Monday, July 21, 2014

Alaska: Homer and Wake In Fright

"Are you here? I'm the idiot in plaid rain boots in front."

I had my suspicions that was who Becca was- there were only two girls at the Homer Concert on the Lawn that seemed to fit her couchsurfing profile - but it was useful to get in text nonetheless. As my third host, Becca, didn't so much offer me a couch but a place to park my car (and sleep in) and seamless integration into her social life. In the days that follow, I'm John Grant's inverse. He finds himself held financially captive in Bundanyabba owing to 2up and falls in with drunks and yobbos in the ensuing days and weeks (Wake In Fright). His arrival at The Yabba is only for it to be a port to somewhere else. Likewise, Homer becomes my port of call on the way to Seward, its on-the-way nature owing only to the vagaries of couchsurfing hosts and their relative availability, not any sort of geographical convenience.

Our stories are of course divergent. Wake In Fright - even forty something years on - remains one of the best and most chilling representations of the Australian outback I've ever seen. It's confronting. The Yabba's inhabitants want to inhabit the screen as caricatures but for every moment that seems an Australian stereotype, somewhere or sometime, I've seen it in the Pilbara, Kimberley or Territory. Homer has these people too, but they inter no terror. Both places hold you captive but it doesn't take losing all my money and being in a perpetual state of inebriation (OK, the latter probably did happen) for me to find Homer as inescapable. After a day or two - firm friends already made - you welcome its embrace. Nothing is so much planned but characters drift into each other with a charming regularity as if it were scripted. Becca the seeming anchor to my days, Sarah's tales of tattoos, hunting and Wyoming, Joe's case for Superman to be taken more seriously as a hero over the course of two nights of heavy drinking, Kelsea with her easily won affection and a chorus of barflies who make cameo roles through the last gasp moments of evenings or carry the atmosphere of the world cup final, they become the fabric to my time in Homer.

I came for two days and stayed for five. Maybe it was Stockholm Syndrome.

Let's face it, Homer is not the most unappealing metaphorical jailor.



Sunday, July 20, 2014

Alaska: 130 miles with 100 songs I like right now - Denali Highway

Going somewhere? Let's go the wrong way!
There is no short route from Denali National Park to Homer. As the crow flies, it isn't terribly far but by virtue of various impassable things like mountains and Turnagain Arm, there is no real direct route. That said, I'm also not taking the shortest route there. Denali Highway is regarded as one of the better drives on offer on the planet and it only takes me 130 miles in the wrong direction. Being mostly gravel, progress is already somewhat inhibited but throw in a desire to pull over to take photos a lot, the countdown from 130 to 1 is slow going. For the most part, the potholes' bark is worse than their bite. This knowledge engenders less cautious avoidance over a period of time by which point I eventually misjudge one, plow heavily into it and start avoiding them like the plague again.

I'm not always a fast learner.

Sometime before departing Australia my frenemy Cam told me of a playlist he has on Spotify, "100 songs I like right now". Now, I don't really like his music very much so I elected to create my own. His rules are simple; one song by one artist. No double ups. My take on this goes one further; no skipping. Loosely adhered to is the suggestion of "not that band's biggest song" but it's kind of hard to sincerely suggest Pulp did anything of note other than "Common People".  It's a playlist that's in flux. Hearing Jimmy Barnes' cover of "The Weight" is not something I need to happen too often so it met the chopping block pretty quickly.

Pleasurable enough without a Jimmy Barnes cover.

The drive itself is brilliant. Travelling along strike of the Alaska Range there are perpetual mountain views. The foreground shifts from alpine forest to tundra, then lakes and rivers. It's scarcely populated, there are a pair of rest stops and a few lodges along the way but save for a peculiar and large hunting party, I crossed bumpers with no one. There's something truly bizarre about fifteen trucks covered in camouflage, manned by men in more camouflage and high powered rifles just... lying about. I suppose they were trying to hide their trucks from moose UAV flyovers or something. With all that effort concealing the sight of themselves, I'm surprised they didn't leave the diesel generators at home to match their inconspicuous sight with a more forest-like sound track but I'm altogether pretty new to the hunting malarkey.

