Studio Fox

Studio Fox – Pausing to perhaps contemplate a recent meal or the next one on a wet morning in late fall, this fox and I encountered each other at the boat landing where an assortment of fuel drums, an abandoned truck and other objects made for a interesting background. Shooting with a long lens and a wide-open aperture helped create this bokehed background. Chignik River, November 27, 2017

Post Office Pinks

Pink Salmon Spawning, Post Office Creek – Locals call the pretty little stream bisecting Chignik Lake village The Crick. We thought it deserved a more honored sobriquet, and so since it cuts through a culvert and passes beneath the road near what used to be the post office, we called it post office creek. It is populated with char and sculpins and very occasionally salmon spawn there. September 19, 2017

Sharp-shinned Predator

Photograph of a juvenile Sharp-shinned Hawk perched in a Sitka Spruce at Chignik Lake. This species is rare on the Alaska Peninsula.
Sharp-shinned Hawk, Sitka Spruce Grove, Chignik Lake, October 23, 2017
Rare visitors to the Alaska Peninsula, Narver did not document Sharp-shinned in his Chignik study of the early 1960’s, so this is perhaps the first documentation of the species in the Chignik River drainage. The specimen in this photograph arrived with passerines migrating south, was seen off and on for a couple of weeks, and then left. The mottled leaf-like pattern on the chest indicates a juvenile. Adults chests are more evenly ruddy.

Autumn Sign

Male Oregon Junco among Sitka Spruce Cones – Small flocks of Oregon Race Juncos, which had not previously been reported on the Alaska Peninsula, along with Slate-colored Juncos – only occasionally or rarely encountered on the peninsula, became regular fall through spring visitors during our years at The Lake. The mystery is, where were these birds coming from? Slate-coloreds nest in taiga forests two or three hundred miles northeast at the peninsula’s hip and beyond, but the Oregon’s closest summertime breeding grounds are unknown and would seem to be much further south. Juncos were not recorded during David Narver’s studies in the early 1960’s. It will be fascinating to monitor these population trends into the future… there is always more to discover. October 14, 2017

Frost in March Sunshine

Frost in March Sunshine – One of our all-time favorite foxes, Frost often slept on the sunny bank just below our home at The Lake. March 26, 2017

Little One

Little One The waters of the Alaskan Gulf near Chignik Bay provide an important nursery for Sea Otters and their pups. Rich with schools of herring, sand lance, migrating salmon and other fish, these waters on the southeast side of the Alaska Peninsula are also home to Harbor Seals, migrating Orcas and whales, and vast numbers of seabirds.

Spring Angels

Spring Angels
Returning Tundra Swans, flying above the Chignik River – Chignik Lake, March 17, 2017

At first it seemed counterintuitive to process this picture captured on a blue sky spring afternoon as a monochrome image, but I like the moodiness. I don’t know… what do you think?

Superb Owl Sunday!

Boreal OwlDenali National Park, June 6, 2017

I’ve gone around knocking on hollow trees most of my adult life, hoping a flying squirrel or owl would pop it’s head out. And then one day, it happened!

Harbor Seals on Lake Ice

Harbor Seals on Lake Ice
Chignik Lake, Alaska, February 3, 2017

Various sources report that in the Northern Hemisphere, there are only five populations of strictly freshwater seals. These rarities are found in Lake Baikal and Lake Lagoda in Russia, Lake Saimaa in Finland, and Lac de Loups in Canada. Alaska’s Lake Iliamna also has a population of purely lacustrine seals.

Although the Harbor Seals of Chignik Lake have access to the ocean and travel into the salt water environment of the Alaska Gulf, they are commonly encountered in any month in the freshwater portions of the Chignik Drainage. Occasionally hunted for their oil by locals, harassed for their habit of poaching salmon from fishing nets and, particularly when hauled out like this ever wary of dogs and wolves, the Chignik’s seals tend to be rather shy. However, I’ve counted as many as a dozen hauled out on lake ice, and throughout the open water season on any given day you’re likely to see a seal or three cautiously pop their heads above water for a look around. In another photo in this series, there were nine seals. The light was a better in this shot, where eight are present. That’s a Common Goldeneye duck swimming in open water just in front of the arabesquing seal.

Almost: Red Fox & Goldeneye, Chignik Lake

Almost The Red Fox we called Skit chasing a Goldeneye Duck on Chignik Lake, Alaska, February 3, 2017

Slow work, going through the thousands of photographs we took in our years at Chignik Lake. But the late summer and fall of 2016 are “in the can,” and today I begin the February 2017 files. I honestly don’t know what I’ll find. So, we hope you’ll keep watching this space! Thanks!