Spain has over 500 hides for wildlife photography
An inventory carried out within the framework of the Untamed Spain project confirms the importance of nature photography tourism in our country.
An inventory carried out within the framework of the Untamed Spain project confirms the importance of nature photography tourism in our country.
Untamed Spain was presented at the Delta Birding Festival with great reception, sharing key data on the evolution of nature tourism in Spain, the challenges of accessibility, and the growing role of women in photography. An event that confirms the brand as a benchmark in sustainable and creative tourism.
We have adapted our hides with clean energy, real accessibility, and inclusive measures that make a difference. Because enjoying wildlife should have no barriers.
A roadmap shared by companies in the sector to reduce impacts, facilitate responsible access to natural resources, and promote good practices in nature photography and painting.
In recent years, the word “sustainable” has become an omnipresent term. We see it on packaging, in advertising campaigns, in tourist destinations that overnight call themselves “eco.” But when everything is sustainable, what truly is? In tourism, talking about sustainability means much more than hanging a green label or planting a couple of trees as symbolic compensation.
In a world where immediacy rules and screens set our pace, pausing to observe has almost become an act of resistance. We move from one image to another in a matter of seconds, scroll without hardly remembering what we saw a minute ago, and rarely let our attention truly rest on something. Looking is quick, superficial, almost automatic.
Spain is one of the most diverse countries in Europe in terms of landscapes, wildlife, and culture, yet we often overlook that richness. We become so accustomed to living surrounded by mountains, forests, seas, and plains that we forget how exceptional they are. While we search for the exotic in faraway journeys, right here we find unique species, traditions rooted in the land, and natural settings that seem straight out of another planet.
El primer Salvaje Fest ha dejado huella en Lleida. Más de 400 personas llenaron el teatro y los talleres durante