Safe to say, our shooting interests are probably divergent.
At just the moment that I had destroyed my voice singing along to all two minutes of "Fucken Awesome" I realised a growing need for food - it was 8pm - and like some sort of black magic Maclaren Lodge (set in the footprint of Maclaren Glacier) appears. Salmon and beers ordered through a husky, broken voice, time seemed to freeze. It was just as light when I got back on the road - a bit before eleven - so driving continued unabated. This elongated twilight is good for getting miles under the belt or outrageously beautiful photographs - typically not both - so I didn't get too far before locating a gravel pit off the road on the Richardson Highway to sleep in for the night.

I'm a simple man.

A never ending sunset was well used.
For those interested in critiquing/viewing/sampling my taste in music for this exercise, read on.


Name Artist Album
Dream On Aerosmith Aerosmith's Greatest Hits
Poison Alice Cooper The Definitive Alice Cooper
She Keeps No Secrets The Angels
House Of The Rising Sun The Animals Forty Shots Of Rock
Roam The B-52's The B-52's
Bad Company Bad Company Bad Company
Good Vibrations The Beach Boys Sounds Of Summer
Spicks & Specks Bee Gees Their Greatest Hits: The Record
Rebel Yell Billy Idol Idol Songs: 11 of the Best
Love Burns Black Rebel Motorcycle Club B.R.M.C.
Harley & Rose The Black Sorrows Harley & Rose
Godzilla Blue Öyster Cult The Best of Blue Öyster Cult
Roll Me Away Bob Seger Greatest Hits
Streets Of Philadelphia Bruce Springsteen Greatest Hits (Bruce Springsteen)
I Will Survive Cake Fashion Nugget
Let's Go The Cars Complete Greatest Hits
Reptile The Church Starfish
I Fought the Law The Clash The Singles (Clash)
Bow River Cold Chisel Radio Songs
G.O.D. Coloured Balls Ball Power
White Room Cream Strange Brew - The Very Best of Cream
Who'll Stop The Rain Creedence Clearwater Revival Chronicle, Vol. 1
Boys Don't Cry The Cure Staring At The Sea: The Singles 1979-1985
Mistreated (Live) Deep Purple The Compact Disc Anthology (Disc Two) (Disc 1)
Pour Some Sugar On Me Def Leppard Best Of (Def Leppard)
Telegraph Road Dire Straits Love over Gold
Bare Necessities Disney Classic Disney, Vol. 2
Listen To The Music The Doobie Brothers Listen To The Music: The Very Best Of The Doobie Brothers
Light My Fire The Doors The Doors
Tales Of Brave Ulysses Eric Clapton Backtrackin' [Disc 1]
Sweet Dreams Eurythmics Eurythmics Greatest Hits
Weapon Of Choice (with Bootsy Collins) (Attack Hamster Edit) Fatboy Slim The Greatest Hits: Why Try Harder
Suspicious Minds Fine Young Cannibals 80's Best Of The Best
Dreams Fleetwood Mac Greatest Hits - Fleetwood Mac
Slow Ride Foghat Dazed And Confused
Come Fly With Me (Live) Frank Sinatra Live At The Sands (with Count Basie & The Orchestra)
Pasisienne Walkways (Live) Gary Moore The Best Air Guitar Album in the World... Ever! - Volume 2
Wayne Gretzky Goldfinger Open Your Eyes
Civil War Guns 'n' Roses The Best Of Gun's 'n' Roses
A Thousand Miles Away Hoodoo Gurus Ampology
Back in the Hole Hunters & Collectors Natural Selection [Bonus Tracks] Disc 1
Tucker's Daughter Ian Moss Matchbook
Mystify INXS The Years 1979-1997 Disc 1
Leaving Home Jebediah Triple J Hottest 100 Vol. 05
Little Wing Jimi Hendrix Live at Royal Albert Hall
I Love Rock and Roll Joan Jett I Love Rock N' Roll [Bonus Tracks]
Satch Boogie Joe Satriani Electric Joe Satriani: An Anthology
Love Will Tear Us Apart (Live) Joy Division The Complete BBC Recordings
Highway To The Danger Zone Kenny Loggins Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow: The Greatest Hits
God of Thunder Kiss Double Platinum
Babe I'm Gonna Leave You Led Zeppelin Led Zeppelin
Are You Gonna Go My Way Lenny Kravitz Greatest Hits
Roll On The Living End From Here On In
Free Bird Lynyrd Skynyrd Gold & Platinum (Disc 1)
Nothing Else Matters Metallica Black Album
Blue Sky Mine Midnight Oil 20,000 Watts R.S.L.: Greatest Hits
Knights Of Cydonia Muse H.A.A.R.P [Live]
Sunday Morning No Doubt Best of: No Doubt
Married With Children Oasis Definately Maybe
Sleeps Like A Curse The Panics Sleeps Like A Curse
All Fired Up Pat Benatar 16 Classic Performances
The Boy In The Bubble Paul Simon Graceland
Alive [Brendan O'Brien Remix] Pearl Jam Rearviewmirror: Greatest Hits 1991-2003 Disc 1
Another Day In Paradise Phil Collins ...Hits
Comfortably Numb Pink Floyd Triple J Hottest 100 Of All-Time
Every Me And Every You Placebo Comedy
My Kind Of Scene Powderfinger Fingerprints: The Best of Powderfinger, Vol. 1
Lump Presidents Of The United States of America The Presidents of the United States of America
Breathe The Prodigy The Fat Of The Land
Common People Pulp Triple J Hottest 100 Of All-Time
Don't Stop Me Now Queen Greatest Hits I
Nightswimming R.E.M. Automatic For The People
Killing In The Name Rage Against The Machine Rage Against The Machine
Blitzkrieg Bop The Ramones Mania
Ghostbusters Ray Parker Jr Ghostbusters Sndtrk
Californication Red Hot Chili Peppers Californication
Black Bugs Regurgitator Unit Re-Booted
Sympathy For The Devil The Rolling Stones Beggars Banquet
Kathy's Song Simon & Garfunkel The Definitive Simon & Garfunkel
Alive and Kicking Simple Minds Live in the City of Light Disc 1
Bullet With Butterfly Wings The Smashing Pumpkins The Smashing Pumpkins
Tainted Love Soft Cell Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret
Fucken' Awesome Spiderbait Greatest Hits
Rock'n Me Steve Miller Band Young Hearts: Complete Greatest Hits
Russians Sting Fields Of Gold: The Best Of Sting 1984-1994 [International]
Skin Deep The Stranglers The Very Best Of The Strangler
Give A Little Bit Supertramp Even In The Quietest Moments
Once In A Lifetime Talking Heads Seven Talking Heads Tracks
Stranglehold Ted Nugent Dazed And Confused
Cowboy Song Thin Lizzy Live And Dangerous
Greg!  The Stop Sign!! TISM Machiavelli and the Four Seasons
Learning To Fly Tom Petty Tom Petty's Greatest Hits
Girl, You'll Be A Woman Soon Urge Overkill Stull EP
(Oh) Pretty Woman Van Halen The Best Of Both Worlds
Blister in the Sun Violent Femmes Add It Up (1981-1993)
One Headlight The Wallflowers Bringing Down The Horse
Werewolves Of London Warren Zevon A Quiet Normal Life The Best Of Warren Zevon
Jolene The White Stripes White Stripes Singles & B-Sides
Baba O'Riley The Who My Generation: The Very Best O
Mind's Eye Wolfmother Wolfmother

