Polar explorers
The pale sun shines down from a cold, clear sky, spilling light across a frozen landscape. Ice glitters blue and white, rising from the sea in cliffs and jagged peaks. Suddenly, the still air is split by a piercing crack. A mountainous glacier fractures, a shard shearing away, crashing into the sea. The waves jostle the smaller fragments drifting on the surface, startling a flock of birds that rests upon one.
They take to the air with a chorus of angry calls. Their feathers gleam, soft grey and snowy white, a smart black cap crowning their head. Elegant wings carry them away, long tail streamers trailing in a fork behind them. They’re restless. Something inside of them, instinct and an internal clock, is stirring, telling them it’s time to move. It’s time to head north.
The Arctic tern is one of the world’s most spectacular migrants. Every year, these intrepid explorers fly the length of the planet and back again. They spend our summer nesting at the very top of the Northern Hemisphere, from the UK right up into the Arctic circle. As the season starts to change, they head south, reaching the ice of Antarctica just in time for the southern summer. Some might see both polar bears and penguins in the space of a few months! This nomadic lifestyle means Arctic terns live in a state of perpetual summer, experiencing more daylight than any other animal.