EcoSENSES delivered a full multi-sensory research programme using sensory ethnographic data collection techniques in Arctic Norway. Methods included participant sensation (joining swims), “wet” in situ interviews during immersion, dry interview follow ups, and elicitation in interviews using photos and video, and documenting of immersion fieldwork using social media posts. Data was analysed through grounded theory models to link themes of sensation, culture, stewardship, and wellbeing.
Key achievements:
• Baseline synthesis of friluftsliv and wellbeing from policy documents, literature, interviews, and a year of ethnographic data collection.
• Model of the outdoor swimming sensorium, mapping cues and skills for safe, respectful practice—reading currents, feeling bodily limits, noticing ecological signs.
• Insights on place and stewardship, showing how attachment to coves, shorelines, and beaches translates into clean ups and care.
• Robust governance with a Data Management Plan and ethics approval; co created multisensory artefacts treated as research data.
Outcomes: A theoretical model of relational wellbeing now underpins several outputs: an accepted journal article, an encyclopaedia entry, a book chapter on urban river swimming, and a forthcoming article on sustainability practices. A curated dataset (closed due to confidentiality concerns) supports future publications.