Winter, for several reasons. Food is scarce and the snow gets deep, pushing the lynx to venture down to the more accessible foothills of the Carpathians to root out prey. January to April is also mating season, peaking in March, so lynx are out and about looking for prospective partners. Eurasian lynx mating calls are pretty distinctive, too, haunting the valleys with rumbling growls and miaows.
The snow doubles as a mouldable canvas. Paw prints, prey drag marks and even the lynx themselves show up on snow like they’ve been put under a black light.
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From a photographer’s point of view, it’s worth braving the Romanian winter just to see the lynx in the heavy fur coats that they shed later in the year. While each lynx has a uniquely patterned coat (including some without a pattern at all), they all turn reddish in the summer to camouflage in with the rocky forests of the Carpathian Mountains.