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by Noella Ballenger
Churchill, Canada offers an exciting photographic journey into the world of the polar bears.
In the center of Canada … in the far north … lies a massive inland sea called Hudson Bay. A point of land extends into the bay on the western shore at about the half-way mark. This is Cape Churchill and the location of the remote town of Churchill. During the summer months, the town is a major shipping port for Canadian grain. It’s also a hub for scientific studies, researchers, and tourists during all times of year. But in late October or early November, winter pack ice begins to form on the bay, and the area again becomes wild and free--the home of the polar bear.
The polar bears are circumpolar--living in all the areas that surround the northern polar region. Hudson Bay has the southern-most population of polar bears. Each winter, large numbers of polar bears come to the Churchill area to wait for the ice pack to form.
In 1689, a fort was established at Cape Churchill. In fact, markers and canons still stand in place there. But one of the early explorers scratched on a rock a realistic assessment of the location: “most miserable place.” And it certainly can be when the wind and the cold conspire and silent winter settles in. When I visited the area, the temperature was zero degrees Fahrenheit with a nasty thirty-knot wind blowing off the bay.
If you wish to photograph in the area around Churchill, you’ll have to be dressed well. When you’re working in intensely cold situations like these, it’s vital that you keep your comfort and safety in mind. You can’t do a good job with your photographs when your hands or feet are freezing. Proper clothing is important to keep the cold and the wind away from your body. I dress in layers and find that silk and many of the new ” wonder” fabrics do an amazing job under wind-proof parkas and pants. Boot liners are also a must.
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All around the town of Churchill, posted warnings remind us that this is the white world of the polar bear, and it’s not for us to enter casually. With man and beast in such close proximity, some rules have been established. While most bears prefer not to have an encounter with man, there are a few that are willing to take the chance.
If a polar bear
is visiting the town dump or in other ways making a pest of
himself, he is captured in a bear trap and relocated to a more
remote location. Frequently, the offending bear must make a
stop at “polar bear jail.” This building is a holding quarters
for “wayward” polar bears. Here they may be tranquilized,
marked, and radio tagged in the ears. (It’s not possible to
radio collar a male bear because his neck is larger than his
head, so the collar just slips off). If the bear is a repeat
offender and returns after many re-locations to distant areas,
she may be shipped to a zoo. |
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The best way to visit the Churchill bears is on a tour. Because hotel facilities are so limited in Churchill, it’s difficult and often expensive to make individual arrangements. Each day, tundra buggies move out to tour the edges of the bay in search of bears. Tundra buggies are self-contained vehicles with heaters and a pit toilet for the comfort of the passengers. They ride on tires that are six-to-eight feet tall, which puts the happy photographers well out of reach of the bears. Regardless, the bears are quite curious about these unusual smelling “critters with wheels” and readily come close. One situation that I observed was quite revealing:
There are a few
small tundra buggies available for rent to individuals. I saw
one of these pull up near a bear. The photographer inside
popped out of the roof to snap a photograph. I cannot describe
how quickly the bear went from casually standing there to a full
charge at the vehicle. Nor can I describe how quickly the bold
photographer dropped out of sight! The thought came to me that
the vehicle was actually a can of bear food. And then I
realized that I was sitting in a larger can of bear food. It
was an interesting feeling.
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We want to understand the great white bear and see him as a part of his
environment. As the winter begins to take hold, the tundra is
transformed. Along the edge of the Hudson Bay, ice begins to form. As
the temperatures drop, the water in the bay becomes “slushy.” The
geography of the area allows the winds to push the new thin ice against
the shore and compact it much sooner than in other locations. It’s in
this area that the primarily carnivorous polar bear begins to feed over
the winter months. Its main food is the fur seal, but during the summer
and while waiting for the ice to form, bears will hunt mice and any
other creatures they can find. |
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The polar bear has been uniquely adapted over thousands of years to becoming an “arctic specialist”--able to survive and thrive in its harsh climate. Its “coat” is composed of three layers: dense fur (guard hairs and thick under-wool that traps heat), skin, and fat. The individual hairs of the fur are like hollow tubes that conduct heat inward. The bears are masters at negotiating thin ice and don’t seem to mind a dip in the frigid waters.
Interestingly, a research project was undertaken to observe and record polar bear migrations. Using infrared film (noted for its high sensitivity to thermal radiation) from the air, the researchers found that the only sign of bear that recorded was the thermal imaging of their breath. Thus, the polar bear is extremely well insulated and loses almost none of its body heat.
Continue with article on Polar Bears.......
Noella Ballenger leads photographic workshop/tours to special locations in the West. Visit her site in Apogee Photo Magazine at www.noellaballenger.com or send her an e-mail at Noella1B@aol.com Write to her at P.O. Box 457, La Canada, CA 91012, call: (818) 954-0933 or fax: (818) 954-0910 for more information on her workshop/tours.
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