The Post

A ‘magical’ moment in the snow

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Mads Nordsveen has traversed the world, capturing spectacula­r vistas of dramatic French cliffsides, palmlined California beaches and the northern lights.

But over the weekend, it was a simpler sight in his native Norway that caught his eye.

The travel photograph­er was hiking with some friends on the northern Norwegian island of Senja when they spotted a little reindeer calf, white as the snow that blanketed the ground around them.

‘‘He almost disappeare­d into the snow!’’ Nordsveen later wrote on Instagram.

Were it not for its dark eyes and bone-coloured antlers jutting into the air, the calf might have looked like another snow mound.

Nordsveen and his friends quickly stilled themselves. A brown reindeer that Nordsveen thought was the calf’s mother stood just a few hundred yards beyond, he said.

‘‘The calf seemed a bit scared at first, but we sat completely quiet and were very calm, and eventually it came quite close,’’ Nordsveen, who is based in Oslo, said.

Nordsveen recalled being so mesmerised that it was a few seconds before his ‘‘photograph­er instinct’’ kicked in. He grabbed his camera and began shooting.

‘‘It was a very special moment, felt so magical!’’ Nordsveen said. ‘‘We looked straight into each other’s eyes.’’

Nordsveen estimated the calf stayed close to him for about five minutes before it ran back to its mother. The pair then disappeare­d into the forest.

On Tuesday, Nordsveen posted images of the rare white reindeer to Instagram, and quickly logged tens of thousands of likes.

‘‘What a beauty,’’ one user commented. ‘‘The prettiest little creature I’ve seen!’’ wrote another.

Nordsveen said the indigenous Sami people – many of whom herd reindeer in northern Norway – told him white reindeer are so rare that they are thought to bring happiness.

– Washington Post

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