Cities have gone crazy: an interesting project by a photographer from the USA about wild animals living next to people (14 photos)
Photographer from the USA Corey Arnold created an interesting project "Cities Gone Wild" (cities went crazy). In this series of works, he showed how wild Animals have to coexist with humans. Because now many representatives of the fauna are forced to adapt to the urban environment. The photo study turned out to be really emotional and bright! Let's We'll see.
Invasion of private property
The woman in the photo bought a house in Asheville, North Carolina, and each day, a three-legged mother bear named Sarah appeared on her porch and looked through the window. Soon the bear and the woman became friends. When Corey came to photograph Sarah, she herself, with her powerful paw, opened door and went straight into the house.
Coyote in front of Chicago skyscrapers
Playground for cubs
The backyard of a home in Asheville, North Carolina is next to forest where bears live. It turns out that bears and people live side by side, and the locals even set up toys and rope swing for cubs.
Came to visit
Janice (the woman in the photo) has a familiar bear family who often come to visit her and play in the backyard of her house.
Gang of raccoons in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco
Dangerous criminal caught
Pictured is a professional raccoon catcher. They catch raccoons who, without asking, settled in other people's attics or in other nooks and crannies of the house, and let the little troublemakers go back to the wild.
Crawled out of the home lair
This bear decided to make his lair an old abandoned house.
Another city raccoon
Coyote from San Francisco
Now this is their home.
Who is walking around the city at night?
Another bear visits people
Night guest
Corey set up a camera trap at a hole in a fence next to a river in Chicago. And here's who got it.
Wild coyotes that are perfectly used to humans
Coyotes live quietly in the open areas of San Francisco, completely surrounded by high-rise buildings. Urban and wilderness coexists here so closely that there is no fear on the part of people, not from the coyotes.