After becoming fed up with city life, this couple moved to the world's most northern town and now live among 110 dogs.
Audun Salte and his wife Mia, live in Longyearbyen, in the Arctic, which is believed to be warming faster than any other town on Earth.
Two years ago, they bought a dog yard in a bid to improve the health of all the dogs and now they run husky tours for visitors.
Speaking to the BBC in a video produced by Daniel South and Trystan Young for Newshour, Audun said: "A life with dogs is just better.


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"You have these four-legged friends that are happy to see you whenever you come and they just improve your life a little bit.
"Now I have 110 children, before we knew it we owned too many dogs.
"I tried to live in a city once. I used to be very annoyed at people all the time. You were annoyed when you were in the car, you were annoyed when you were in a shop, you were annoyed on everyone else and you thought you were always fine.
"And with the dogs, have you ever seen a dog that's annoyed at someone else? No, they usually bark at someone and then they're over with it.


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"They don't sit and think about people being annoying. They just seem to enjoy life so much better than we do."
Longyearbyen is a small coal-ming town in Norway's Svalbard archipelago and it is known for it's views of the Northern Lights.
Audun wants to limit the number of tourists visiting the area.


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"The arctic has kind of become that place that people want to experience before it disappears instead of laying on a beach and just being in a lazy place," he continued.
"For some reason in the world it seems to be a natural way of thought that every business should double their income every single year. It's even in the deadly sins, greed.
"It's like a basic thought pattern that you shouldn't do this but still everyone thinks it's natural that a business should do it to be able to survive and I think as long as I can feed my dogs, as long as I can feed myself and live in a house, I'm fine."