Friday, July 18, 2014

Alaska: Denali National Park


John talks the whole time. He's not obliged to. In fact, he sought the permission from the bus passengers to share some of his observations and thoughts on the park as he shuttles us through it to Wonder Lake. I have no idea of his out-of-summer professional proclivities. Perhaps he's semi-retired. Maybe he's a teacher. Right now though, he's a bus driver, although you wouldn't know it. Naturalist adequately covers what he's doing. He talks to the geology, ecology, biology, cultural history and mountain climbing throughout the park.

Naturalist is probably the only word that could adequately cover it. His range of narration covers a breadth of topics, most of them immediately fascinating to me. He begins with the geology of the park and talks in an informed and academically correct manner. This doesn't feel like he's reading idly from a prompter or recalling some notes... he's explaining, making observations and discussing science. I want to call him a geologist, even if he's more like an amateur one from the 1800's; the types who crawled the hills in the British Isles crudely coming up with a sedimentary structure to further aid them finding coal. The type who viewed it as the eminent weekend hobby... regardless, he speaks knowingly and lovingly of his plot of land and the processes involved with it. He's at least getting a "B" for the park's geology so he's probably already more accomplished in the field than I am.

Given my tertiary education doesn't cover a lot of what follows, I have to trust that he's correct about the topics that moves on to... but he talks with a confidence and assurance that belies his comfort with the knowledge and ideas he's sharing. Plus, the earlier "B" makes it easier to accept his remarks about the different park species, their migratory patterns, eating habits and so on. Likewise for the Athabascan inhabitants. Then the history of mountaineering and climbing Denali.

