Seward Summers: Red Bear, Texture, Last Summer

Black Bears can vary quite a lot in color. This older male is showing dark auburn. Maybe his last summer… Alaska, 7/3/13

Seward Summers: Springtime Girl

Young Cow Moose somewhere not far from Seward, May 23, 2013

Seward Summers: Bubble-net Feeding Humpback Whales

Humpback Whales corralling herring in a net of bubbles and then pushing the small fish to the surface for easy feeding. Gull much obliged. Gulf of Alaska, 6/22/12

Moose roast and root vegetables in a bath of mushroom broth, red wine, cream and fresh herbs slow-cooking in the oven, pumpkin cheese cake setting. Lots to be grateful for on this Thanksgiving Day… and every day. Barbra and I hope all is well in your world.

Seward Summers: Sea Shower

Humpback Whale descending on a deep dive, Gulf of Alaska, 7/22/12

Seward Summers: Copper River Dipnetting

Barbra waiting for Sockeye Salmon to hit her net on the mighty Copper River near Chitina, June 22, 2012.

Iconic Alaska. Hike in along a canyon trail, then down a steep, more narrow trail to water’s edge. The river’s chalky, clay-colored glacial till reveals nothing. But the fish are there. Upwards of a million Sockeyes will ascend the Copper, and that’s after the commercial fishing fleet has taken a similar number from the sea near the river’s mouth. Armed with a net on a big hoop attached to a 15-foot pole, you find a fishable perch along the canyon wall and ease the net into an eddy. If you’ve timed it right, huge schools of fish are passing in front of you within feet of the shoreline. It doesn’t take long till you feel the morning’s first solid thump as a Red hits the net. If you’ve got the patience and don’t pull in right away, you might feel another thump, and then another – three fish in one scoop. And you feel a connection with people who have been fishing for salmon this way for thousands of years… grateful that there’s a place where it can still be done, not another person in sight except for the companion you’ve hiked in with. You get the feeling this isn’t going to last… which makes you appreciate it all the more. Iconic Alaska.