“Fox With A McDonald’s Takeaway?”: Once-In-A-Lifetime Photos Taken At The Exact Perfect Moment
Some photos stop you in your tracks. Not because they’re perfectly sharp or technically flawless, but because they capture a moment at the exact right time.
A meteor streaking across the sky during an aurora, a rainbow kissing a boat at Niagara Falls, or even a fox running away with a McDonald's order — these are the moments that make photography feel magical.
Some moments are just so fleeting and rare that it might be impossible to take that exact picture again.
Canon USA recently asked people on the internet to share their once-in-a-lifetime photos, and the results are nothing short of jaw-dropping.
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My sweet girl, Hara. She passed away last year, but this is how i’ll forever remember her. My peaceful sleepy girl.
Photography has never been more accessible, and people are taking more photos than ever.
In a European survey, about 72% of people said they take a photo every day, and nearly half take three or more photos daily.
The same survey also found that most people like to take pics of real moments such as family time, beautiful landscapes and everyday scenes that actually mean something.
Many say they’re still taking photos that make them feel connected to their lives and memories, not just their feeds.
Rare phenomena like a total solar eclipse or large waves crashing against a seawall during stormy weather are the kind of moments that can leave anyone in awe.
You can only capture them when everything, from the light and the weather, comes together in just the right way.
You can plan all you want, but sometimes it’s pure luck and being in the right place at the right time.
Blue t**s are my favourite birds, though this one looks a bit scruffy!
Some of the best photos happen when you’re paying attention to tiny details.
For example, to take a picture of a brown bear catching salmon, you need lots of patience and to know when to press the shutter.
It’s not about pointing a camera at the animal and hoping for the best. It’s about learning their habits and being ready when something amazing happens.
Wildlife photographers usually spend hours studying animal behavior so they can get the right results.
The more you learn about your subject, the more extraordinary moments you notice.
Oh, I should ever have been so lucky! I was outside once wearing a floral shirt and perfume, and a hummingbird zipped over to me and I didn't know what it was, so I batted at it (like a moron) and it darted away while my spouse remarked, "But I thought you LIKED hummingbirds." :-(
One photo in this list shows a scuba diver completely surrounded by fish — a scene often described by divers as a “living silver river.”
To capture this, you need to know where these fish gather, which often depends on currents, reef structures, and feeding times. You also need to stay calm and still so the fish don’t scatter.
This kind of knowledge can give you an upper hand — instead of reacting to what happens, you’re already ready to capture that rare moment.
Research shows that photographers who deeply observe and interact with their subjects create more original and memorable images than those who just snap and go.
Original photos also come from looking at the world differently.
Instead of taking the same sunset everyone else has photographed, you can try new angles or even new subjects, like the picture of a dog sleeping peacefully in a canoe at sunset.
Choosing a subject that isn’t the usual postcard scene gives your photo its own story and personality.
“The difference between a photograph that blends in and one that captivates often comes down to the depth of your understanding and the effort you invest. It is about seeking moments that few others will see, whether on a remote Alaskan river, a coastal beach, or even a riverbank closer to home,” Kate Garibaldi, an award-winning travel and nature photographer, writes.
Paddling under the northern lights
This is my once in a lifetime photo and also a once in a lifetime experience. We held a direct visual connection and felt a beautiful mutual respect
Technical skill helps, of course. Freezing a water splash so that it looks like a unicorn or catching a volcanic eruption at just the right moment takes knowing your camera.
That often means using fast shutter speeds or shooting in bursts so you don’t miss the best frame. You also have to pay attention to light so things like water or texture really stand out.
But technical mastery is a means to an end… the real goal is to convey emotions and movement.
“Capturing motion, tension, or interaction adds drama and depth to your images. Freezing water droplets midair, showing a predator’s decisive strike, or capturing a herd moving as one in a grand scene that shows their habitat conveys more than a static moment, it tells a story,” says Garibaldi.
Sometimes ordinary things can also become unforgettable when framed differently, like a child playing with bubbles or a leaf drifting across a puddle.
These unexpected little scenes can be frozen in time if one only remembers to turn on the (camera) light.
Studies even show that taking photos mindfully — really focusing on what’s in front of you and why you’re taking the shot — can boost your mood, help you feel more present, and make you enjoy experiences more, almost like meditation in motion.
Porcupine and bee having a staring contest
My mum turning into a mermaid
AI search result: This image captures a diver swimming amidst a massive school of fish, likely minnows, sardines, or jackfish, in an underwater location such as Marsa Bereva in the Red Sea. The phenomenon of vast schools of fish moving together is a natural occurrence, often involving millions of individuals. Divers often describe the experience as being lost in a "living silver river" as the fish move as one large mass.
The last photo my camera took remotely before an alligator ate it
I love watching lightning during thunderstorms, and appreciate photos capturing them. But what amazes me are those lucky chances of photographing Red Sprites since they only last for milliseconds.
Bowman Lake , Montana - this deer popped up out of nowhere and I had my 5DM4 right by my side
I painted this exact location for my art project for school last year! It is such a beautiful place
My daughter was blowing bubbles and I snapped this shot.
I hope I can someday see a solar eclipse (with eye protection obviously) as they don’t occur frequently enough in my country
reminds of the laser in Alice in Borderland, or a very blue orbital strike
There is nothing quite like watching an animal the size of a house toss itself into the air at a high speed for no other reason than sheer exuberance at being alive.
Just this alien. This is a horsehead grasshopper
This is a photo of some guy with a headlamp stargazing in Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia, the world's largest salt flat that produces a mirror image.
Thunderstorm in Amherst,MA.
Oh, that area had some humdingers of storms. Down the road from Amherst lies acres of tobacco farms in Hadley. Catching flashes of lightning in that wide open sky by the river was breathtakingly spectacular.
Humpback and Bryde's whales use the bubble net technique when surface feeding, which is learned behavior. Using their blowholes to create bubbles, they disorient the fish making it possible to corral them into the bubble net. These gulls are taking advantage of this bounty.
Tornado chasers make me think of this Gene Wilder line - "You've got to remember that these are just simple farmers. These are people of the land—the common clay of the new West. You know... morons."
The seagull was lit up by the reflection from the boat I was aboard.
It's just gull. I'm trying to break the habit of referring to them as seagulls, but it's low on the list.
Oh and this unexpected shot while I was capturing a random climber down in Malibu. Taken with 5D Mark 3 in 2015.
This doe & fawn in a pasture at sunrise, only lasted a split second before they realized I was there
one of many I took in Las Vegas during lockdown
I remember my dad taking me to see where his new company’s office was during lockdown and found it so surreal how empty the roads were, not a single human being for all those kilometres. A while back I had to go down the same stretches of roads for another reason and spent a few hours stuck in the very busy traffic of that region
This one if my dad
I don't know why, but I hate watching animals be captured or killed.