Denali has one road. It's about a hundred miles long, is mostly gravel and generally one lane wide. This is obviously problematic with traffic going in both directions... and downright diabolical on the mountain passes.  No guarding. No windrow. Just a sheer drop. A long time ago - as a motorcyclist with only a small self preservation streak - I used to imagine the gruesome and bloody ways that I may meet my end if I were to make a mistake mid-bend. It was enough to stop me from twisting the throttle a little further or going in a little harder. Here, I caught myself doing a similar thing. How many times would the bus tumble before coming to a rest some three hundred metres down? How many times would I feel it? Would anyone actually survive? Is there really a point to wearing this seat belt up here?

Apparently, expressing these thoughts to the person next to me is not the right thing to do.

Moments later, John piped up with a few comments of his own about the precarious nature of the pass we were on, "there are three ways y'all can deal with it. You can look out at the horizon in the distance, you don't notice the height so much then, or you can keep your eyes in the bus."

Someone tells him that's only two things. I wish it was me.

"Or, y'can do what I do..." Dutifully, they ask him what it is that he does, seemingly because he's best placed to dealing with these sorts of things.

"... and just shut your eyes."

That nervous laughter that I have come to love travels the length of the bus. I'm grinning like an idiot.

The three days I'm there I have three different drivers. They are all more than adequate narrators, each with their own interests. No bus ride is the same, save for the ground we cover. Not that that is necessarily bad. It's spectacular country. The object of the drives is typically to find wildlife which is cool - make no mistake - but asking to stop to admire a landscape, something I am more prone to do, wins you some pretty weird looks.

Apparently foxes are less frequently sighted, being a bit skittish by nature... this guy was pretty unfussed.
... and just generally pretty cool.

Luckily, the wildlife roam around and so over the three days we stopped in a variety of places that often quite accidentally have amazing backdrops.

No animals. Apparently that makes this less interesting.

I didn't accomplish as much hiking as I'd have liked. Still being unreasonably sick - I spent most of my time in Fairbanks lying on the couch wondering what I did to deserve it - I milled around at and around the rest stops without getting too far away. On the third day though I mustered the energy and resolve for a few miles of a valley, mostly to stalk some caribou I'd seen earlier in the day. Luckily, they were still there and were reasonably happy to put up with my company for a while before they made off in a direction I wasn't too interested in heading. I followed a river for a while to meet up with the road somewhere in the mid distance and hailed a shuttle returning to the campsites.

An obliging caribou.

Taking a seat on the bus, the passenger next to me asks how my walk was, how far I'd walked and from what direction. It seemed like a pretty pointed inquisition, but whatever, sometimes that's how people prefer to go about the business of conversation. Dutifully, I answer all questions.

"So how close did you get to the bear and her cubs back up the valley?"

... what fucking bear?

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Why is Alaska So Beautiful? A scientific examination of angles, warm light and CMB.

If you're expecting a serious post, just close the window now and read something else.

Abstract: Alaska is beautiful because it is. It is mountains and rivers and lakes and snow and big mammals and alpine forest and glaciers and just... seemingly unspoiled.

Introduction: Alaska spends an awful lot of time in twilight. That part of the day where everything seems that much more pretty than it really is. By virtue of its latitude, the sun doesn't really get very high and when it is rising or setting, it travels very, very obliquely. You get a long twilight period... that soft, dappled, warm light that photographers love.

Hypothesis: Alaska is beautiful because of twilight.

Apparatus: Photos of Cameron Michael Browning, sourced from personal archives and/or facebook.

Discussion: Cam is an average looking person with the sort of personality that is its own contraceptive device. He is appropriate for testing this hypothesis because I haven't made fun of him for over a fortnight.

Figure 1 is a photo of Cam under flash photography. It's an appropriate substitute to midday sun as it mimics the harsh light of the sun high, somewhere in the middle of the day. It's especially useful because it's clear that his face is unprepared for this, it responds less well than the girl's next to him who has a bit of makeup on, obviously to counter looking like a washed up drug fiend.

Figure 1: I will present this without further comment.

Figure 2 highlights the importance of a soft and oblique light source. Taken at twilight, it's infinitely better than figure one... but perhaps that's only because he's looking the other direction.

Figure 2: Cam at twilight looking in the opposite direction. Already less repulsive.

In the interest of rigorously testing my hypothesis, let's also investigate a photo of Cam looking the otherway but under the midday sun, simply to see if it's twilight or his pose that makes Figure 2 subjectively more appealing. Figure 3 shows Cam at 2pm on a Saturday violently vomiting off the back of a boat in Longreach Bay. Ladies, form an orderly queue.

