"The first marmot in this thread was a yellow-bellied marmot. The one here appears to be a hoary marmot."
Thanks for the info, Bob. I always liked the silver/gray color patterns on some of the marmots I've seen. That one was in Mt. Rainier NP.
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"The first marmot in this thread was a yellow-bellied marmot. The one here appears to be a hoary marmot."
Thanks for the info, Bob. I always liked the silver/gray color patterns on some of the marmots I've seen. That one was in Mt. Rainier NP.
That marmot is always out looking for a handout like it is desperately hungry, yet its belly is dragging on the ground. It takes them a few minutes to chew a marmot-size hole in a backpack.
Yes, the hoary marmot is across Washington, Idaho, and Montana that I know of. Maybe Wyoming. The yellow-belly marmot is in California, and I don't know where the dividing line is between the two.
–B.G.–

This friend is enjoying the view! On the rock.
The reason why I've been packing a 7.0 oz Panasonic DMC-TZ4
But none of our marmots have the shallow depth of field of the OP's marmot.
When marmots get your wag bag, it's a shi tty mess!
And another…
Never again will we see depth of field and wag bag in the same discussion.
It is so hard to find a truly ultralightweight wag bag these days.
–B.G.–
This is a marmot from the Italian Alps (the area I came from)

not my picture..
I only posted this pic to show the Italian designed version of a marmot.
She is wearing Ermenegildo Zegna.
Picture stolen from :
http://www.altavallebognanco.it/
(that is where I grew up)
Franco
Is that a rock?
Nice photo!
Nice marmot.
This was also in Mt. Rainier. There were 4 or 5 young marmots in the rocks and this parent carrying grass into their burrow.

Thank you. That marmot did everything in it's power to allow me to get a good photo or two. He just hung out and let me set up one of those mini-tripod things to make my point-and-shoot take a reasonably good photo. Wish my hiking partner had as much patience as that marmot!
Not an extravagant shot, but it's of marmots on a rock.

Gary, your Swiftcurrent marmot makes me salivate for GNP….
(Disclaimer–there are no marmots associated with this post, but some griz instead; I just want to say howdy to Travis, and, I guess, tell him a GNP story)
But before I drove up there, I decided to do a day hike to Iceberg Lake, fairway of the bears. I was hiking alone about a mile from the still-frozen lake, loudly singing Jimmy Buffet songs, as I entered a curved corridor of 8' tall timberline brush. That's when I met met the bear. It looked rather confused as to what it should do. I wasn't sure if it was male or female, but I kind of knew what to do. I did the "Hi, bear, love you lots, gotta go" thing, backed up quickly, maybe 200', then scooted uphill till I hit a vertical snowfield that pinned me maybe 50' above the trail. The bear, all 450# of it, finally emerged from that brushy corridor and non-chalantly cruised down the trail I had been hiking up.
Big mama heading down

About the time I figured I was good to slip in behind the bear, it being 100 yards down the trail, I took one step, and here came her three puppies that were lagging far behind her. Everything was OK until one of them decided to be curious and come up to see what I was all about.
I was about to be dead meat

Mom started to become interested, keeping direct eye contact with me, as was the baby, but no one was more into it than I was. I decided to start shouting loudly to the baby, "Wait! Stop! I hate you, your mama loves you! I don't! Go away! Go back to your mama! Boogie, boogie, boogie!" I had my eyes on mom the whole time, and she had hers on mine. Finally she heaved a moderate grunt, and her baby ran back to the fold. Whew, my apparent painful death averted.
And off they went down the trail
It turned out to be the most beautiful nature experience of my life, after it was over. A big, beautiful cinnamon mama griz with her three gangly 6-month old cubs, sharing the trail with me in near-perfect harmony.
The frozen lake was an anticlimax, other than having lunch below the splendid Ptarmigan Wall. Then there were the rangers, who wanted to know all of the details of my event, and the other hikers' questions ("What was it like?"). I was glad to get back to Many Glacier, give the BC rangers my report, and pop a couple of beers on the rocky hill between the Many Glacier Hotel and its parking lot. Staring at those 3 fine valleys–Grinell, Swiftcurrent, and Iceberg/Ptarmigan, I was reminded of how that might be the most magnificent piece of turf on the planet. Lots of griz, for sure, but some of them are pretty damned peaceful.
Glad to know that you are still with us, Travis.
Geez, beautiful if a bit unsettling. Anyhow, those are the biggest marmots I've ever seen. ;)
Gary,
Holy crap! What an encounter!!!! Glad that everything ended ok, and humbled that I was thought about in the grand GNP.
I know I've been AWOL for several months. Summer is busy with the family business (irrigation systems) and I've expanded my violin studio to about 30 students that I teach in the evenings throughout the week. On top of that, I just got married (August 5th, which is a year to the day since I proposed on top of Boulder Peak) so the last few months have been quite busy with planning and such. I just got back from my honeymoon at Isle Royale which my new wife and I hiked/packrafted about 60 miles. Busy, busy, busy!! I've missed BPL, and although I'm still busy, I'm going to try to be a part of the community again.
A trip report, hopefully much like my GNP engagement one, will be coming at some point.
Hartley says:
But none of our marmots have the shallow depth of field of the OP's marmot.
Heh. No offence to Bob, but I'd rather photoshop the bokeh into the background later than hulk 10lbs of camera gear about in the mountains. Mind you, I just bought a secondhand Olympus E410 so I could be on the slippery slope. :-)
Here's my Marmot on a rock. Also taken with a 7oz Panny TZ7. However Pyreneean marmots are shy, and cunningly disguised as rocks…
.
A Panny TZ7 and a bag of peanuts is the best lightweight solution perhaps?
Edit to add: Congratulations to Travis!
"Heh. No offence to Bob, but I'd rather photoshop the bokeh into the background later than hulk 10lbs of camera gear about in the mountains."
Actually, that ten pounds of camera gear is ballast, and that gets me better traction on a difficult trail.
–B.G.–
Via Alpina in Austria, Canon G11, cropped

Guy on the left whistled and dived for cover. Mummy and baby on the right ignored us even when we were quite close.
Cheers
You know, I had to look this up since I have never photographed wildlife in Europe.
The marmot that is in Europe is the Alpine Marmot (Marmota marmota), and its adult size is listed at 4-8 kg.
The marmot that is in California is the Yellow-bellied Marmot (Marmota flaviventris), and its adult size is listed at 2.8-3.9 kg (smaller than the European cousins).
The marmot that is in the Northern Rocky Mountains is the Hoary Marmot (Marmota caligata), and its adult size is listed at 8-10 kg (much larger than the above two).
In Africa, the nearest thing might be a Hyrax.
I wonder why we don't see an Australian marmot. Maybe the wombats ate them.
–B.G.–
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