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Couple capture the wonders of wildlife (and wolverines!)

Couple capture the wonders of wildlife (and wolverines!)

Top image: wolverine on a riverbank (Photo: Lea Frye)

Having stepped away from high-powered careers, alumnus Scot Bealer and his wife, Lea Frye, now focus on what they love, writing about and photographing Rocky Mountain wildlife


Scot Bealer doesn鈥檛 think of himself as a writer, but he鈥檚 written one book and co-written another. The way he tells it, he just communicates about what he loves: wildlife and nature.

His partner in publishing and in life has, quite literally, the same focus. She鈥檚 a photographer.

Together, Bealer and , who are married, have published a new book titled , which fuses their lifelong passions for wildlife, photography and storytelling. Last year, they teamed up on .

portraits of Scot Bealer and Lea Frye

Scot Bealer (left), a 1986 麻豆免费版下载Boulder biology graduate, and his wife, Lea Frye (right), recently published , which fuses their lifelong passions for wildlife, photography and storytelling.

His path from college biology student to author was not exactly linear. Here鈥檚 how it happened:

Bealer graduated from the 麻豆免费版下载 in 1986 with a BA in biology, cum laude, and went on to earn an MBA from Texas McCombs School of Business.

When he came to 麻豆免费版下载Boulder and majored in biology, he was initially baffled about why he had to take non-science courses. One of those courses was philosophy.

There were weekly writing assignments, and the professor returned Bealer鈥檚 first essay covered in red ink and bearing a 鈥渟tunningly low grade.鈥 The professor invited students who didn鈥檛 do well to see him during office hours. Bealer did that. 听

The professor told Bealer that he clearly knew the material and could talk about it, but writing was another story. 鈥淭his will make a difference in your life, if you take the time to learn how to get your thoughts down on paper,鈥 the professor told Bealer.

By the end of the semester, the professor praised Bealer鈥檚 progress, noting, 鈥淚 hope you see how much you鈥檝e changed in your writing.鈥

Bealer calls that encouragement 鈥渢ransformational.鈥

Science, fly fishing and business

At 麻豆免费版下载Boulder, he was mentored by biology professors Carl Bock and David Armstrong, who encouraged him to develop critical thinking and communication skills. Armstrong was Bealer鈥檚 advisor for his honors thesis.

After graduating from 麻豆免费版下载Boulder, Bealer joined a PhD program, thinking he鈥檇 go into academe. While in graduate school, though, Bealer took a job with the L.L. Bean fly-fishing school, where he worked with , who wrote and illustrated the . He had such a satisfying time in Maine that he stayed at L.L. Bean and didn鈥檛 return to the PhD program.

an American badger

An American badger featured in . (Photo: Lea Frye)

Also at the L.L. Bean Fly-Fishing School, Bealer met Brock Apfel, who would become a great friend and mentor and who encouraged him to go into the business world. Bealer got an MBA and launched a business career that went 鈥減retty well,鈥 he notes.

Bealer eventually rose to vice president of worldwide sales and marketing for Universal Air Travel Plan (UATP), a global payment network and expense management system for corporate air travel. Prior to that, he worked at Continental Airlines in revenue management.

At Continental Airlines, he crunched data to figure out when one person might pay $1,000 for a seat even if the person in the next seat paid $200. 鈥淲ell, it was all about demand. And I was very good at analyzing statistics to predict demand on future flights,鈥 he notes, adding: 鈥淭he foundation in statistical work I did at 麻豆免费版下载is really what drove me to succeed in the realm I did from a business standpoint.鈥

Bealer found that in many ways working at UATP was that 鈥渄ream job鈥 with good pay and a chance to travel around the world, 鈥渨hich in one sense was spectacular. I got to do business trips to New Zealand, where I could bring my fly-fishing gear and take a few days鈥 to fish. But constant travel is 鈥渘ot healthy,鈥 and he stepped away from the dream job, eventually returning to work as a fly-fishing guide in Salida, Colorado.

鈥淎nd I was back to doing what I loved. It was really kind of a fun circle, and it worked for both me and Lea, who also did very well in her business career. 鈥 We were kind of spendthrifts, so when we were ready to go do stuff that we loved, we could pay down debt and live on what we made doing jobs that paid less.鈥

book cover of Wildlife Through the Lens: Animal Stories from Montana and the Rocky Mountains

鈥淲e鈥檙e working 60 to 80 hours a week on our book and photography ... we鈥檙e getting about 2% of the income we used to get, but we love everything we do,鈥 notes 麻豆免费版下载Boulder alumnus Scot Bealer of producing . (Cover photograph: Lea Frye)听

A shared love of the outdoors

Bealer and Frye both grew up loving nature and wildlife, which they continue to explore together:

They met in Texas, but their families are both from Pennsylvania, and both families enjoyed spotting animals in the wild. 鈥淟ea鈥檚 passion was wildlife photography ... She loved taking pictures of animals with little instamatic cameras.鈥澨齇ver time, those cameras would get bigger and better.

