Tromsø, Norway. Irregular tweets on nature, photography, kayaking, environment, marinelitter, cleanups. Helped w this years ago: youtu.be/xzklQprO59g

Joined February 2009
787 Photos and videos
Bo Eide retweeted
2 Aug 2025
Tall but Shy. Before Columbus. Before the Inuit. There were the Dorset. They left no cities. No words. Only silence and ivory carvings of bears so still, they feel alive. And then, they disappeared.🧵
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Bo Eide retweeted
A GPS-tracked capsule launched in the Barents Sea drifted all the way to a remote beach in Porsangerfjorden 🇳🇴, showing how far marine litter can travel with ocean currents. Learn more about @PAME_Arctic Plastic in a Bottle project 🌊👇 🔗 pame.is/ourwork/arctic-marin…
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Bo Eide retweeted
Fifth and final pass through Hurricane Melissa for our crew today. Just after noon entering from the NW corner exiting SE.
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Bo Eide retweeted
1 Oct 2025
sunset in the stratosphere seen from a 250g weather sensor gliding back home from 30'000m altitude. The Meteoglider is making radiosondes reusable
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21 Sep 2025
My own little disappearing icefield study. I have followed this small glacier on Kvaløya since 2009, and warmer summers lately seem to have an impact. Pictures below are from sept 13. 2022 and same date 2025. Gone in 2037?
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Bo Eide retweeted
The Northern Pacific Ocean is currently smashing temperature records. And it is reaching these levels far earlier than the current generation of climate models had expected. A short thread 🧵
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Bo Eide retweeted
It's bizarre (or maybe it's not) that no one talks about this but the rate of change of current global warming...averaging 0.2-0.25 C/decade...is greatly outpacing the ability of vertebrate lifeforms to keep up. Even if you accept the IPCC's (likely) conservative projections on the global temperature rise, we're basically talking a 3-4 C rise in temperature relative to pre-industrial, much of which will have occurred since the 1970s. A compression of change normally (in the ice age cycles) over thousands of years into 130-150 years. I hear climate scientists say we're returning to these certain ancient climates from hundreds of thousands to millions of years ago. This is true. But, to do so over the course of just century or less is truly cataclysmic for complex biological organisms. So, when I've, in the past, also heard some say, "well 4 C isn't as bad as 6 C", I scoff because, well 4 C just as a global temperature anomaly threshold is still by itself a hell world for current life adapted to interglacial conditions. But, the pace we're taking to get there...is like taking life to the butcher house. It's too damn fast. And humans are mammalian lifeforms who need other life to survive like any other mammal. We just can't move our agriculture to different soils on a dime. Extinction rates are already accelerating because of other environmental issues (deforestation, for example). Rising by 4 C over 4,000 years would lead to extinctions. 4 C in 130 years? Or less? Life is resilient, but the more complex it is, the more it depends on other life to survive. The fact that the pace of change and the effect on biology and ecology are never discussed is like a glaring hole in the climate conversations. People (and I'm guilty of this as well) post these graphs (see below) showing the monstrous spike in global average temperatures relative to tens of thousands of years of history, but the biological/ecological implications of that are just not thought about. We cannot ignore it though. The assumption that things will remain all hunky-dory (basically, we just have more weather disasters, but nature and us will be somehow fine as far as food, water, etc.) is absurd. But to have such a discussion would be a realization that maybe we've lost control of the situation more than we wish to realize. Civilization is a fragile structure. Take away food (because of depleted agricultural production and the ecosystem processes ag depends on) and the whole deck of cards collapses. Ag was the whole reason civilization developed. And that's just climate...set aside rapid topsoil losses globally, the rise in dead zones in the ocean, and the conquest of greater amounts of land (and deforestation) for agriculture and urbanization. I've tried in recent years to remain somewhat optimistic about the future based on the fact that, well...I'm a scientist not a crystal ball. There's a lot of uncertainties in our understanding of things. But, seeing what's happening with climate over the past couple of years and especially this year, I realize the uncertainties seem to revolve more about timelines than the path itself. The path is ugly. And the result is the same whether it be 2030 or 2070. It's in a blink of an eye as far as Earth is concerned. We need a miracle at this point and I'm not sure what that would be. Sorry, the doom is hitting me hard this week, but I know what I know and what I see. Via Nick Humphrey Metrologist
Their "planning" reminds me of this
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15 Aug 2025
Dette må være noe for dere, @Meteorologisk . Vi finner alt for mange værsonder i fjæra.
15 Aug 2025
600'000 radiosondes ($100M) are lost in nature each year after being used for only 2h. The Meteoglider returns to home after each flight to be reused.. it has been tested by national weather services in Switzerland, France, Spain and Denmark. @NOAA it's your turn!
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Bo Eide retweeted
Today: Breakthrough for high quality marine protection in Norway! The government introduce three big zero-fishing zones. First time the use this tool. Placed in the Oslo fjord, where the cod stocks and ecosystem are near collapse due to overfishing and pollution. #oceanoptimism
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Bo Eide retweeted
27 Jul 2025
Replying to @SteelySeabirder
Kayaking w loads of puffins and auks outside Tromsø. Can't get much better than that.
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26 Jul 2025
RT @SylviaEarle: I wish people could understand that the ocean is not just a massive amount of salt water, but rather it's a living system.…
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Bo Eide retweeted
18 Jul 2025
Why is the Arctic emerging as a key region for understanding climate change?
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26 Jun 2025
Det er bare å gjenta det jeg sa for 4 år siden. Fisk og spis pukkellaks nå. Den er god mat.
22 Jun 2021
For mage og miljø, fisk #pukkellaks nå. Det er mye rundt #Tromsø nå. Den smaker fortreffelig fersk, og er innført og uønsket, da den fortrenger vår hjemlige #villaks. Samme historien med mange #fremmedarter, det der. Den biter villig, men ha med håv, for den er løs i kjeften.
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Bo Eide retweeted
Your 'moment of kakistocracy' for today: “The entire content production staff at climate.gov (including me) were let go from our government contract on 31 May ... We were told that our positions within the contract were being eliminated.” theguardian.com/us-news/2025…
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Bo Eide retweeted
Just a reminder that no matter how you slice it, no matter which proxies you decide are relevant or irrelevant, Earth has warmed so quickly over the last 50 years that the "Hockey Stick" shows up on every temperature reconstruction (even the ones produced by skeptics).
LMAO. McIntyre and McKitrick refuted global warming by claiming temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere in the 15th Century were 0.2°C warmer than 1980. Northern Hemisphere surface temps LAST YEAR were 1.3°C warmer than 1980. Even McIntyre & McKitrick's data shows a hockey stick.
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Bo Eide retweeted
What happens in the Arctic doesn't stay in the Arctic. It affects us all. The Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP) has released their Summary Arctic Climate Change Update. Read it: amap.no/documents/doc/arctic… Nobody can later say they weren't warned, again and again.
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Bo Eide retweeted
På verdensbasis har 70 prosent av sjøfuglene blitt borte siden 1950. 80 prosent av alle norske sjøfugler har forsvunnet siden 1980. @Naturvern @SABIMAnorge @WWFNorge aftenbladet.no/meninger/deba…
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Bo Eide retweeted
The Norwegian Polar Institute created excellent physical maps of both poles, including a 3x3 ft. 1:10m-scale arctic map showing bathymetry, glaciers, cities, land cover, sea ice extent, and ocean currents (load in 4k)
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