All posts by Lodge Guide

Looking between stands 1 of 2

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August 25th is the first day that Grizzly Bear Lodge is permitted to take quests to the viewing platforms on the Glendale River. There are two stands located on the river. This picture is taken from the finger stand looking back at the first that overlooks the weir. The weir is a small dam used to control the water level in the spawning channel that zig zags beyond the weir.   If you take time to check the second posting on January 1st 2014, under “Monthly” to the right, it shows a Google map of the spawning channel …more tomorrow.

 

Killer whale on a mission

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As with most wildlife photography doing nothing is often the best practice. On whale watching safaris from the lodge there is normally allot of activity when a pod of killer whales in located. The guides job is to try predict where the orca are going and to try and be there when they arrive and this can be a challenge when they continually change directions. But when there is a full day on the water at sometime there is a good chance of success and then a photo such as this is the result. Taken just before the two orca dove beneath the boat.

 

 

We do not need to share

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When we have our fall grizzly bear tours to the viewing stands on Knight Inlet’s salmon river it is to view the grizzlies catching and eating salmon. In this photo are two sub-adult sibling grizzly bears. At this age there is no longer the rivalry that occurred when they were with their mother. They are now able to catch their own food and do not share. As cubs it was the mother grizzly’s responsibility to ensure enough food was provided to fatten the family to survive the winter now the former cubs are on their own.

 

Looking both ways on the river

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If you book the extra day in camp we take a forty-five minute boat tour across Knight Inlet through Thompson Sound to the Kakweikan River where spend a day with Trapper Rick.  This river is located on the BC mainland where we travel by road to Rick’s cabin. The first photo is the view from the deck of the cabin down the river overlooking the falls. The second photo is from below the falls back toward the cabin. On the left of this picture is the fish ladder built to assist the salmon around the falls that they had been jumping over for thousands of years. (Never question a government when it has money to spend.) The area below the falls is good for grizzly bear viewing, as it is one of their main fishing spots. We tend to sit on the deck and wait for the bears to appear and also hike to the lower pool another popular feeding area.

 

Guess who came to lunch?

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The whale watching day from the lodge requires a fifty-minute boat ride to the area around Johnstone Strait, which is part of the Inside Passage to Alaska. On this day we have a picnic lunch that is normally eaten in the boat as we drift with the whales or other marine life. I am always amazed at the curiosity of these mammals. With the motor turned off and sitting quietly we frequently have visitors. Harbour seals because of their size are a little more timid and less frequent. Steller sealions will approach the boat swimming around and beneath when we have lunch near their “haul out island”. 

 

 

Looks a bit like a grizzly

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On the boat rides up and down Knight Inlet for the grizzly bear watching day the guides are constantly scanning the shores for black bears. This photo is of one of the few brown black bears observed in the inlet over the years.
Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks for British Columbia says:
“Black bears are not always black, and this variation is most apparent in British Columbia. Other colour phases that occur in British Columbia include cinnamon, brown, and blonde. A white-coloured morph, called Kermode or Spirit Bear, is reported most frequently on the north-central coast. The blue phase, or “glacier” bear, is sometimes seen in the extreme northwest corner of the province.” Unfortunately this “brown” black bear is rarely seen in our viewing area.

 

How tall is the Grizzly

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This photo was taken on August 23rd just two days before our grizzly bear tours are permitted to use the viewing stands on the Glendale River. This grizzly was in the river’s estuary and the guests were in the large skiff used to move up and down the river. The bear was approaching the river and eventually swam across to follow the salmon up river. The grass is at least a meter (three feet) high so this is not a small bear and the stare from the bear means we were within its comfort zone so we drifted down river to let it pass.

 

 

 

Grizzlies are good Mothers

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In human terms we would like to think that this photo shows a love bond between mother and cub although this may be true in this case the cub wanted to nurse. Grizzly cubs generally stay with their mother for two years; some will stay for three or four if she does not become pregnant in the fall of their second year. Grizzly bear are extremely good mothers, and, consistent with the high level of “investment” they make in their cubs to ensure their survival, they are very protective of them. Because of this, encountering a grizzly bear with young can be very dangerous. During the first two years of their lives, the sow will teach her cubs everything they need to know to survive on their own. She will school them in finding and exploiting different food sources, and the cubs spend significant time observing her actions and learning them for themselves.

 

Beautiful day on the water

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It is only 9:00 and the whale watching trip is off to a good start with a pod of Pacific whitesided dolphins playing with the boats. These dolphins are often in the area and it is a treat when they become playful. A normal day will also include time spend with a pod of northern resident killer whales, Steller sealions basking in the sun and humpback whales feeding on herring. Along the way there will be bald eagles in the trees or feeding, harbour seals, dall porpoises and may be a black bear or two.

 

River side viewing

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The grizzly bear viewing is not always about grizzlies fishing and eating salmon to fatten for the winter denning. While that is true for the adult bears the cubs in this case two year old cubs are like teenagers and much time is spent in play. Climbing the log jumble gym gives mom time to catch a meal that she can eat without having to share. It seems to work for this family as the photo was taken in late September and all appear to have a healthy layer of fat.