| Digg |
|
Margaret Williams, leader for WWF's Bering Sea & Kamchatka ecoregion, traveled to Chukotka, the northeastern most corner of Siberia on an expedition in April 2007. With several Russian and American colleagues, Margaret and her team traveled over 700 miles across the roadless, snow-covered Chukotka Peninsula to reach the small village of Vankarem, north of the Arctic Circle on the Chukchi Sea. The expedition is part of an ambitious effort to protect and study polar bears and address an increasing problem caused by climate change -- conflict between polar bears and humans.
Join Margaret on her journey across the vast and frozen tundra, and learn more about WWF's work in the Bering Sea & Kamchatka ecoregion.
Part 7: Polar bear information exchange
n the evening, I join Sergey and Vladilen for a visit to the home of Lidia Nikolaevna, one of the school's few teachers, where we find Anatoly Kochnev, a walrus and bear biologist. As soon as Vlad has settled onto the sofa, Lidia hands him a guitar. For the next hour, Vlad and Anatoly hand the instrument back and forth, singing about Chukotka, the Arctic, and other songs. Vlad sings the song he's written about Vankarem, and Anatoly sings his walrus song. It's one of the most enjoyable ways to spend an evening, and of all the places I've traveled, it only happens here in Russia. There is so much creativity, heart and soul bottled up here, and it comes pouring out on a night like this.