July Photo of the Month – Polar Bear Pounce – Win a Fine Art Print!

My photograph of the month for July 2015 was taken during an expedition to photograph Polar Bears this winter on the frozen Templefjord in Svalbard. The Polar Bear was both playing and hunting around this large piece of blue ice in front of the glacier as I photographed her from snow mobile. She frequently tested the ice by leaping onto it and putting full her body weight on a concentrated area to try and break through and reach the seals beneath the ice.Svalbard-9056-Edit12015If you are interested in photographing Polar Bears in the wild I will be leading an expedition in 2016 ‘Polar Bears of Svalbard‘.  Places are already extremely limited (two places only remaining) and once spoken for thats it. Both the 2015 Polar Bear expeditions are already sold out.

Don’t forget! You can win a free 13″ x 19″ Fine Art Print of this photograph including shipping anywhere in the world. All you need do is to be the first to comment on this post on the home page with your thoughts on why you like this photograph or why you would like to own a print of the image and then share the post with your preferred social media outlet.

AIPP Guest Speaker at The EVENT in Perth Western Australia

Later this month I will be attending the AIPP Event in Perth Western Australia. This will be the first time I have attended The Event (as I have always been travelling overseas when it has been on in the past) and I am looking forward to the wide selection of speakers that will be giving up their time this year. Personally, I will be presenting two lectures on both Polar Wildlife Photography and Polar Landscape Photography during The Event as well as attending several of the social events scheduled over the course of the Event. Hope to see you there.TheEventPerth

Polar Bears on the Edge – Press Release

Recently I wrote about the release of a very important new book on conservation of the Polar Bear. The following press release goes along with the release of this new book.Polar Bear Blues

PRESS RELEASE: New book punctures myth that polar bear conservation is success story

The climate is changing, sea-ice is melting, polar bears are suffering. And yet, the establishment accepts that about 1.000 polar bears are hunted every year. On average, one polar bear is shot every 9 hours, or almost 3 every day. Polar bears are systematically being hunted out.

A new book documents how lack of political courage and the corruption of science and management by commercial interests combine to threaten polar bears as much as global warming. „Polar Bears on the Edge“ is a relentless account of polar bear management failure and a daring attempt to finally initiate true protection of the species before it is too late.

Over-hunting will eradicate polar bears before climate change can.

Polar Bears have become one of the strongest symbols of our climate change challenge, and the effects of climate change have been elevated to the sole major threat to polar bear survival. The challenges polar bears face through deterioration of habitat are used by the community of polar bear workers as an opportunity to do nothing about over-hunting.

Commercialized polar bears corrupt Arctic politics, science and management.

Why does this over-hunting not make headlines? Why is this scenario allowed to continue? Danish veteran Arctic guide and traveler Morten Joergensen suggests several reasons why. He further documents manipulations with polar bear population figures, so that “reality” is made to mirror the opportunistic policies. The lack of arms-length between decision-makers, scientists, managers and consumers is demonstrated. The prevalence of letting money and rifles talk means that polar bears are facing extirpation.

How bad is it?

It is quite simple: The numbers do not add up. There are probably no more than 20.000 polar bears left today, the population down by 20-40% in 40 years. Science reckons they can multiply by less than 4% per year, but we allow 5% per year to be shot. A confluence of interests leads to this over-hunting being condoned by particularly Canada and Greenland, but also the USA and Norway. Neither is it challenged by elite scientists, polar bear managers, or our largest conservation NGOs such as WWF.

Change of policy  –  or extinction before mid century

In clear language, the author describes how the current hunting regime in itself will lead to polar bear extinction in the wild in only decades. But the book also argues that there is a chance to keep polar bears around if a complete revision of management policies happens very soon. Maximum harvest management must be replaced by a moratorium on polar bear hunting, the affected communities must be compensated, all international trade in polar bear parts must be banned, and new refuges must be set aside for the bears to survive in. That way, we might still have polar bears after 2050.

Morten Joergensen:

POLAR BEARS ON THE EDGE. Heading for Extinction while Management Fails

Softcover, 218 pages including photographs. US$ 19,95, € 18,50, DKK 140,-

ISBN 9-783937-903231. Published by: Spitsbergen-Svalbard.com. Also available as eBook.

Link to crowd-funding campaign for further distribution and with further information: bit.ly/1ELpk3d

For more information, interview requests or reviewer’s copy, contact Morten Joergensen: ursmar2015@gmail.com

Link to forum for further discussion, group-forming and action: https://www.facebook.com/ProtectThePolarBear

AIPP The Working Pro Magazine Feature Article

The current May 2015 issue of the AIPP The Working Pro magazine features a short article (along with photographs) on my Polar Photography workshops and specialisation in the Polar Photography genre. You can download the complete article by clicking on the image below. The full edition of the Working Pro magazine is available for free to AIPP members.
workingpro2015

May Photo of the Month Winners: Ronny, Brian and Rachel

Congratulations to the fifth print winners ‘Ronny Nielson, Brian Peters and Rachel Mailais’, for the photograph of the month for May 2015: ‘Ice Bear’. This month I had three comments come in within just seconds of each other so have decided to give away one print each to the first three to comment.

What Ronny said: Great capture of the polarbear. Shows it in its environment and how isolated these animals live. And how they are the king in the arctic.

What Peter Said: This is an absolutely magnificent image of a threatened species in an endangered environment. I’m hoping to get something half as good when I’m in the Arctic in July. This image has my name all over it.

What Rachel Said: Great shot, Joshua. A gorgeous bear out for a stroll, blending in its white environment. It seems to suddenly notice you, kind of wondering what is this new type of animal on it the horizon?

Congratulations Ronnie, Brian and Rachel, you were the first, and your prints will be sent to you at the end of May when I return home from the South Island of New Zealand.Svalbard

Keep an eye out on my blog for the next print giveaway with the June photograph of the month. Remember the best way to get instant updates is to subscribe via email.