It must have been one of the better days in the u.s. photographer Scott Stulbergs career, when he came home with a magical photo shoot of 12 of wild, galloping horses of the Camargue.

He has also described the experience as magical, which you can easily understand when one looks at the result, which is so great that one could confuse the images with the maleier.

the Pictures were taken shortly before sunset near a lake in the French town of Sainte Marie de La Mer, near Montpellier in France.

the Camargue Natural Park, where the horses live in the south of France, consists primarily of wetlands, lakes and swamps.

A large part of the area is also a part of the Unesco biosphere reserve.

The white horse live partially under wild conditions, in marshland, in the region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d’azur.

the Camargue breed was officially recognized in 1978, but has reportedly been in existence for many thousands of years.