.conservationphotography.net/) The ILCP initially includes a core group of some of the best nature photographers in the world. The mission of the ILCP is to further environmental and cultural conservation through photography and to this end they will be working on global campaigns to highlight current issues. In February, 2007, the Keelers, in partnership with the Alaska Wildlife Alliance, created a video and posted it on YouTube.com to protect the McNeil River bears yet again. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5h54hbNXEG0) The Alaska Board of Game had voted to allow hunting on an adjacent piece of land that had been closed to bear hunting for over 20 years, and nothing short of an avalanche of protest was needed at the March Board of Game meeting. The video was successful in generating over 600 individual, handwritten letters of support for the bears, and the Board voted to overturn its prior vote to allow the hunt, thus saving the bears. (http://www.flixya.com/video/53412/Protecting_Alaskas_Brown_Bears_(CBS_News) On January 11, 2008, Dorothy Keeler completed a video entitled "End Aerial Wolf Hunting" and uploaded it to Current.com, the brainchild of Al Gore. Within a week, the video became the #1 Most Popular Viewer Created video on the web site, and one of the top 10 videos on the entire web site. This explosive new video blasts the justification for Alaska's current aerial wolf hunting program and rallies voters to end it. Using testimony from Alaska Department of Fish & Game staff, a master hunting guide, and Board of Game members, this video exposes the fallacy behind Governor Sarah Palin's claim that predator control is based on sound science. Declarations that the program is for the benefit of subsistence hunters are shattered with documentation showing that sport and trophy hunters take up to 73% of prey in areas where aerial wolf hunting has taken place. End Aerial Wolf Hunting rallies support for H.R. 3663, legislation now being considered in the U.S. Congress which will close the loophole in the Federal Airborne Hunting Act that has been exploited to allow this practice to continue. Five years in the making, this video exposes the truth about the stranglehold the hunting lobby has on wildlife management in Alaska.
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