Rare but Regular Visitor from Eurasia: Tufted Duck

On the left, a female Greater Scaup. To her right, an Asian visitor, a female Tufted Duck. Male Tufteds look a lot like male Ring-necked ducks but with the eponymous tuft of head feathers. Although most frequently seen near North America’s coasts, you might encounter this wintertime Eurasian visitor almost anywhere among flocks of scaup and Ring-neckeds. Chignik Lake, 1/26/17

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.

The Fox We Called Skit

Photographic portrait of the Red Fox fox we named Skit. Chignik Lake, Alaska.
The Fox We Called SkitFoxes were attracted to the Spruce Grove where we had hung several bird feeders. The birds attracted them, no doubt, but they also ate seeds from the ground and probably caught a vole now and then. Skit was skittish and his right eye was bad. I was fortunate to get his left side in good light. Chignik Lake, 1/2/17

A Portrait of Kate

A Portrait of KateIn truth, I do not know whether the regal fox we called Kate was male or female. One winter evening while I was photographing birds at the Spruce Grove she came by, and for a moment presented herself in the most beautiful chiaroscuro lighting, the last evening light breaking through spruce boughs.

Frost Fox – of the Chignik Lake Foxes

FrostOur first year at The Lake, we got to know seven different Red Foxes well enough to name them. Each had different facial features and individual personalities. Here is Frost, named for her whitish face and brightness of the white parts of her coat and tail. It’s often difficult to distinguish sexes in foxes, especially during the winter season when their coats are full, but we referred to Frost as “she.” Of the seven foxes, she was the smallest, perhaps in her first year, and the most likely to bark at other foxes, or for attention from us. I made this portrait a little after sunset on December 31, 2016.

Happy 2024 to our Readers around the World!

Van Gogh and company at Cutterlight wish our readers a Happy New Year and all the Best in 2024!

If you’re reading this, you are among more than six thousands subscribers and countless additional readers who have popped in at one time or another over the years from virtually every country on the planet. We truly appreciate it! Thanks! Barbra and I wish you and yours all the best in 2024. Van Gogh? An old friend from Chignik Lake.
 - Jack & Barbra Donachy, Cordova, Alaska

Those Eyes: Young Stone Sheep Ram Along the Al-Can Highway

Check for Stone Sheep in mountainous areas along Alaska-Canada highway in Northern BC and Yukon Territory. The big rams sport impressive curling horns, but the young males, females and lambs are cool, too. Those eyes. July 12, 2012

First and Ten: Bison Along the Al-Can Highway

First and Ten – there are several places along the Alaska-Canada highway where Bison are likely to be encountered. Things can get heated! By the time this multi-bull fight was over, there were tufts of hair on the road and a wet patch of blood on one of the bull’s flanks.

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