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IN THIS EMAIL
  • Muskoxen: the tundra’s ultimate survivors
  • An excerpt from Gone Viking III: The Holy Grail
  • Our biweekly wildlife roundup
  • Photographing Vancouver Island with Ryan Tidman
  • A Maple Leaf Adventures trip through southeast Alaska
Muskoxen: the tundra’s ultimate survivors
Muskoxen have roamed the tundra for millennia, but today these woolly beasts are facing a number of very modern threats to their existence 

By Alanna Mitchell
Photo: Natalie Gillis

The muskox, that shaggy-coated, white-stockinged, short-legged, warty-lipped, thick-skulled, inbred, plant-munching, cold-loving, sociable beast of the Arctic, the ultimate survivor. 

When the last ice age, which ended about 10,000 years ago, remorselessly excised mammoths, woolly rhinoceroses and cave lions from the book of life, muskoxen, who shared the same landscapes, somehow pulled through. 

They dodged fate again about a century ago, reduced to a few tiny pockets in northeastern Greenland and in Canada after being commercially hunted for hides almost to extinction. In 1917, with perhaps only 400 remaining in the country, the Canadian government halted the hunt — almost a moot point by then — and muskoxen began their slow climb back from the brink.

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Excerpt from Gone Viking III: The Holy Grail
Bestselling author Bill Arnott embarks on an extraordinary adventure, trekking the ancient world, unearthing Viking secrets and more to reveal history’s most elusive treasure, the holy grail

By Bill Arnott
Photos courtesy Bill Arnott

It was a Canadian adventure, touching transnational coasts. And like most worthwhile encounters, people were the common connection. But my domestic excursion began overseas. In Norway. Where I trekked while I researched my Gone Viking travel memoirs, specifically, Gone Viking III: The Holy Grail (RMBooks, 2023).

I was seaside in Oslo, touring exhibits, concluding the day at a Viking Ship Museum. Two of the featured displays were the Oseberg and Gokstad, hand-crafted longships, a visceral blend of function and design. The former constructed, it’s believed, not to sail but to facilitate an elaborate burial, shuttling royalty to Valhalla. Effectively an art installation, designed as a vessel of oak, its role to serve as a coffin. The Oseberg almost certainly never touched water, but still it appeared seaworthy, as though awaiting a crew of rowers, a sail and a breeze. The second craft on display, however, the Gokstad, was very much a ship of the sea.

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Wildlife Wednesday: Toronto Zoo animals threatened by wildlife smoke

Plus: Rapidly evolving cod, surprise science, two new bird monitoring stations and how to protect clams against extreme heat 

By Sarah BrownLuke Faulks, and Madigan Cotterill 

Most animals were allowed to stay outside where they are comfortable, but animals at higher risk are brought indoors. (Photo: Alexander Ross/Unsplash)

Where there’s fire, there’s smoke… and a whole lot of it has been blowing down to southern Ontario and Quebec in recent days. With a worse-than-usual fire season in full swing, the haze is affecting more than just humans. On June 10, for the first time in history, animals at the Toronto Zoo were seriously threatened by the city’s poor air quality, ranked one of the worst in the world. Like humans, animals that are young, old, pregnant or have a history of respiratory issues are more prone to the negative effects of air pollution. These animals were immediately brought inside.

To check the other animals’ levels of distress, zoo staff examined their abdomens and made note of how quickly they were moving as they breathed — those breathing more quickly than usual were sent inside to join the animals at a higher risk. Precautions were also taken by engaging in “enrichment and training,” adding toys and scents to habitats to create a calming and safe environment.

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EXPLORE PODCAST
Photographing Vancouver Island with Ryan Tidman
Breaking into the business of wildlife photography is no easy task, but Ryan Tidman has experienced great success through his work photographing Vancouver Island's iconic mammals — bears, sea wolves, marmots and more
Wildlife photographer Ryan Tidman and one of his photographs of a Vancouver Island sea wolf. (Photos courtesy Ryan Tidman)

Professional wildlife photographer Ryan Tidman has an up-close view of the damaging impact logging old-growth forests is having on Vancouver Island. The Trebek Initiative Grantee is investigating how cutting down the last remaining giant cedars and redwoods is taking away the dens of the island’s black bear population. On that rainy island, caves are too wet for bears to live in, so holes in giant trees are where they spend their winters and raise their young. But for how much longer, and what can be done?

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TRAVEL WITH CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC 
Featured trip: Alaska Supervoyage
Join Maple Leaf Adventures on a sweeping exploration of southeast Alaska, from Sitka's outer coast in the northwest to Ketchikan in the southeast. Discover worlds off the roadmap, home to historic coastal towns, magnificent glaciers, and wildlife phenomena that provide fodder for BBC and IMAX documentaries. You’ll see Alaska’s natural wonder aboard Swell, a classic tug that has plied the inside passage for more than a century, and go where the big ships can’t, including special access to brown bear sanctuaries and hot springs.
This once-in-a-lifetime adventure will also be in the company of CanGeo Travel Ambassador and photographer Jenny Wong. Camera in hand, she specializes in adventure and wildlife photography, providing insights from her experience photographing bears and participating in and northern adventures.

The Alaska Supervoyage will run this July 26 to Aug. 6 (12 days), and as a special for readers, solo travellers can book a private cabin with an ensuite and pay no single supplement (usually 50% of the trip fare).
Learn more

Check out these other upcoming trips:

- Saskatchewan Whooping Cranes with Carol Patterson 
- Canadian Badlands and Rocky Mountains with George Kourounis 

- Newfoundland Circumnavigation with Jenny Wong

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