Figure 3: Hard to know what to make of this, except to laugh at him chumming the waters.

The obvious final test is Cam looking at the camera at twilight (Figure 4). Being a man of science though, I'm prepared to state that in my opinion the results of this particular photo are anomalous, should be discarded and not considered when forming any conclusions as to why Alaska is beautiful.

Figure 4: Cam looking at the camera, at twilight. This experiment shows results that are anomalous to a pre-determined conclusion and has been summarily discarded.

Conclusion: Hypothesis is void. Alaska is beautiful because Browning isn't in it.

Further reading: https://www.facebook.com/cam.browning

Alaska: Independence Day

One of my central motivations for driving past Denali National Park and over to Fairbanks was to spend Independence Day in a city, with people. Instead of a park, with bears, who probably don't care. I don't know what I was expecting. Gun toting, loud proclamations of a love for freedom and incessant calls of "'MURRRRRRRICAAAAAH!" certainly crossed my mind but was ruled out as unlikely; being in the company of some very left leaning and hippie couchsurfing hosts, I couldn't imagine that this was the company that they would be seeking out.

My assumptions were fair. In Ester, there is a parade and town fair for the fourth and that was to be our day's entertainment. It turns out that Cassie, Liz and Sarah - my hosts - seemed to know the whole town. The fair is also a giant picnic, there's a pig on a spit and just generally a stack of food on offer right around the grounds. I load up, like a student at a buffet. After the food is mostly gone the fair starts up proper with rounds of sack races, tug-o-war, egg & spoon races... and egg catching contests which is most definitely a spectator sport.

Photo finish unnecessary, the ginger wins it after the guy on the right crashes out spectacularly.

After some time just flinging a frisbee around (and one of the girls hitting a toddler in the face) we decamp to a pub for a few beers. Again, it feels like the girls know everyone here. Admittedly, there are a few familiar faces from the fair, but there are plenty of strangers too. Before too long what feels like most of the bar has traveled with us to a lake for paddling and frolicking. It's fucking cold but we're loaded up with beer and tequila coats, among all sorts of other things and it would be well past dark in a normal part of the world before we get back to our cabin in the woods.... for more drink and merriment, until everyone just sort of winds down. There was precious little nationalism on show. No xenophobia.

It was pretty great.

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Alaska: Flightseeing - Oh Hi, Mt McKinley.

One of the major reasons people stop in Talkeetna - besides to sample the local brewery and reindeer - is because of its relative proximity to Denali. The airport is a myriad of flightseeing (a good, but not great pun) tour operators and for no apparent reason, I sign up to K2 Aviation's offering. As always, I'm winging it (also not a great pun).

Not totally trusting myself with an 8:30am departure, opting for the 10:30am flight exiting Talkeetna is a good move. The lady at the front desk informs me that some cloud earlier has cleared up and it is looking like one of the better days of the summer. The pilot - Patrick Carter (google him, his job and some of the projects he is working on are awesome) - is clearly impassioned by what he does and takes us through a safety briefing light heartedly, "if for some reason we need to land and I can't get to them, there is a tent and some food in the front, but don't worry, these guys in with the red planes around us will be out with the pizzas and beers pretty quickly."

Black humour remains the best kind.

Our route takes in a collection of glaciers, peaks, circumnavigates Denali and for the majority of the flight the weather is completely amenable to showing us a good time.

A cauldron of cloud!
Patrick is a pretty great narrator, he covers the natural history, ecology and cultural history of the area in between alerting us to various points of interest. This is all momentarily abandoned when he sees me playing with lego. He and I briefly bond over Junior and then a Snowtrooper. Somewhere in the flight he begins an observation with, "now I'm no geologist but..."

It's jarring to hear. It sounds a little like those clowns who preface racism with, "I'm not a racist but...". Patrick's observation of weathering patterns on the Alaska Range is reasonably sound. Perhaps he is a geologist in denial, much like those other guys with that different prefix.

Glacier carved valley with Denali in the background.

The flight itself is incredible. It seems every time out there has been one or two experiences that are very much, "do this and don't pay too much attention to the price" sort of activities. Shark diving. The Serengeti. Petra. Jiuzhaigao. Abu Simbel.

Flying over Denali National Park is it. Just do it.

