Get Outdoors

The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service has invited anyone with a camera to take part in its “big picture”—an image mosaic of a painting by Canadian wildlife artist Robert Bateman.


"Getting to Know" by Robert Bateman

You know those pictures comprised of thousands of other pictures? From far away, you see an orange Gerber daisy, but up close, you encounter thousands of individual pumpkin-, tangerine- and peach-colored images?

Working off of that idea, and the notion that all of nature鈥檚 a mosaic, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service has invited anyone with a camera to take part in its 鈥攁n image mosaic of a painting by 鈥攂y submitting their nature photos.

Bateman鈥檚 image, of four children playing in a pond, is only a quarter covered despite the more than 500 pictures already submitted. Sending in a photo is free and simple, on . Once you submit an image, you鈥檒l receive an ID and a direct link to its placement on the painting.

This is part of USFWS鈥 push to get people鈥攑articularly children鈥攖o reconnect with their natural surroundings, something about which Bateman is a huge proponent. His in existence for almost a decade, aims to reverse what the artist considers a huge problem today: That children know thousands of corporate logos at a glance and almost none of the wildlife species that exist in their own backyards.

He created a contest that鈥檚 been running in Canada since 2000 that asks youth 19 and younger to get acquainted with their wild neighbors and express their experiences in paintings, photos or writing. This September, the contest will for the first time, with an original commemorative work by Bateman that features generations鈥攇randparents to children鈥攇etting to know nature. (For full contest rules, check the starting on August 1). Winners are chosen based on their artistic merit and the type of experience the artist had.

There鈥檚 still plenty of summertime left to participate in both of these events鈥攐r just to get outside. When experiencing your wild neighbors, remember the following etiquette from USFWS:

  • - Respect the animals and nature
  • - Learn patterns of animal behavior
  • - Don鈥檛 interfere with animal life cycles
  • - Move away if an animal becomes visibly stressed or upset
  • - Stay on marked trails
  • - Treat others courteously
  • - Report inappropriate behavior