After spending a week in Uppsala for a DNA barcoding workshop as part of my PhD I decided to delay my flight home by five days so I could do some hiking and nature photography in Sweden. I rented a car on the Friday afternoon after the workshop ended and drove 500km north up to … Read More
Hiking
Searching for Musk Oxen in Dovrefjell, Norway
Last July, a friend and I went on a wild camping road trip around southern Norway. The highlight was definitely seeing musk oxen in Dovrefjell. Spending a couple of days watching and photographing these animals in the wild was an experience I’ll never forget. Musk oxen, which are more closely related to sheep than cows, … Read More
Wild Camping in Norway
This July, a friend and I went on a wild camping road trip around southern Norway. We spent our days driving and hiking through the incredible landscapes and our evenings camping out in the wild. Norway is a nature photographer’s dream. The scenery is so dramatic and varied with jagged mountains, immense fjords and magical … Read More
A Day in Ordesa
Last month my girlfriend and I hired a car in Barcelona and drove up to the Spanish Pyrenees for a few days of hiking and bird watching. We stayed in a small campsite in Valle de Bujaruelo beside Ordesa y Monte Perdido National Park. We decided to spend one of our days in the mountains … Read More
Full Moon Hike in Glendalough
Glendalough, in the Wicklow Mountains National Park, can be a very busy place, especially in summer. One way to avoid the coaches packed full of people and the traffic jams on the mountain trails, is to visit… at night. After work one evening I looked up the forecast and the moon phase for the coming … Read More
Hiking, Camping and Photographing the West Highland Way
The West Highland Way is Scotland’s oldest long distance walking route. It starts in Milngavie, just outside Glasgow, and finished 151km later at the base of Ben Nevis in Fort William. Every year, thousands of people from around the world complete the route. My corkonian companion, Sam, and I spent seven days at the end … Read More
Mweelrea in Winter
Rising 814m or 2,670 feet above sea level, Mweelrea is Connacht’s highest mountain. Its Irish name, “Cnoc Maol Réidh”, means “smooth bald hill”. Looking at the flat, curved and often snowy summit, its clear where the name comes from. Mweelrea is on the edge of Ireland surrounded by Doolough Valley to the north, Killary Harbor … Read More