Mt McKinley/Denali/The Great One. Whatever you call it, it's impressive.

Alaska: Talkeetna

Conveniently, pretty much every building in Talkeetna has a pub attached to it!
Talkeetna is a small town with one main road, conveniently called Main Street. It's mostly cafes and pubs for a few hundred metres. Interspersing the places I'm most interested in were gift shops and activity shops. Pedestrians rule Main Street, cars crawl behind unfussed walkers often many abreast.

I ditch the car and wander into the Roadhouse, an eatery of some reknown for its large delicious portions delivered at a low cost. Upon noticing reindeer chilli on the menu all decision making could be concluded for the foreseeable future; spicy rudolph is exactly what I want inside of me. Sitting outside I ate cute dead animal, made friends with local porter and just people watched for a while, losing track of time. This is an excellent way to settle into a small town and I fully recommend it. Talkeetna has a pretty great feel to it; a pedestrian paced lifestyle in a town of log cabins in the woods by a river, all not too far from one of North America's finest national parks.

Admittedly, were I to live here I'd probably think it was hick-ish and inbred, but whatever. One of the joys in being a passerby is just feeling and writing whatever the hell you want into the lives of the people and buildings around you. It's not such a bad space to be.

Alaska: Turnagain Arm & Crow Pass

With a car now purchased (Subaru Forester) and insured, the afternoon became dedicated to going for a drive. South of Anchorage is a coastal drive along the northern side of Turnagain Arm, inside the Cook Inlet. Story goes that Captain Cook sailed up Turnagain Arm expecting passage into Prince William Sound. Instead he had to turn back as it turned out to be a fjord.

Turnagain Arm is remarkable for one other thing; it has a bore tide. As the tide comes in, the range and tidal pressure is so large that a wave of up to 12 feet forms at the front as the water rushes in. Once upon a time (pre-1964) it used to cause a taller incoming wave but an earthquake (9.2 on the Richter scale) in the area caused the inlet to relax, sinking lower as the earthquake released built up pressure. The now deeper inlet means a smaller apparent wave on the surface. In some respects, this is a little similar to what occurs at horizontal falls in the Kimberley, albeit on a much, much larger scale.

Along the way are some well regarded vantage points, Beluga Point (I didn't see any) and Bird Point (two more bald eagles) before getting to Girdwood, the Alyeska ski town. Girdwood is situated in a rain forest and given that it's basically at sea level, is one of the lowest ski towns on the planet. Apparently that's desirable.

Around to the north of Girdwood is Crow Pass, a trail to a former gold mine. The drive up is thickly forested and the mine closed for a wedding. The pass continues so I keep driving. A neighbourhood very unexpectedly appears as I break through the upper reaches of the treeline, "... and even here, there is (human) life."

No tripod... no worries.


The end of the road comes a bit later after crossing a pair of rickety bridges. The carpark at the top marks a trail head I won't be exploring, but even here I'm being treated to another million dollar view.

The view from the carpark. Being lazy is still rewarding!


One the way back the sun is getting a little lower - to say it's setting is to be pretty economical with the truth - though it's not going to hit the water until early morning... and even then it's only really hiding for an hour or two. I return to Bird Point for little to no reason, another look can't hurt. Walking past an elderly gent who has a large telescope mounted on a tripod pointed across the highway and up the mountains (presumably in the wrong direction, the birds are behind him) my attention is grabbed in undivided fashion when he says, casually as you like, "say, do you want to take some photos of a few bears?"

Fucking oath I do.

Ken has been tracking a grizzly bear mother and her two cubs for the afternoon. In a flash he removes his eyepiece on the telescope and is rigging up a ghetto Canon mount with my camera on the other end. It's a little fiddly and by the time he sorts out the mount he has lost the bears.

Ken with his telescope. The bears are near the top, by the middle blob of snow... a casual two miles or so away.

Tersely whispered "darn!"s appear to be the upper limit of his cussing vocabulary. I adjust mine accordingly.

He finds the bears quickly enough and we sit there shooting and having a yarn over the course of a couple of hours. It's tricky work taking their photo, between tracking them, manually adjusting the focus and using live view on the camera, the working conditions are miles from ideal... but then again, the bears are miles away. 9pm rolls past and he remember he needs to get home. It's easy to lose track of the time when it doesn't get dark. The camera is dismounted, telescope dismantled and we leave...

Grainy out of focus bears!
... but it's a long time until the giddiness subsides. I continue to be remarkably fortunate.

Bird Point