New book explores the rugged adaptability of Sable Island, N.S.’s wild horses
HALIFAX — A Nova Scotian zoologist and photographer says he hopes his upcoming book on Sable Island’s wild horses will help people appreciate the rugged beauty and adaptability of the isolated animals.
Damian Lidgard has been travelling to Sable — a 42-kilometre-long sandbar about 290 kilometres southeast of Halifax — to research its seal population for about 30 years.
During his work, he’s amassed a large collection of images of the remote island’s wild horses, which have lived there since the 1700s.
Lidgard says he’s developed an appreciation for how the animals have adapted to life on the island, which is surrounded by more than 300 shipwrecks.