You'll probably know what mammalwatching means - yes, it's watching and listening the wild mammals i.e mammalwatching. But remote mammalwatching?
Well, in remote mammalwatching you don't need binoculars, thermal monocular nor camera, but you must have internet connection and TV to watch mammals.So, I'm trying to see and identify mammals in live TV broadcasts and through online live webcams. I will not pay any attention to recordings or movies, all the mammals must be out there somewhere right at the same moment when I see them. I'm also trying to capture photos of all the mammals, whenever it's possible.
At this moment this is just an experiment - I'm just curious on how many mammals species I can see and identify via cables!
The first one is the Mountain Hare (Lepus timidus), in Nuuksio National Park, southern Finland, today, on 4th of February 2026.
Here's the link to webcam: Nuuksio Forest - Wild Animals Live cam
This species is distributed from Fennoscandia to eastern Siberia; in addition, isolated mountain populations occur in the Alps, Scotland, the Baltics, northeastern Poland, and HokkaidÅ. In Ireland, the Irish Hare (L. t. hibernicus) lives on lowland pastures, coastal grasslands, and salt marshes, not just in the mountains. The mountain hare has also been introduced to Iceland, Shetland, Orkney, the Isle of Man, the Peak District, Svalbard, the Kerguelen Islands, the Crozet Islands, and the Faroe Islands. In the Alps, the mountain hare lives at elevations from 700 to 3,800 m (2,300 to 12,500 ft), depending on geographic region and season.

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