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The lush canopy of the Kibale rainforest in Uganda
A Day in the Life

A day in the life,
out in the wild

A field day is the rare one. This is where the people who give their lives to protecting nature, the photographers, rangers, researchers and volunteers alike, hand you a whole day of it, from the dark hour before sunrise to the quiet of the long way home.

Step into the day
About the series

One whole day, in their own words

People often picture this work as one long expedition into the wild. The truth is quieter and more varied. The photographers, rangers, researchers and volunteers who protect nature spend most of their days observing, recording, planning and sharing the work so it reaches the rest of us, which is exactly what makes a full day given to it feel so precious.

A Day in the Life is our standing invitation to the people doing this work, in whatever way they have chosen to do it: take us with you, from first light to the last task of the night. Each edition below is one real day in someone's own words and images, shared firsthand, in the order it happened.

Choose a storyteller to walk their day.

A day for the wild with

Karen González Videla

Chimpanzee Trekking in Uganda

Wildlife photographerKibale Rainforest, Uganda

Field days are the rare ones, and that is exactly what makes them feel precious. Karen walks us through a single morning tracking chimpanzees in the lush Kibale rainforest, from the dark hour before sunrise to the moment the gear is packed away.

See Karen’s work on Untold Stories

01/13

About me

About me

I am Karen, a wildlife photographer based in Florida, and I travel the world to document animals and the people working to protect them. Not every day is spent in the field. Many are spent editing, planning, answering emails and sharing the work. So when a field day comes around, it feels like something special. Let me give you a glimpse of what one of those days is like.

Step 1

Before sunrise

The day begins in Uganda, where I have come to photograph chimpanzees. I wake at around six in the morning, while the rainforest is still cool and quiet.

Step 2

Into Kibale

After breakfast and a briefing from the team, we drive through the lush Kibale rainforest. The excitement builds with every mile as the forest closes in around us.

Step 3

On foot with the trackers

We reach the starting point and step into the rainforest on foot. Trained rangers and trackers move ahead of us, reading the forest for signs of the family we hope to find.

Step 4

A family is found

Word comes back that a chimpanzee family has been located. Before we go any closer, we put on protective equipment and a face mask, so there is no risk of passing on any illness to the chimps.

Step 5

The first sighting

We spot the family through the trees. The slow, careful approach is my favourite moment of the whole day, the quiet seconds before everything comes to life.

Step 6

Time to photograph

Now the work I came for begins. Camera up, breath steady, I start to make pictures.

Step 7

One hour together

We are given one hour with the family. I watch and photograph as gently as I can, careful never to cause them any stress. They go about their lives as if we were not there.

Step 8

The walk back

When the hour is over we make our way back through the forest. At the end of the trek we receive our chimpanzee trekking certificates, a small marker of a morning I will not forget.

Step 9

Back at the lodge

We return to the lodge, which looks out over the Kibale rainforest. After hours in the forest, sitting with that view is its own kind of reward.

Step 10

Dinner and dessert

The evening brings a warm dinner and, just as importantly, dessert. It is a chance to rest and talk through everything the day held.

Step 11

Backing up the day

Once it is dark, I transfer the day's photographs from my memory cards to a hard drive. Protecting the images is as much a part of the job as taking them.

Step 12

Ready to begin again

Finally I prepare my gear for the next day and get some sleep. Tomorrow I will wake early and head back out to do it all again.

More days, more storytellers

We are always looking for the next field day to share. If you photograph or film wildlife and would let us walk a morning beside you, we would love to hear from you.

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