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This guy gets to film polar bears for a living (and one tried to attack him)

Meet Gordon Buchanan.

DSC_2807 GORDON BUCHANAN GORDON BUCHANAN

GORDON BUCHANAN HAS a job that most of us would dream about. He’s a wildlife cameraman, so he gets to travel the world, see amazing animals, and make great TV shows about the process.

Hang out with polar bears all day and get paid? Colour us jealous (but a little scared, admittedly).

Buchanan is getting ready to head around Ireland for a few weeks of talks this month, when he will give Irish audiences a glimpse into his experiences working with some incredible animals.

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Over a career already spanning 20 years, he has travelled to parts of the world we can only dream of. And it all started off by accident.

“I was working in a restaurant at the weekend on the summer holidays,” recalls Buchanan. It just so happened that the owner was a wildlife cameraman. “I’d never considered it as a job and I got to know him and I was absolutely fascinated by what he does.”

They got on well, and the cameraman offered Buchanan an opportunity to join him – so the young lad couldn’t say no.

Having “arsed around in school”, becoming a cameraman was a way of seeing the world.

Buchanan grew up on the Isle of Mull, which is a fairly remote part of Scotland. “There wasn’t much to do and I absolutely loved exploring the world about me and seeing the animals that lived alongside us,” he remembers.

Meeting the animals

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This sense of curiosity is what must drive him to keep exploring the planet. What’s it like filming animals around the world? “A lot of the time you’re trying to hide,” he says.

“There are occasions when there’s animals that can completely ignore you and you are able to ignore the environment and watch them do what they do naturally,
and then occasionally animals cross the line and they want to engage with you some way… it’s a great privilege to get to spend time with animals.”

The one thing he had always wanted to do was film polar bears in the Arctic – but he didn’t get to achieve this lifetime’s aim until 2012. When he did get there, he met them at a critical time, after sea ice melted early, due to climate change. “When we got there we thought, ‘this isn’t a good time to film polar bears’, but really it was because it showed them what they faced.”

“I don’t even have to remind myself how lucky I am to be doing the job that I’m doing,” acknowledges Buchanan. “I think if you go complacent or tired of doing it, it would be time to give up. There are so many fascinating places and fascinating people that every time I go away I do feel completely blessed.”

Even when things like this happen…

jack strack / YouTube

Changing attitudes

In recent years, Buchanan has become hugely interested in the environment, and the human race’s impact on the world around it.

“In the beginning, the early days, when I was just starting to get my career going it was almost a selfish thing because it was a job I desperately wanted to do,” he says. It has made him realise that as individuals, we can all impact on the world, and he wants to make sure he treads lightly on it.

“What I care deeply about is raising the awareness of places or species that are in danger and I would love to get to the end of my career and end of my life and feel I’ve done everything to possible to help the natural world.”

He says you don’t have to go to the Arctic to see the effects of climate change. Earlier this year, thousands of seabirds washed up dead along the west coast of Scotland.

“That was caused by climate change, winter warming,” explains Buchanan. “There was a freak weather event where we had these storms that lasted much longer than the amount of days they normally do.”

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Buchanan knows that a lot of the “big” decisions to help the environment are going to be made at big levels. But he also believes that we can all help save the world by making small changes.

“I think all of this attitude should start at a very basic level – if you walk out of a room, switch off the lights, don’t leave the taps running.”

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He drills these tips into his own kids, to make sure they’re aware. “I just look at everything I do,” he says, adding that he’s not telling people to “knit their own onesies and live in a cabin”.

“If we can all make these small differences we can put pressure on government and politicians,” he said.

The past years have seen him sort out his life-work balance, which has given him more time for causes and conservation. So far, he’s teamed up with the likes of Greenpeace, Trees for life and Scottish Wildlife to help boost their work.

Life with the snow wolves

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Buchanan’s next television show is The Snow Wolf Family and Me, where he spent time with Arctic wolves.

He found them fascinating – but realised that he shouldn’t lose sight of their natural instincts. “They are an animal that have killed people in the past. But that adds to the excitement of being with the animal. You can’t switch off.”

“We do have these preconceived ideas of what bears and wolves are like,” he says. “The programme really shows them as they really are.”

Gordon will give talks around the country from 11 November: 11 November: Lyric Theatre Belfast;  12 November: An Grianan Letterkenny; 13 November: Royal Theatre Castlebar;  14 November: Station House Clifden; 15 November: Town Hall Theatre Galway;  17 November: St Michael’s Theatre New Ross; 18 November: Theatre Royal Waterford; 19 November: Glór Ennis; 20 November: Triskel Christchurch Cork; 21 November: George Bernard Shaw Theatre Carlow;  22 November: Axis, Ballymun Dublin.

Read: Poachers turned gamekeepers: Rwanda looks to hunters to save mountain gorillas>

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40 Comments
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    Mute Neil Ward
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    Nov 10th 2011, 8:26 PM

    Not a mortgage holder, and I’m not unbiased, but fair play to the Govt for staring them down

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    Mute Niall Mulligan
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    Nov 10th 2011, 8:38 PM

    No vested interests either, but I’m even more shocked that at the stance they took in the first place.

    51
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    Mute Frank Buffets
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    Nov 10th 2011, 8:42 PM

    Like It takes guts to do that when the bank is state owned! Give yourselves a salary increase for help with our spin.

