Tundra Swans at Black Lake

Wintertime photograph of snow covered mountains
Tundra Swans at Black Lake – The jagged Aleutian Mountains loom in the background over this bay on remote Black Lake on the Alaska Peninsula. A flock of approximately six dozen Tundra Swans rests on ice in the foreground. Not readily discernible in this photo, a few ducks, mostly Mallards, are milling about in the open water near the ice. This broad, shallow, weedy lake at the headwaters of the Chignik River Drainage provides waterfowl habitat as well as an important nursery for salmon that spawn in various tributaries. The most practical way to access the remote waters of Black Lake is by skiff – about 17 winding miles from the village of Chignik Lake up Chignik Lake and then up Black River. January 3, 2018

Lake Sunrise

Photograph of an October sunrise at Chignik Lake. With the sun coming up over the mountains at the lower end of the lake at this time of year, fall sunrises were often spectacular.
Sunrise
From our living and dining room windows, we would follow the position of the sun as it changed with each season. Autumn mornings, when the sun rises over the lower end of the lake, are often spectacular. Coho Salmon are still migrating up the lake and river at this time of year, and on still mornings such as this we would watch from our windows for wakes and bulges along the shoreline. Chignik Lake, 10/16/17

Chukchi Chess

Chukchi Chess – Colliding plates of ice as leads open and close create striking sculptures on the frozen Chukchi Sea near Point Hope, Alaska. 4/13/12

Autumn Shrike

Photograph of a Northern Shrike in flight as it settles onto a roost of autumn-brown Dwarf Birch.
Autumn Shrike – Northern Shrike burdock gone to rust and seed, Chignik Lake, 9/10/17
The brownish color of this shrike indicates a first-year bird. Mature adults are more gray, and the black eye mask is sharply defined and really pops. At The Lake, Northern Shrikes are typically arrive in late summer and remain common through fall with occasional specimens remaining into winter.

Friends Don’t Let Friends…

Friends Don’t Let Friends Eat Farmed Fish
Alaska is home to a number of iconic bumper stickers. It is my understanding that in former times, this Suburban served as Chignik Lake’s ambulance. That was awhile ago…

Otter Pile: Any otter’ll tell ya, it’s better when we get along

Otter PileChignik Lake, Alaska1/2/17

Red Foxes tussle, nip and bark at each other. A Brown Bear might literally rip the face off a rival in a dispute over fishing and mating rights. Even cute little Black-capped Chickadees and Redpolls sometimes aggressively gape at each other and might engage in a quick peck to establish pecking order.

I suppose there are times when River Otters squabble, but in years of observing them at the lake, we never saw anything more than a look of envy cast from one otter toward another. (The coveting occurred over an exceptionally toothsome flounder one lucky fellow came up with.) Mostly, otters are the social goofballs of the four-legged world – rolling in snow, piling atop each other, sliding over ice and snow on sleek bellies, crowding together four-heads-at-a-time popping up from a hole in the ice, chasing each other in jaunty little parades as they scoot up and down the waterway. Maybe it was the Chignik’s abundant supply of fish that allowed for such conviviality. Whatever the reason, it was our observation that these inquisitive, cheerful beings simply like each other. And we think there’s a lesson in that for the rest of us.

Salmon Hooks on Cobalt Blue

Bald Eagle in flight showing yellow beak and formidable talons against a cobalt blue sky.
Salmon Hooks on Cobalt Blue – Chignik Lake, Alaska, August 19, 2016

Back in the Day: Wooden Salmon Seiner, Chignik River (and a note on the perils of passing up photographs)

Back in the DaySalmon Seiner from the wooden boat era in the Chigniks
Chignik River, September 23, 2016

Concurrent with publishing this photo, I’m putting out a request on other social media asking my Chignik friends for more information on this vessel. I don’t know a lot about boats, but I’m fairly certain that this is a salmon seiner, perhaps built sometime in the 1940’s or 1950’s. It was aground, as you see here, about two miles up from the salt chuck when I noticed it tucked into the back of a wide river cove accessible only on high tides. The tide was out, the person whose skiff I was riding in was in a hurry to get down to Chignik Bay, so I settled for this passing shot. I always intended to go back and get additional photographs, but it never worked out. Years later, I saw what appeared to be the same vessel on a beach at Chignik Bay – perhaps towed there by someone who valued its history.

The lesson here, such as a lesson exists, is to be careful… mindful… about passing up shots – even if the composition is imperfect. No doubt every serious photography has in their memory banks a list of pictures that they passed on and later came to regret not getting. You arrive at a new locale, note a species of bird that is new to you, assume that they must be abundant there, pass on the shot and never see another bird like it. You keep telling yourself you’ll make a portrait of that special friend – and never create the right moment. Or you tell yourself that you’ll come back to make a photo of the stunning landscape before you. But way leads to way and you never return.

While no one can get every shot they’re presented with, some of the ones we pass on haunt us. They become very much like those big fish that got away, growing larger over time… until all those photos and fish meld into a single image of a monster of a Japanese Sea Bass emerging from the surf, shaking her massive head, and then dark tunnel vision as the white jig breaks free from her jaws and comes springing back through the air as your knees turn to rubber – that Sea Bass my own personal metaphor for In my life as a photographer: a rare Spotted Redshanks flitting around me as I cast flies to Chignik River Salmon, assuming the bird to be more common than it is; a Parasitic Jaeger stuffed so full of fish it could barely fly perched near me on shore the first time I hiked out to Tikigaq Point, again, making the assumption that this would be a regular occurrence I’d have other opportunities to capture; portraits of my friends and neighbors at The Lake… the “some other day” I was going to photograph them never arriving.

So, imperfect as this photograph is, I’m glad I got it when I had the opportunity. A boat like this will never again be seen on the Chignik.

I’ll update this post if I discover additional information.

The Alaskan Hotel & Bar, Cordova, Alaska

Christmas night photograph of the iconic Alaskan Hotel & Bar on Main Street, Cordova.
The Alaskan Hotel & BarOpened on September 16, 1913. Iconic Alaska. Main Street, Cordova, Alaska. December 25, 2023

Our Town: Cordova, Alaska, Christmas Night 2023

Christmas night nighttime photograph of Main Street in Cordova, Alaska depicting a quiet town with Christmas lights and the town Christmas Tree.
Our Town – Christmas Night, 2023. We went out last night, after the snowfall, before the breeze knocked the snow off of things, to make a few photographs of our town at night. This picture was made from about the middle of Main Street looking south. My objective was to make a photograph that evokes nostalgia for small-town America. I captured and created several images including some abstracts. I’ll show some of those in future posts.