Norbert Rosing has been photographing polar bears for 25 years. In 1989, he captured his first polar bear images in Churchill, in the Canadian province of Manitoba. He was there to photograph the ...
See the huge bear. He is hungry. See the little dog. He is happy. See the bear move close. "Come, play!" says the dog ... This couldn't be. A 1,200 pound male polar bear (especially when it's autumn ...
Rosing knows a bit about polar bears. He’s photographed them for 20 years, taking yearly trips to the Canadian and Scandinavian Arctic to capture the bears in their natural environment as they play, ...
“The Arctic experience in winter is mostly about learning to love the cold,” a young Inuk told Norbert Rosing at a Winnipeg library in February 1983. “Luckily, you don’t have to go all the way to ...
It was a chance encounter that could have ended with flying fur and bloodshed in the snow. Wildlife photographer Norbert Rosing was taking pictures of a team of huskies in Canada's frozen north when a ...
The cubs were born late last year, introduced to the world last month and, on Monday, were given names by their godparents. And as the photos above of the cubs frolicking in their play area will ...
Polar bears, as you’ve rarely seen them, in the fascinating pictures by nature photographer Norbert Rosing. Also: “Sibylle” was East Germany’s answer to “Vogue” magazine. And: snowshoeing in the ...
A 1,200 pound male polar bear (especially when it's autumn and he hasn't eaten for four months) doesn't make play-dates with an animal from another species. He doesn't arrive every afternoon to cuddle ...
It was a chance encounter that could have ended with flying fur and bloodshed in the snow. Wildlife photographer Norbert Rosing was taking pictures of a team of huskies in Canada's frozen north when a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results