When we think polar bears, we usually think ice.
Yet for centuries, polar bears have adapted to a particular warming of climate that occurs every year, starting around late June. It’s called summer.
Ask Canadian photographer Martin Gregus, 26, and he will explain how polar bears spend their ice-less offseason ashore. He and his dad, both professional photographers and cinematographers from Vancouver, have traipsed to the Arctic over two dozen times on bear-documenting expeditions during summertime—when ice is scant and landbound bears are aplenty.
“What people actually don’t realize is that huge chunks of the Arctic are actually ‘ice cream’ in the summer and they do look much like that,” Gregus told The Epoch Times. “And they have looked like that for hundreds if not thousands of years.”…
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