Alaska Excursions

Alaska Excursions

A wide range of trips throughout Southcentral Alaska.

Iditarod 41

Photos and stories from the last great race.

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Webcams make Alaska bears more accessible

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Focal Point: Skiing across Portage Lake by moonlight

Portage Glacier by moonlight

It's a rite of spring for many Anchorage skiers: a trip across Portage Lake to the glacier face. It can be a crowded place on a bluebird weekend, so photographer Marc Lester set out to experience it in a different way: He skied out all alone at night.

Bird Treatment and Learning Center hold open house

Petra is a bald eagle that has been with Bird TLC since 1995. Bird Treatment and Learning Center invited the public to visit and learn about bald and golden eagles at its Save the Eagles event on Saturday, January 12, 2013.

Bird Treatment and Learning Center invited the public to visit and learn about bald and golden eagles at its Save the Eagles event on Saturday, January 12, 2013.

A Butte-Palmer tour

Vapor rises and overflow freezes in this view of the Matanuska River on Wednesday. Take a photographic tour along the Glenn and Old Glenn highways in the Valley on a clear, cold day at the Focal Point photo blog.

Aerials from Birchwood to the Alaska Range

The Ruth Glacier flows out of the Alaska Range with Mount Foraker on the left and Mount Hunter in the center in this aerial view from the south on Sunday, September 9, 2012.

A small plane is just one of the many ways to experience the beauty Alaska offers. These are recent photos from a flight along the Susitna River towards the Alaska Range.

Photos: A Day along Turnagain Arm

The Portage River reflects the sky near the outlet from Portage Lake at sunset on Monday, August 13, 2012.

The short drive along Turnagain Arm reveals a unique arena for many outdoor activities. The sunsets aren't bad either.

Two new ziplines open in Southcentral Alaska

SeaLife Center treats orphaned walrus calf

Webcams make Alaska bears more accessible

Painter brings odd Alaska dinosaur to life

Bear attracts audience during marathon swim

Baby Dall sheep finds home at Alaska Zoo

Birds of Southcentral Alaska

Birds of Spring 2012

Spring babies out and about at Palmer farm

A winter's day on Westchester Lagoon in Anchorage

Valdez digs out from world class snowfall

Alaska's attractions lure visitors even in winter

Cold weather equals safe travel for great ice fishing

Christmas 2011

New scanners debut at Anchorage airport

Alyeska Resort opens

Hilltop Ski Area opens

A summer day in Barrow

Autumn awesome for Northern Lights viewing

Fall Colors

Denali Park prepares for lottery winners

Alaska State Fair, 2011

Record salmon surge thrills Kenai netters

Salmon fishing at Bird Creek

Columbia Glacier Kayaking

Welcome to Talkeetna

Spring can be prime time for a visit to Portage

Begin the season fishing hooligan, king salmon

Outdoor Life names Kodiak 4th best for sportsmen

Preparing for McKinley climbing season

Chugach backcountry network takes stride forward

Popular Anchorage salmon derby will take a year off

Sea lions fly from Europe to Seward

Fewer Prince William Sound shrimp means pot reduction

Photos: U.S. Adaptive Alpine Championships

Photos: 2011 Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race

Skiers hit city trails in 2011 Tour of Anchorage

Day-by-day guide to the 2011 Fur Rendezvous

Reality TV invades Alaska

Recent weather makes for ideal skating

Outdoor enthusiasts make the most of Alaska

Carving out Anchorage's New Year's Eve celebration

Ice climbing along the Turnagain Arm

New hut on Snowbird Glacier has great views, insulation

Birds of prey boost the thrill of the hunt for some

Healing Waters encourages vets to start casting

Potter Marsh's swans

Steelhead in Anchor River a sport fishing boon

There's more to fall than just colorful leaves

Hill on wheels; testing Alyeska's Silvertip Traverse

Anchorage teacher looks to climb 5 treacherous 'teeth'

Surfing the bore tide

Alaska tourism industry sees visitor increase this year

Alaska's vanishing wonders

Marine paradise

A new video initiative is bringing the famed brown bears of Alaska's Katmai National Park directly to your computer or smartphone.

