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Posts Tagged “EverydayClimateday”
#EVERYDAYCLIMATEDAY – Time to vote
Climate protection isn’t negotiable. But it is electable! Time to vote – Your vote counts! In a democratic society, citizens can help decide what the future should look like. You have the choice. You can choose climate protection – for a future worth living, for all of us, our children and the generations to come. […]
#EVERYDAYCLIMATEDAY – Contact your political representatives
Your vote counts for climate protection Climate researchers and other scientists have been warning us for years; the newest report of the IPCC Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change also makes it very clear: Climate change is a reality, and we can see the effects right on our doorstep. Heat waves, droughts, floods and other severe […]
#EverydayClimateday – Eat Sustainable
Why our diet can also contribute to climate protection Wiliam Cochet is a freerider and can usually be found somewhere deep in the winter snow. Come summer when he’s can’t powder down snowy slopes, he spends a lot of time on his small farm in France. For many years now, the VAUDE athlete has been […]
#EverydayClimateday – Reducing CO2 Emissions
Sustainable mobility is active climate protection. At VAUDE, we’ve been dealing with the challenges of sustainability related to corporate mobility for more than ten years. We’d like to present three examples of practical solutions that have been successful for our employees. Productive business travel by rail As a VAUDE sales manager for Germany, Markus Schelkle […]
#EverydayClimateday – How to make sustainable consumption successful
Why it makes sense to repair: European Sustainability Week begins today. This week of events was established in 2015 and its goal is to encourage more people to engage in sustainability. Every individual can to something to make change for the better – climate protection concerns us all and climate change has long since begun. […]
Popular Blog Posts
Explore Scotland: Sail & Climb the Outer Hebrides – Part 1 “The most remote pub on mainland Britain”
Europe, a continent viewed as the centre of the universe is, in fact, an offshoot of Asia. Great Britain, former centre of the world’s largest empire, lies on the outskirts of Europe. The Old Forge, a pub on Scotland’s Knoydart peninsula, can only be reached on foot or by boat.
Popular Videos
Vertriders in Namibia – Social Project Ben Bike
Bikes for a better life: simple words that describe the simple yet impressive community program, BEN Namibia.
Burning Mountains: Mountain Biking in Namibia
Mountain Biking Extreme: Follow the Vertriders on their unconventional trails through Namibia, a wide open land of extreme harshness and surreal rocks…
Popular Pictures
The Story
OK, it’s the most famous glacier in the world. You can’t expect solitude here; every fifteen minutes a busload of tourists is released in the direction of the viewing platforms. And yet the sight of the Perito Moreno Glacier in Patagonia with its 4-km wide and 60 m high escarpment has something touching, something incomprehensible about it. It is a natural spectacle that takes your breath away and that instinctively describes the relationship between man and nature. Humility and tranquil joy of existence seizes every viewer.
The Photographer
Ralf Gantzhorn was born in 1964, holds a M.S. in Geology – and has even worked as a geologist (as an independent consultant in the contamination sector). He has been climbing since 1983 and working as a photographer since 1985. As a northern German, he is always torn between the far too distant mountains and the fresh sea air, but he’s found a compromise in Scandinavia, Scotland and Patagonia (where he has now spent over three years). He enjoys organizing trips in areas where unfamiliar vistas – which haven’t already been photographed 1000 times – lure from every corner. He often experiences his images as far too static, but then is pleased with the abundance of triangles in the structure and the fantastic light.
Wallpaper Download
The Story
The picture was taken on the summit of Marmolada after an ascent of the Vinatzer/Messner on the south wall. We didn’t reach the summit until 10:00 p.m. so we bivouacke (planned) there. We woke up to this riot of color …
The Photographer
Ralf Gantzhorn was born in 1964, holds a M.S. in Geology – and has even worked as a geologist (as an independent consultant in the contamination sector). He has been climbing since 1983 and working as a photographer since 1985. As a northern German, he is always torn between the far too distant mountains and the fresh sea air, but he’s found a compromise in Scandinavia, Scotland and Patagonia (where he has now spent over three years). He enjoys organizing trips in areas where unfamiliar vistas – which haven’t already been photographed 1000 times – lure from every corner. He often experiences his images as far too static, but then is pleased with the abundance of triangles in the structure and the fantastic light.