Showing posts with label wildlife video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wildlife video. Show all posts

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Cute Squirrel at a Bird Feeder in Finland | Winter Wildlife Video


A cute squirrel visits a bird feeder in a tree during the Finnish winter. This peaceful wildlife video captures a small everyday moment in Finland’s winter nature. Select the image to play the video on YouTube.

Cute Squirrel at a Bird Feeder in Finland | Winter Wildlife Video

A cute squirrel visits a bird feeder in a tree during the Finnish winter. This peaceful wildlife video captures a small everyday moment in Finland’s winter nature: snow, quiet surroundings, and a hungry squirrel taking advantage of an easy meal.

In Finland, the familiar squirrel is the Eurasian red squirrel, Sciurus vulgaris. It is known in Finnish as orava and in Swedish as ekorre. During winter, Finnish squirrels often look different from their summer appearance: their coat becomes greyer, and the ear tufts are more visible in the cold season.

How Squirrels Survive the Finnish Winter

Squirrels do not hibernate through the winter. Instead, they remain active and search for food whenever the weather allows. In bad storms or strong winds, they may stay in their nests and rest, but they still need food during the cold months.

Food is one of the biggest challenges of winter. Squirrels store food in autumn and use those hidden supplies later. In Finland, squirrels may store nuts and acorns in the ground, dig through snow to reach their caches, and place fungi in tree branches or crevices. When cone crops are poor, they may also eat spruce buds.

Bird feeders can become attractive places for squirrels in winter. Research on red squirrels in Finland found that squirrel abundance increased with the number of winter feeding sites, and urban areas can be important habitats for the species.

A Small Winter Visitor

This video shows the squirrel as a clever and agile winter visitor. Bird feeders are designed for birds, but squirrels are opportunistic feeders and often learn quickly where food is available. Their climbing skills, balance, and quick movements make them entertaining animals to watch, especially in snowy garden or forest-edge settings.

The scene is simple, but that is part of its charm. Finnish winter nature is often quiet and minimal, and a squirrel at a feeder brings movement and life into the landscape.

Filming Wildlife in Snow

Wildlife videos in winter can be difficult to expose correctly because snow reflects a lot of light. This squirrel video is slightly overexposed, which is common when filming pale snow and bright backgrounds. The easiest way to avoid this is to lower the camera’s exposure before recording.

A practical setting is to use exposure compensation, for example around -0.3 to -1.0 EV, depending on the brightness of the snow. If the camera allows manual control, use a low ISO, check the highlights, and lock the exposure before the animal enters the frame. A histogram or zebra warning is also useful, because it shows when the white snow is losing detail.

For wildlife filming, it is usually better to prepare the exposure first and then wait calmly. Sudden movement can scare animals away, but a steady camera, correct exposure, and patience can turn a short garden visit into a memorable nature video.