The Call of the Wild
Photos by Mac Stone ’06
March 2, 2020
![A Sandhill Crane forages along the upland fringes of Kanapaha Prairie in Gainesville, Florida.](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/article-image.transform/m-medium/image.png)
Mac Stone (Spanish and International Studies ’06), a National Geographic Explorer, contributed an essay, “How to Take Impossible Photos in Nature,” to the “Hokie How-To” feature in Illumination.
The author of Everglades: America’s Wetland, Stone is also a senior fellow with the International League of Conservation Photographers, a Sea Legacy fellow, and the executive director of Naturaland Trust, a nonprofit that permanently protects critical lands in the upstate of South Carolina.
In March 2015, Stone delivered his first TED talk, which has since been viewed more than 1 million times.
![Mac Stone found this cypress tree in Central Florida irresistible, but it was growing in eight feet of black water teeming with alligators. So he devised a system for taking a self-portrait remotely — from inside the hammock.](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/content/adaptiveimage.transform/m-medium/image.jpg)
![Two west Indian manatee take a moment to play in Three Sisters Spring, Crystal River, Florida.](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/content/adaptiveimage_1431558616.transform/m-medium/image.jpg)
![A male Everglades snail kite, an endangered species, swoops down on its sole source of food, the apple snail.](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/content/adaptiveimage_150062671.transform/m-medium/image.jpg)
![An alligator's snout peaks above water lit orange by the sun](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/content/adaptiveimage_1504918926.transform/m-medium/image.jpg)
![A night sky in Wyoming](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/content/adaptiveimage_336193876.transform/m-medium/image.jpg)
![A symbol of biodiversity and speciation, chameleons inhabit the dense forests and foothills of northern Mozambique.](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/content/adaptiveimage_1745849581.transform/m-medium/image.jpg)
![The Middle Saluda River flows through Jones Gap State Park in northern Greenville County, South Carolina.](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/content/adaptiveimage_2129227044.transform/m-medium/image.jpg)
![Burrowing owls are diurnal birds that make their home in the ground.](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/content/adaptiveimage_248944649.transform/m-medium/image.jpg)
![Dawn illuminates an old-growth cypress tree on Cypress Lake in Lake County, Florida.](/content/liberalarts_vt_edu/en/magazine/2020/photo-galleries/mac-stone-photo-gallery/_jcr_content/content/adaptiveimage_1022564388.transform/m-medium/image.jpg)