Notes and comments, and occasionally, news about visiting Alaska.

A Touchy Fishing Subject

Filed under: Activities, Fishing — Tags: , , — Wigi @ 4:59 pm June 18, 2008

I am a pretty hard-core fisherperson, and I fish a lot with my extended family. My girlfriend’s brother is a very active fisherman, and I spend a lot of time fishing with him.

He’s having a rough year fishing this year.

So far this year, I’ve landed four king salmon, and kept two. I’ve hooked and lost probably five more, and I don’t think I’ve had a day fishing where I didn’t fight at least one fish.

He’s had none. No fish landed, no fish on, no fish lost.

When we fish, we usually fish together, sharing fishing holes, etc. But he’s been rather magnanimous about letting me have what we would consider the favored spots. Ultimately, I don’t think that matters, and it certainly isn’t making a difference between me catching fish and him not catching fish. But I can’t help but think now that maybe I should make sure he gets the favored spots, at least for a while.

We’re going fishing this weekend… And perhaps before then. I’ll keep you posted.

Our New and Improved Blog

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — Wigi @ 4:41 pm June 16, 2008

We have been away from our blog for a while, but we’ve since returned, and come to you with updated software, and hopefully updated posts and information. If you have visited the blog before, I apologize for the long delay in getting a new post out there.

I hope you enjoy following along!

The Province of Ice

Filed under: Activities, Adventure, Destinations — Tags: , , , , , — Wigi @ 4:39 pm

I had the opportunity to take a weekend off and head to Seattle. On the way back, I was seated in a window seat, and was treated to one of the more spectacular and rare views that one experiences in Alaska: The view of the Kenai Mountains by air.

The coastal mountains of Alaska guard the interior of the state from the moisture of the Gulf of Alaska and the Pacific Ocean, and in doing so, pile up some impressive snow, which then turns to ice and fills vast valleys with glaciers. These glaciers creep down the valleys and either terminate into a lake or river, or plunge all the way to the sea, forming the sight that many guests to Alaska have come to expect, large chunks of ice falling into an otherwise-glassy bay.

Another way to look at these glaciers is that they exist in an area where the Ice Age never ended. These are the last remnants of the thousands of years of continental glaciation, and are just now retreating into the alpine areas of Alaska.

Most people think that the ice age has been over for thousands of years. But in a significant part of Alaska (as well as other far northern and southern regions), the ice continues today as it has for millenia.

One of the things that has scientists so concerned about global warming is that many of the glaciers in Alaska and in other places have been historically stable – their rate of retreat has been slow, or oscillated between advance and retreat. However, in the last thirty to fifty years, many glaciers have shown a dramatic retreat as their rate of growth has not matched their melting. In fact, there are a number of places around Alaska where a guest can get instant feedback of the rate of glacial retreat. If you visit Exit Glacier near Seward, as you drive up the road to the visitor center, you’ll see wooden signs along the road, that list the location of the terminus of the glacier by year. On the slopes of Mt. McKinley, one can see the lateral moraines where the Ruth Glacier has pushed rocks and gravel to the side, and how the glacier has since melted away from the moraines, leaving walls of gravel dozens or hundreds of feet high.

Alaska’s glaciers are not in danger of disappearing in our lifetimes. But when we talk about change in a geologic time frame, these changes are occurring essentially instantaneously.