The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Spread your wings on a wild adventure

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EVERY week our Holiday Hero

NEIL SIMPSON takes an in-depth look at a brilliant holiday topic, doing all the leg-work so you don’t have to. This week: Holidays for animal lovers.

ANIMAL magic is in the air for 2020 with a host of new expedition­s and experience­s on offer that get you close to some of the world’s rarest and most endangered species. Many tours have research and conservati­on angles, so you can help out as you travel. Here’s what’s on offer around the world.

Protecting puffins

THE traditiona­l five-yearly puffin census in Scotland will take place annually from 2020, as fears mount that climate change is hitting the bird population harder than previously thought. Join a four-day Puffin Explorer wildlife cruise around the Isles of Mull, Iona and Staffa to see some of the biggest remaining colonies of the birds, absorb expert informatio­n on the new count and learn about local geology, mythology and other wildlife. With luck you won’t just see puffins: also expect seals and whales while eagles fly overhead. The trip ends with a whisky tasting and includes three nights in hotels from £699pp. Haggisadve­ntures.com

The final 50

HUNDREDS of Marsican brown bears used to roam the forests of Italy’s Abruzzo National Park – but best estimates say little more than 50 now survive. You can track them and help with the conservati­on and wilderness restoratio­n effort on a four-day wild nature tour with The European Nature Trust. As well as helping the research and monitoring efforts, you can see wolves, mountain foxes, red deer, wild boar and chamois. You stay in a family-run hotel and a remote mountain cabin. Trips from £1,450pp including a £500 donation to preservati­on charities. Theeuropea­nnaturetru­st.com

Tagging the rays

ORGANISERS call them ‘ocean expedition­s with a purpose’ – holidays where you do more than just look at the wonders of nature. A new adventure tour from Scott Dunn joins forces with Conservati­on Internatio­nal and takes you offgrid (though in luxury on a stylish yacht called Rascal) through some of the most biodiverse, but threatened waters of the eastern Indonesian archipelag­o. You assist on ocean surveys and can help tag manta rays. A four-night exploratio­n trip through Komodo National Park starts from £5,500pp, including internatio­nal and internal flights. Scottdunn.com

Ostriches in the snow

GUESTS at the Gstaad Palace, the ‘grand dame’ of Swiss ski hotels, get the chance to see some unexpected fellow visitors this winter. Take time out from the slopes to visit an ostrich farm and, if it snows, you may see the birds twist their necks trying to ‘drink’ falling flakes in what’s described as ‘a ballet in the snow’. The owners say birds used to cold South African nights thrive in Switzerlan­d and have hatched more than 100 eggs in the past decade. Rooms at Gstaad Palace start at £384 per night. Palace.ch

The seals of San Francisco

CROSS San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge and follow twisting roads for half an hour northwards to the Marine Mammal Center. It’s a little-known animal hospital, treating sea lions, seals, sea otters and any other animals found in distress in the waters of northern California. Entry to the exhibition space is free but take the £8 guided tour and you go behind the scenes to see vets and volunteers caring for animals suffering from pneumonia, malnutriti­on, trauma or maternal separation. Marinemamm­alcenter.org

 ??  ?? UNDER THREAT: You can see – and help protect – puffins, left, and Marsican brown bears, above, on the conservati­on trips on offer
UNDER THREAT: You can see – and help protect – puffins, left, and Marsican brown bears, above, on the conservati­on trips on offer

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