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- 20. February 2026
Hand on heart: who voluntarily lies flat in the forest mud during the day at three degrees and drizzling rain? While the world waits for the first cherry blossoms for the perfect Instagram selfie, I prefer to lie where it is brown, damp, and—well—quite uncomfortable. But right here, under the moldy leaves and in the inconspicuous ponds, the most exciting drama of early spring is currently unfolding.
Julius Kramer
Wildlife Photographer & Conservationist
Hand on heart: who voluntarily lies flat in the forest mud during the day at three degrees and drizzling rain? While the world waits for the first cherry blossoms for the perfect Instagram selfie, I prefer to lie where it is brown, damp, and—well—quite uncomfortable. But right here, under the moldy leaves and in the inconspicuous ponds, the most exciting drama of early spring is currently unfolding.
The amphibian migration in March is not a fair-weather event. It is a logistical masterpiece of nature, which I documented this year in honest, cold daylight. Let's forget the glossy nature documentaries; this is about the "Messy Aesthetics" of real life.

When I crouch on the shore like this, barely feeling my fingers from the cold and staring at the water's surface, I encounter my three main characters. Each has a mind of their own:
| Species | "My" Nickname | Starting Temperature (Rain) | Special Feature |
| Common Frog | The Cold-Resistant One | from 4°C | "Snow frog," migrates early |
| Common Toad | The Mass Wanderer | from 6°C | Incredible site fidelity & endurance |
| Moor Frog | The Blue-Blooded One | from 10°C | Short-term blue coloration of the males |
We are living in the year 2026. AI images are everywhere—smooth, perfect, and more sterile than an operating room. My antidote? Dirt. The "Messy Aesthetics" trend celebrates the unvarnished.
When I take a photo of a common toad with a mud-smeared back crawling through brown, dead leaves, I am telling a story of resilience. I want to see the raw textures, the moist sheen of the skin in the harsh, cold daylight, and the disorder of the forest floor. This "visual honesty" moves people today more than any perfectly lit studio portrait.
The challenge with daytime shots in March is often the flat, cold light under a cloud-covered sky. But that is exactly my studio.
Instead of isolating the animals with a 100–200mm telephoto lens, I am increasingly reaching for a wide-angle macro (e.g., 15mm or 24mm). This allows me to have the frog large in the foreground while simultaneously including the bare, cold forest and the gray sky. This gives the image a "sense of place"—the viewer doesn't just see an animal, they feel the coldness of the habitat.

Wet skin reflects. Always. Even under cloudy skies, there are unsightly white spots on the subject. My trick: a large-scale diffuser, which I also use during the day to make the ambient light even softer.
One thing is important to me: just because I'm lying in the mud for a photo doesn't mean the animal has to suffer. Amphibians are ectothermic; at these temperatures, every flight response is a massive loss of energy.
For me, spring doesn't begin with the first warm breeze, but with the first muddy knee. Documenting these hidden species requires patience and a willingness to get dirty. But when you capture that one moment—that blue moor frog against the cold March sky or the stoic common toad on its millennia-old path—then you know: the real magic of nature doesn't need filters. It just needs someone who looks closely.

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