Tips for stunning wildlife images . by der Schulenburg . Dr Gaub . J.Milei

7 hours ago
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Step by step useful tips Photo tips included >well-paid, aggressive and less well-paid heroic national politicians!
a political animal trip for #WorldWildlifeDay
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von der Schulenburg, Michael Sergius Graf von der Schulenburg (* October 16, 1948 in Munich) is a German politician (BSW) and former diplomat of the OSCE and the UN. From 2009 to 2012 he was the highest representative of the UN in Freetown in Sierra Leone and head of the world's first integrated peacebuilding mission. In the 2024 European elections he received a mandate in the European Parliament for the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance party./@EurasienGesellschaft

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Florence Gaub (* September 1977 in Munich) is a German-French political scientist and futurologist. She is research director of the NATO Military Academy in Rome and an expert in the field of security and conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa. She has worked for the European Union and published a large number of publications./@NATO, This is the official YouTube channel of NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization).
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Javier Gerardo Milei (born October 22, 1970 in Palermo, Buenos Aires) is an Argentine economist and politician (Partido Libertario). He has been President of Argentina since December 10, 2023./ARTE/"Argentine mission condors "
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Tips for stunning wildlife images by OM SYSTEM ambassador Brooke Bartleson
To celebrate, professional wildlife photographer and OM SYSTEM ambassador Brooke Bartleson shares essential tips for capturing stunning wildlife photos. From understanding animal behavior to using features like Pro Capture and AI detection autofocus, these tips will help photographers improve their shots. She also highlights the importance of getting on eye level with subjects, using weather-sealed gear, and taking time to appreciate nature.

📷 Gear Used: OM-1 Mark II + 150-400mm lens

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Finally:
Elephant riding in Thailand is still popular. What many tourists don't know or want to see is that the animals are tortured for it. "The problem is that most tourists don't get enough information," says Lek. They want to take a selfie with the cute baby elephant. But they don't ask themselves where the mother actually is.

They want to be close to the animals, pet them, ride them. What they don't see are the scars on their heads or the elephant hook in the hands of the mahouts, as elephant trainers are called in Thailand.

Elephant as a tourist attraction - this is how they are tortured for it
As a tourist attraction, a lot of money can be made from the pachyderms in Asian countries, but to do this they have to be made submissive. The training, known as the Phajaan procedure, begins early. Young animals are torn away from their mothers and locked in narrow enclosures.

They are shouted at, beaten, and deprived of water and food. Until they submit. Generations of mahouts see Phajaan as a kind of educational cure, for animal rights activists it is a cruel method of torture.

Since 1990, tortured elephants have found a new home in the Elephant Nature Park in the province of Chiang Mai, around 60 kilometers from the metropolis of the same name. The park is surrounded by mountains and forests, with a river winding through it. According to the organization Asian Elephant Projects, it was the first elephant sanctuary of its kind in Asia...

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