Without having to go there, you can watch as mature bears compete for salmon and cubs tumble over each other as they play. Started Tuesday, a live Web stream allows the public to log on and see the brown bears in their daily activities in their natural habitat.

"I think it's an unparalleled opportunity for people to get that front row seat (to) the lives of the bears at Brooks Camp," said Roy Wood, chief of interpretation for Katmai National Park and Preserve.

The project is a partnership with explore.org, which set up four high-definition cameras in Katmai, spokesman Jason Damata told the Associated Press. Three of them are at existing viewing stands where bear fans come to watch the animals.

The cameras provide access to a national park that is difficult to reach and expensive for most tourists. It is about 275 miles southwest of Anchorage, but inaccessible by road. A trip there involves multiple airplanes and a lot of planning: it's hard to get a lodge reservation at Brooks Camp before 2014. Camping is allowed, but on a reservation system that goes online Jan. 5.

"It takes a lot of time, a lot of effort and a lot of money, and the webcams will make it accessible to anyone with access to a computer, a smartphone, a tablet device," Wood said.

The park draws just fewer than 10,000 visitors a year. About 2,200 bears live in Katmai National Park, and about 100 of them are in the Brooks Camp area.

One of the cameras is at Brooks Falls, where bigger male bears compete for salmon, some of which are caught as they try to jump the falls. The bears eat mostly the brains and eggs of the fish and let the carcasses wash downstream. This is the prime viewing area now.

The second camera is about 150 yards away, where females and cubs eat the fish scraps floating downstream. The third is at the lower falls, where bears will congregate later this summer as dead, spawned out salmon float downstream. "Any bear can catch them when they're dead," Wood said.

The fourth camera is on Dumpling Mountain and provides an aerial view of the entire ecosystem, including Brooks Lake, Naknek Lake, Brooks River and falls, and in the distance the Valley of 10,000 Smokes, Damata said.

"The placement of the cams is fantastic," Wood said. "I mean, they'll be close enough, many of the bears you'll be able to identify and follow the individual bears as they use the salmon at Brooks Falls and raise their young here."

The cameras are powered by solar and wind energy. Microwave signals are sent to the Dumpling Mountain camera, which are then sent to King Salmon, where a T1 connection allows for the high- definition video to be broadcast on the Internet. The best action of the four cameras will be broadcast.

They are the latest additions to a list of live-streaming webcams in the Pearls of the Planet initiative for explore.org, underwritten by the Annenberg Foundation.

The subjects of other webcams include osprey off the coast of Maine, polar bears in the Arctic and Scandinavia, California redwood trees and the Vancouver Aquarium, where cameras are directed at belugas and jelly fish. A camera in Brookeville, Md., is focused on a golden retriever and her new litter. The pups will be raised and trained as service dogs for military members suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

"The mission is simple. We simply want people to fall in love with the world again," said Charles Annenberg, creator of explore.org and vice president of the Annenberg Foundation.

A previous attempt to set up live Katmai bear cams by Homer's Pratt Museum failed because of a lack of funding.

"It's very expensive to run streaming video, more expensive than we could handle with our partnership with the Pratt Museum because both of us don't have a good revenue stream," Wood said.

He said it was a "great, fortunate day for us that explore.org called and said they were interested."

"I think when you watch these brown bears, and the salmon going upstream and you see the beauty of this nature, I think it's going to put a smile on your face and a sense of bewilderment and awe you felt a long time ago when we were all kids," said Annenberg, who also goes by the name Charles Annenberg Weingarten.

When people view the live stream, he said, he hopes they realize what they are seeing is pure -- there's no motive other than to allow viewers to experience nature.

The cost of the project wasn't disclosed, but explore.org will absorb the full costs. No advertising will be sold.