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On the trail of southern Norway’s Arctic foxes, back from the brink

  • The iconic Scandinavian animal, which had disappeared from the area for two decades, is once again leaving pawprints across Hardangervidda National Park
  • Feeding and breeding programmes have successfully reintroduced the species

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White Arctic foxes at a feeding station on the Hardangervidda Plateau, in Norway. Photo: Daniel Allen

On the edge of southern Norway’s Hardangervidda National Park, two snowmobiles plough lonely furrows across a frozen vastness, dwarfed by the pristine surroundings. Temperatures on the sprawling Hardangervidda plateau,snowbound in winter, can plunge to minus 30 degrees Celsius or below, but today the wind is light and the sun hangs low in a cloudless, cobalt sky.

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Petter Braaten, a senior nature inspector and park ranger attached to the Norwegian Directorate for Nature Management, halts the lead snowmobile and inspects the trail ahead. The snow is mostly deep and compacted, but lightly covered boulders can flip a snowmobile.

“You know, polar pioneers Amundsen, Scott and Shackleton all trained here,” he says, returning to his purring, brightly coloured vehicle. “With its Arctic climate and Antarctic landscapes, it’s hard to believe we’re only 200km west of Oslo.”

Today’s expedition into the park is more about conser­vation than exploration, but it’s not hard to imagine a proces­sion of men and dogs traversing this icy wilderness.

Dogsled­­ding in Geilo. Photo: Daniel Allen
Dogsled­­ding in Geilo. Photo: Daniel Allen
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