Please do not disturb

If you leave your experiment behind in the Scandinavian mountains, you will have to deal with the wildlife up there.

Reindeer and Lapporten

We learned that lesson the hard way. It turns out that the high north houses a high density of reindeer, a fact we immediately noticed in our plots: labels destroyed, large footprints everywhere, flowers eaten, even some dung piles… The reindeer seemed to be attracted to our research!

Sassy rein

The first few days, we only saw their tracks, obvious as they were. It only took us some time to finally see one in real life.

Reindeer and Torneträsk

We thought they might have been hiding from us far away in the mountains, on the highest and less-visited peaks, but in the end our first sighting was right next to the chairlift, on the most touristical location in the whole northern mountain range.

Reindeer and chairlift

The next day, we saw some more disturbers, with impressive antlers and a fierce look.

Majestic reindeer bull

They were too majestic to keep us angry for a long time, though, and even after munching on our labels, we still had to forgive them.

Munched labels

That is exactly why we are here in the end, was it not, for the real nature?

  Reindeer with massive antlersAll pictures of the Scandinavian research from this summer here!

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A happy reunion

Recent post about my fieldwork in Abisko on the Arctic Research Blog!

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Back to the top

This post was originally posted here, on the Arctic Research blog of the Interact network.

Golden mushroom

We are back in Abisko after two months. Right before the start of the rainy autumn weather – it might fall upon us on our last day – we are here to harvest the seedlings of our two-year experiment.

Hiking in Abisko

We take a week to skim the mountains and bring down the harvest to the research station.

Hiking in AbiskoOur nonnative species now had two growing seasons to show their best survival skills. For most of them, that turned out to be barely a centimeter of growth, but there were also some heros that made into full grown plants.

Harvest

The hikes in the mountains gave us the opportunity to enjoy the beautiful end-of-august atmosphere in the Swedish mountains. Beautiful colours in the sun, amazing little fuzzy plants, pretty golden mushrooms and cute lemmings collecting their winter fat.

Autumn plants

Lemming

Fuzzy plants

The sun is still around for some days, so we gonna make the most out of our short stay in the north. We might take some seconds to harvest two or three blueberries, we might take a detour to get a nice view on the valley, but we will especially enjoy the nice data we are collecting, as they promise us so many fascinating answers.

Plot

 DSC_0028     Fuzzy autumn plants Sweden

Autumn in the mountains

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On the fly

Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We welcome you aboard just another flight.

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I have been flying a lot this summer, and yesterday brought three more flights in a row. Brussels-Copenhagen, Copenhagen-Stockholm and Stockholm-Kiruna.

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Three more times the safety instructions, three more times drinking tea from a cardboard cup.

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Three more times living the dream above the clouds and experiencing the surrealistic feeling of viewing the world from above.

14 8Aug Zweden

All the plains brought me back to Abisko, in Northern Scandinavia. For the last time this summer, I will go there to check on my plants. We will harvest our first experiment (finally!) and bring back the plants to Belgium.

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I hope to share some nice stories and pictures with you the next days!

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Chasing Europe’s Big 5

This is a guest post from Sofie Lembrechts, about a nature photography trip to Spain. While I am mainly a photographing ecologist, she had to become an ecological photographer in order to catch the big mammals of Europe with her camera.

Spain people

The story of a girl, wildly chasing a wild dream… To become a wildlife photographer.

Spain falcon

I went to the north of Spain with Europe’s big 5. They organise ecological trips to search for the Big 5 of Europe’s mammals, and many more wild nature.

Spain sunset

This trip went to the ‘picos de europa’, with as main goal to get in the tracks of bears, wolves, wild cats, birds, … There were two goals for me this trip. To see the animals in their natural environment and to make pictures of them…

Spain spotting

The first goal was surprisingly easy to achieve. Jan, the guide, knew all the places and he could even make sure we saw wolves already on the very first day. It required big adventures, with hours of sea sickness on a boat or endless staring through dense fog, but the reward was big: every day we saw at least one big mammal.

Spain wolves

The second goal however was less easy to accomplish… With only a small telephoto lens I could just not come close enough…

Spain butterfly on thistle

One day, we heard a rumour that a bear was spotted in the village nearby a hotel. This was my chance! We hid on a mountain slope till the bear would come out to look for a snack.

Spain bear

And there he was! Still not close enough for a good picture, but at least close enough to see him on my camera! It was very exciting to see him so close by! I’m very happy that I achieved my first goal, and I learned that it might require some next level expensive camera gear to accomplish the second one.

Spain mountains

Just accept it from me: those big predators are even more breathtaking without bars to keep you safe.

Spain forest

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Marshing on

My playtime is limited on my international working trips. If I want to see a little bit of the environment, I have to be inventive and time-efficient.

Bird house in marsh

My forced visit to Philadelphia airport while waiting for a connection flight provided an ideal occasion for a photography trip.

Female finch drinking

On a nice, sunny afternoon, while my baggage was safely deposited at the baggage drop, I took the airport shuttle to its first stop: a peaceful bunch of houses called Eastwick. A short walk brought me to the entrance of the John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge, an area of marshland for which I had very humble expectations.

John Heinz national wildlife refuge

These expectations had to be adjusted upward immediately. While the sun slowly gained heat, I was dropped in a world full of birds, deer, squirrels and butterflies.

Deer in the wildlife refuge

The swamp was in its full summer glory, preceded by the flourishing swamp rose mallow.

Close-up of swamp rose mallow

It was an unprecedentedly easy acces to all nature’s beauty: wooden boardwalks, watch-towers, viewpoints on the lakes, everything was there.

Boardwalk at John Heinz national wildlife refuge

I do not know if all USA’s suburban nature has this high standards, but this random peace of marsh bordering the international airport was definitely a jewel.

Snake

For those stuck at Philadelphia airport: I do recommend the trip, but only from a 5 hour wait onwards, as you do not want to be stressed out. The train rides every half an hour and makes the trip in 4 minutes. The refuge is on a 20 minutes walk at most from the train station. It gets nice as soon as you pass the information center.

American robin in the bath Heron on the lake at John Heinz   Swamp rose mallow Squirrel

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