New book explores the rugged adaptability of Sable Island, N.S.’s wild horses
HALIFAX — Damian Lidgard has spent 30 years studying and photographing wildlife on Nova Scotia’s Sable Island, and hopes his forthcoming book will give people an appreciation for the beauty and hardiness of the wild horses that have thrived on the remote and inhospitable spit of land for centuries.
The photographer and zoologist with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans says he made his first trip to the isolated, crescent-shaped sandbar — about 40 kilometres long and one kilometre across at its widest point — while working on his PhD in December 1996. Since then, his research on its roughly 20,000-strong seal population has brought him back several times each year, almost without interruption.
While his work with seals is the main reason for his visits, he’s amassed a collection of photos of the island’s most famous residents he’s sharing in his new book “Sable Untamed: The Wild Beauty of Sable Island’s Horses”, coming from Nimbus Publishing in June.
“I also just developed a bit of an awe, like an appreciation of how well these horses have adapted to this island,” Lidgard said in a recent interview. “I just felt like I wanted to also be able to share that with people. It’s really inviting people in to be able to see this animal that has been able to adapt to this really hostile environment.”


