Patient crocodile dad lets his 100 babies hitch a ride on his back in stunning photo

Life in the wild can be more fun than you think. Thanks to our wildlife photographers, these unseen moments have continued to be documented and shared to the world.

For instance, a sweet father and children moment was captured in a wildlife reserve in India among gharial crocodiles.

It was shown that the crocodile dad gave his youngsters a ride on his back while crossing the river.

Award-winning wildlife photographer, Dhritiman Mukherjee, said more than 100 babies swarmed over the gharial in the Chambal River.

The never-before seen photo were shot within a safe distance using a 70-200mm camera lens, since getting too close to a male croc while guarding his young hatchlings can cost you later.

“I am making it clear that I am not an artist,” Mukherjee told PetaPixel over a video call from Kolkata, India. “The difference is that the artist works on wildlife to satisfy an artistic ambition or artistic goal. I use it to achieve my scientific goal – for conservation.”

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Mukherjee considers photography as a means and outlet to tackle conservation issues the world faces today, which is why he is typically out for 300 days a year to travel the outskirts of the world’s wildlife reserves, exhibited on the dhritiman website.

While he does not specifically consider himself an artist, it has been his mission to capture images of highly endangered species, including gharials, whose maximum population is concentrated in the Chambal River, according to the National Chambal Sanctuary.

In June 2017, Mukherjee travelled a little less than 200 miles southeast of the capital city of New Delhi to fulfill his mission.

It was this one particular morning that he was able to accidentally come across the scene, which would not have been possible if not for the “good connections” and “very good local network”.

“I keep getting information from the local people, scientists, naturalists, and forest department officials. And this was not my first visit to the region. I have been here a few times…I keep going there,” he added, noting that Chambal has the maximum population of gharials as of now.

“This was a big mature male, 16-17′, quite known [to forest officials] and had mated with 7-8 females. The kids you see on his back are from multiple females.”