With baited breath you wait, warm beneath your many layers and sipping on steaming hot coffee, surrounded by the white and snowy landscape that comes with being so far north. A scout has travelled ahead of you in search of a den, and now, as you sit outside after the sun has barely risen, it is down to you and your patience to reap the rewards. Staring at the dark hole in the bright snow, you wait.
There is movement in the den, a dark round circle is working its way to the surface just 100 metres away from where you now sit, completely still. The polar bear nose becomes clear as you watch this magnificent mammal, cautiously but wearily exit the den after months of nursing her cubs inside. Shakily they make their clumsily exit, trudging through fresh powdery snow after their mother, excited at their brand new surroundings. This is what you have been waiting for, a moment that for years to come you will struggle to find just the right words to emphasise its beauty.
The cubs will play and learn to properly make use of their limbs whilst their mother watches on, stretching her legs with a recognisable motherly expression mixing joy with exhaustion. It is now time for the cubs to get ready for their hard trek to the floe edge ready for the summer hunting season. Just south of Churchill is a lodge perfectly located amongst the polar bear dens, allowing you a unique opportunity to witness this beautiful event. You may not have heard of Wat’chee Lodge before, but you will have seen work recorded there as many images of polar bear cubs are captured there, and we can guarantee you will never forget it.
Where and when?
40 Miles south of Churchill on the Hudson Bay, accessible only via private plane, is an area renowned around the globe for this extraordinary niche. Polar bear mothers have chosen to reuse this spot each year to raise their cubs under the snow, and then leave their dens in March to prepare for the summer.
Best time to go: March