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    Mute Ballyer Rules
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    Nov 10th 2011, 9:40 PM

    The PTSB are the biggest gangsters in this and are gettin away with it. They increased the rates 3 times recently and although they will be reducing this .25% they are still by far the dearest.

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    Mute Gavin McDonnell
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    Nov 11th 2011, 4:14 AM

    I think you’ll find Ulster bank are the most expensive at 5.1%

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    Mute Pete Gibson
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    Nov 10th 2011, 8:19 PM

    AIB only exists because stupid taxpayers pay their bills.

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    Mute Rod McAlpine
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    Nov 10th 2011, 8:19 PM

    I can not believe that they are getting away with this. The Bank has 3,000 employees it does not need and coupled with a host of branches that should be shut the cost to the tax payer is truly astronomical. recent salary increases on top of inflated salary levels add to the pension fund cost.

    50
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    Mute Johnny Zillion
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    Nov 10th 2011, 8:54 PM

    Why is the EBS rate 1.5% higher than AIB and they are merged institutions?
    The EBS borrowers are being excessively penalised….

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    Mute Derek Turner
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    Nov 10th 2011, 9:57 PM

    I think every aib or bank worker on the journal is giving the thumbs down

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    Mute Frank Gallen
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    Nov 10th 2011, 10:57 PM

    What recent salary increase would that be?

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    Mute Ryan Murphy
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    Nov 10th 2011, 11:45 PM

    I started with EBS, some years ago when they were among the cheapest on the market, and I liked the whole idea of a mutual. Because of the race to the bottom, driven in part by Anglo, AIB were at one (later) point the second cheapest on the market for mortgages, and this received some publicity, with the IT publishing a comprehensive “scoresheet” as it were of the rates available at that time-late ’06 or very early ’07.

    So I called into them, just before the whole thing went South, and, like the guy on the bus, I didn’t know what a tracker mortgage was, but they offered me one, as well as the (declined by me) chance to buy another investment property, or take an ‘oul holiday.

    Happily I took it, and even happier, they took on board a ridiculously high valuation of my family home, giving me a loan to value that bore no relation to reality. I still have that-and am gladdened by the fact that those on variable rates are getting a bite of the cherry-I could still be there myself but by chance.

    16
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    Mute Conor Heffernan
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    Nov 10th 2011, 8:42 PM

    if every aib account holder withdrew their deposits and moved them elsewhere, they’d get a rude awakening!

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    Mute David Cullen
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    Nov 10th 2011, 9:11 PM

    The Dutch did this a fews years ago over bonuses to top staff. They gave them back More power to the people

    22
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    Mute Stephen Watson
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    Nov 10th 2011, 8:45 PM

    They didn’t rise rates in the first place like all the other wanks. People should do some research before judging.

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    Mute Paddy O'Reilly
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    Nov 10th 2011, 9:30 PM

    People are just looking for money for nothing, now they are getting a better rate than before the ECB increases.
    The ESB is state owned but does not entitle people to free electricity, why should it be different with the banks.

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    Mute Derek Turner
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    Nov 10th 2011, 8:42 PM

    Still doesnt stop them giving there staff a pay rise

    24
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    Mute cyberbams
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    Nov 10th 2011, 11:13 PM

    I think it was quite reasonable that if AIB didn’t pass on the recent rises, they should not have to pass on the cut. This turn around seems totally illogical to me. Nice for those affected & good luck to them but nevertheless quite daft!

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    Mute Eoin Faz
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    Nov 10th 2011, 9:32 PM

    Wow great, lucky us – taxpayer to pay back reckless mortgage holders loans

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    Mute Eoin Faz
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    Nov 10th 2011, 9:54 PM

    This is a direct transfer of cash from depositors to mortgage holders

    19
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    Mute Rommel Burke
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    Nov 10th 2011, 11:12 PM

    Is there anything stopping the banks from raising their rates in say a months time, irrespective of any change in the ECB rate? It never seems to stop PTSB as far as i can see.

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    Mute Frank Gallen
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    Nov 10th 2011, 10:53 PM

    Great stuff, with govt interference like this how do they hope to get private investment in order to get the NPRF’s investment in AIB back? Very short sighted decision, especially given AIB never passed on the last two increases.

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    Mute willy pearse
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    Nov 10th 2011, 10:03 PM

    You couldn’t make this stuff up

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    Mute Niamh Byrne
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    Nov 10th 2011, 11:25 PM

    Yeah but if you raise interest rates it pushes more people into the cannot pay bracket and so we end up paying anyway, at least this makes repayments more affordable.

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    Mute Eoin Faz
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    Nov 11th 2011, 1:17 AM

    More likely it pushes them to restructure or sell. Banks should not be in the business of giving away money.

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    Mute Oran Drumgoole
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    Nov 11th 2011, 2:45 AM

    Why does it feel wrong that banks are passing on a saving to customers ?

    Oh no, wait a second ……

    News flash – Banks claim PR error and state that it should of read raise rates by 0.25%. The error is set to cost taxpayers a Further 10billion for some reason but banks have decided the double the rate increase to 0.5% because a senior exec was afraid they mightn’t be able to fund the regular replacement of the gold chairs that they use while at their weekly meetings in their ivory tower in the Bahamas.

    Instead of posting the new rates in papers banks have simply setup a very easy system in every branch to accommodate these new costs. All customers of the branches should empty their pockets into barrels that are marked “slush funds”. An Taoiseach should simply sign a blank cheque (as they might need more the 10bil, you never know) and make it payable to cash or C#^?s , either way the ecb will know who it’s for!

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