North to Alaska!

Different Latitude. Different Attitude.

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Whenever we say we are going to Alaska we get the question. “Are you going on a cruise?” Well, no and yes. We’ve traveled Alaskan waters several ways.

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Day excursion ferry boats and tour boats…

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Landing craft and ocean fishing boats…

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By seaplane -

but only during takeoff and landing.

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And by ATV and wading boots -

at low tide.


— Katmai National Park and Preserve —


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Di wanted to see bears catching salmon in the river at Katmai. You can go by slow-boat or seaplane, so plane it was. (Safety first. Loaded firearms and bear spray are not permitted in the cabin.)

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Katmai National Park covers 6,400 square miles. We are a gnat in a football stadium - maybe smaller.

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We get off the plane and find that the bears own the park. We are just visiting.

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Mama bear and two cubs are not the sort of thing you find in the “parking lot” of most National Parks.

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After a safety orientation, we traverse some back trails to one of the elevated observation platforms. Bears don’t pay any attention to anything above ground level so we are essentially invisible.


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Each male bear has established his own fishing location by seniority and intimidation. A mother bear and her two cubs can be seen in the lower left corner. They will “eat and run” lest they be attacked.

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The bears have different fishing styles.

 
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Some poke around in shallow water.

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A few go diving!

The divers can find the largest salmon - those fish tend to put up a fight.


A few bears like to stand at the edge of the waterfall and wait for the fish to come to them. This poor fellow wouldn’t move over a few feet because he would be invading a senior bear’s reserved location.

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I think he was lamenting about the “ones that got away”.

The discussion is rather heated when there is a disagreement concerning fishing rights.

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The bears tend to be messy eaters but the gulls are happy to clean up the leftovers.


— Talkeetna, AK —


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Talkeetna is an interesting village to explore. Shops and stores feature goods, arts, and crafts produced only in Alaska.

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Although the village is small there is is a plethora of culinary choices - none of which is a “name brand”.

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Rusty or rustic -

either one is part of the charm.

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The old television series “Northern Exposure” was inspired by Talkeetna.

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— Denali National Park and Preserve —


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Automobile traffic in Denali National Park is limited to the first 17 miles of paved road. Travel to the interior lodges is restricted to bus transportation.

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And the remaining 80 miles is a “one lane” gravel road.

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The only traffic you see for the rest of the day is a returning bus or a gravel truck or grader maintaining the road.

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The drivers have a knack for calming the fears of white-knuckled passengers while simultaneously performing as master docents.

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They not only have to be qualified commercial drivers but they must also be fluent in history, geology, botany, ornithology, “are we there yet”…

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The vastness of the terrain is emphasized when you can do a “wide angle” landscape with a 100mm lens.

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It is an immense park of over 6 million acres.

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A bush pilot told me that you can’t predict the weather in Alaska - the weather starts in Alaska.

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When we finally reached our lodge, we caught our only glimpse of Mt. Denali in four days. At over 20,000 feet in altitude, it generates its own cloud cover 70% of the time.

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This is tundra. It is difficult to walk in because it is vegetation several feet thick. It never decomposes because the ground underneath is frozen.

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Our lodge group stopped for lunch on a hillside overlooking the valley. We could see for miles in all directions - probably into another time zone at our latitude. Across the valley were at least five canyons, each with its own weather system.

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Isolated from civilization, we experienced a new level of “quiet”. The silence was only broken by the calls of migrating cranes.

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A moose couple was having breakfast on a misty morning at Wonder Lake.

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A sign worth seeing in person.



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The folks in Alaska haven’t established many statues or monuments but the ones they have built are quite inspiring.

…THANKS FOR THE LOOK!

…THANKS FOR THE LOOK!