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IN THIS EMAIL
  • Announcing the winners of the 2023 Canadian Wildlife Photography of the Year competition
  • Sleeping giant: Inside the Mount Meager volcano
  • Ottawa’s Pinhey sand dunes
  • An Eagle-Eye Tours adventure to Patagonia
Announcing the winners of the 2023 Canadian Wildlife Photography of the Year competition
Canadian Geographic is pleased to honour 15 photographers for their outstanding images of Canadian wildlife

By Thomas Lundy and Alexandra Pope 
A juvenile red-throated loon shakes off water in dreamy evening light in the St. Lawrence Estuary at Le Bic, Que. The birds often stop on the south shore of the St. Lawrence on their way to nesting grounds on the Côte-Nord. Rimouski, Que.-based photographer Jean-Christophe Lemay is Canadian Geographic’s Canadian Wildlife Photographer of the Year. (Photo: Jean-Christophe Lemay)

An Arctic fox in its summer coat trots nimbly across the tundra under the midnight sun. A northern gannet returns to its crowded colony with nesting material. A raft of curious sea otters bobs in the Pacific waters off western Vancouver Island, their attention caught by a group of sea kayakers. The winning images of Canadian Geographic’s 2023 Canadian Wildlife Photography of the Year competition showcase both the awe-inspiring biodiversity of this country and the talent of our photography community. For this edition of our most popular photography competition, we are pleased to recognize one photographer whose work stood out among the more than 14,000 entries: Jean-Christophe Lemay is our Canadian Wildlife Photographer of the Year and wins the grand prize of $5,000.

Read on to learn more about Lemay and see the photos that most impressed our judges: wildlife photographers Michelle Valberg and Ryan Tidman, Canadian Geographic director of brand and creative Javier Frutos, and the editorial staff of Canadian Geographic.

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Sleeping giant: Inside the Mount Meager volcano
Something melted a hole through the glacier above the Mount Meager Volcano in 2016. A perilous expedition ventured deep inside the cave to find out, did the volcano wake up?

By Christina Frangou
Christian Stenner (in red) and Kathleen Graham exit the upper entrance to the cave below Mount Meager’s Job Glacier. On this descent, they discovered the volcano’s fumerole, from which they took samples. (Photo: Adam Walker)

Christian Stenner walked across British Columbia’s Job Glacier and came to a hard stop. At his feet, the icy ground ended at a precipice. On the other side, he could see a cave.

Stenner was looking into a seven-metre-wide chasm. Across it, toxic steam gushed from a tunnel, obscuring what lay behind. The air reeked of rotten eggs — a warning sign of hydrogen sulfide gurgling up from somewhere inside. 

Over there, Stenner thought, is where I need to be.

He decided to swing himself across the pit by a rope anchored to the cave’s entrance. Stenner checked his rope and jumped as far as he could. He didn’t quite make it across, and as he swung back and forth like a pendulum over the pit, he pumped his legs to gather momentum. His breath echoed loudly through the respirator covering his face. Each inhale ate away at the supply of compressed air held in a tank on his back. 

Then, a crunch: his crampon stuck into the ice on the other side of the chasm. He pulled himself onto the ledge and into a space where no human had been before.

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Ottawa’s Pinhey sand dunes

The push to rehabilitate a remarkable ecosystem at the edge of Ottawa, the little known remnants of an ancient sea

By Gavin Charles

The Piney sand dunes in the foreground with the Ottawa suburbs and, in the distance, highrises along the Ottawa River. This area was once submerged under the Champlain Sea. (Photo: Colin Rowe/Can Geo)

Just 20 minutes from Parliament Hill, a quiet forest trail wends its way to what looks for all the world like a land-locked beach. There’s no water in sight, just a series of dunes that seem to have been randomly dumped in the woods. These are the Pinhey sand dunes.

This was seashore once, but only the dunes remember. Some 10,000 years ago, all this fine white sand was submerged under the Champlain Sea, a landlocked body of salt water left after the retreat of glaciers that covered North America. The dunes serve as a reminder of the ancient landscape that once was — and just how quickly humans can transform the landscape.

Today, four scattered dunes are vestiges of a single, much larger dune that swept over the area before city planners in the 1950s launched a tree planting program, introducing the tolerant and lumber-ready landscape. As the trees thrived, the organic matter they deposited on the sand began to transform the dunes into a pine forest.

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TRAVEL WITH CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC 
Featured trip: Essential Peru with Jill Heinerth

Unveil the mysteries of the bygone Incan empire on this odyssey through the jungle wilds, lakes, colonial cities, floating villages and lost mountaintop city of Machu Picchu. This special departure of the incredibly popular Essential Peru adventure is led by writer, photographer, and filmmaker Jill Heinerth.

A spectacular journey through Peru’s varied landscape encompassing coastal desert, snow-capped Andean peaks, the high altiplano, and lush cloud forest. The most famous sites are all visited including the mysterious Nazca Lines, awe-inspiring Machu Picchu in its incredible mountaintop setting, Lake Titicaca, where the night is spent in an island homestay, and the remarkable 3000m deep Colca Canyon. On the way, we encounter traditional culture, condors, llamas, and a warm welcome from the Peruvian people.

Meet your ambassador: Jill Heinerth

Learn more
Get inspired!

Why a hiking trip is the best way to experience Peru’s Sacred Valley

To fully immerse yourself in the world of the Incas, you have to get high — in the hills, that is 

By Marina Jimenez

Check out these other upcoming trips:

- Patagonia Birds and Wildlife with Kim Gray
- Saskatchewan Whooping Cranes with Carol Patterson

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