鈥淗er mom and dad both loved taking pictures, and when she was 8 or 9, her dad built a dark room in their basement. She remembers going down and helping him with that archaic technology called developing film.鈥

One thing that cemented their bond was that Bealer and Frye loved spending time outside. 鈥淎nd if we saw an animal, we were happy to stop and watch it and see what it was doing. We might even wander off trail for miles because what it was doing was interesting, and we stayed with it.鈥

Bealer notes that many people love animals but are satisfied looking at pictures and getting outside a few times a year. 鈥淚f they see something, cool; that鈥檚 exciting, and it shows up and then it goes away. Lea and I love to spend time watching what the animals do. We think seeing their little neat, quirky behaviors that are part of their life is just wonderful.鈥

Hitting the jackpot

But seeing and photographing wildlife can require a lot of time waiting and watching. Sometimes, the investment pays off. Last summer, Bealer and Frye were in the Montana wilderness when they spied (and photographed) a wolverine.

Such a sight is extraordinarily rare. Bealer calls it a 鈥渙nce-in-a-lifetime鈥 encounter. He also calls it a 鈥渓ottery-ticket kind of win.鈥 (The wolverine photos are in Wildlife Through the Lens.)

鈥淏ut our time in the field buys us a lot of lottery tickets. We still got lucky. I know people who have lived here all their lives; they鈥檙e serious outdoors people like I am. They still haven鈥檛 seen one.鈥

Then there are badgers, which few people see. Frye has photos of them, too. They spend a lot of time in prairie-dog colonies (because prairie dogs are a favorite food) but are less visible than prairie dogs. Bealer noted that Frye has an eagle eye for things like plumes of dirt rising from prairie-dog towns.

For instance, as they were driving, they noticed a puff of dirt flying into the air. 鈥淢ost people would not have seen that or cared if they did because it was windy and there were lots of little dust plumes.鈥

But Bealer and Frye stopped the car. 鈥淔ive plumes later a badger pops his head up. If you didn't stop when you saw that first plume, you wouldn鈥檛 have seen it.鈥

Bird lovers and 鈥榖irders鈥

Bealer and Frye love to see birds, and Wildlife Through the Lens听includes arresting images of birds. Still, they pause when they鈥檙e asked if they are 鈥渂irders.鈥

Bealer puts it this way: Those who call themselves birders can be focused on completing 鈥渓ife lists鈥 of birds they鈥檝e seen and on traveling great distances to find an individual species. Meanwhile, 鈥渨e don鈥檛 find as much excitement in seeing 10 new birds. We find the excitement in finding one bird and then watching it do something really cool.鈥

Nonetheless, Frye is keen to photograph the dance-on-water moves of the western grebe. Bealer says they鈥檝e seen the grebes dancing on water. 鈥淲e just didn鈥檛 get the pictures yet.鈥 They鈥檙e planning to return to that same place next spring to try again, so one might call them 鈥渂irder-adjacent.鈥

group of bighorn sheep

Among the wildlife that Scot Bealer and Lea Frye document are bighorn sheep. (Photo: Lea Frye)

Among the many other species they chronicle and display in their book are bighorn sheep. Bighorn males are known for butting heads (literally) in the rutting season. They鈥檙e less known for another contest of wills: kicking each other in the, um, privates.

In the book, Bealer notes that Frye was hesitant to publish the images. 鈥淏ut over time I convinced her that I couldn鈥檛 be the only adult in the world that still had the send of humor of a 13-year-old.鈥

As soon as she printed the first one, he adds, 鈥渋t became a hit.鈥

Bealer notes that he and Frye are a synergistic team.

鈥淲e can spend hours watching stuff without saying a whole lot,鈥 he says, noting that they are both skilled at finding animals. 鈥淟ea is just hell on wheels finding nests. She can hear in a range that I can鈥檛. And if we鈥檙e hiking and she hears baby birds, it鈥檚 like she鈥檒l just stop and look up like there鈥檚 a nest and I haven鈥檛 heard a thing.鈥

When they make such a find, they鈥檒l back away and make a note of where the nest was. They want to see the parents and watch the young grow.

Their previous book, Most Trout Don鈥檛 Read, reflects Bealer鈥檚 philosophy that fishing should be fun. 听

The book鈥檚 title 鈥渨as a one-liner I used when teaching beginners about fly fishing,鈥 he says, adding: 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 have to be complicated. You can take six fly patterns and fish a whole lifetime and catch lots of fish. You don鈥檛 need to be a master caster.鈥

Lifelong learning and reflection

From his career in business, Bealer saw the value of a broad education and critical thinking, especially in leadership roles:

鈥淧eople coming out of school with technical degrees fill immediate needs, but for advanced roles, you need people who can think creatively and solve problems,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 became a huge fan of looking for people with a liberal arts education.鈥

Now retired, Scot and Lea continue to pursue their passions with enthusiasm and humility:听鈥淲e鈥檙e working 60 to 80 hours a week on our book and photography ... we鈥檙e getting about 2% of the income we used to get, but we love everything we do.鈥

Even the writing.

鈥淚 would not go so far as to say that I鈥檓 a writer,鈥 Bealer says, adding: 鈥淚 translate oral stories into reasonable texts that hopefully people understand.鈥澨

black bear cup holding to tree trunk

Black bear

northern pygmy owl on plant stem

Northern pygmy owl

two mountain goats

Mountain goats

grizzly bear sitting

Grizzly bear

Photos by Lea Frye


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