http://www.facebook.com/pg/CopperWhaleInn/
I'm the light green Death Valley National Park baseball cap with the Peregrine on the front - and absolutely nothing more.Copper Whale Inn Bed & Breakfast - 2018/06/12
Anchorage, Alaska
This Amazing group on a Naturalist Journeys Birding Tour have traveled from Nome to Anchorage to Denali and on to Seward!! They’re gonna have their minds blown by the Bird Rookeries in Resurrection Bay!!
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Anyway... Next stop - Potter Marsh, the southern end of the state's Anchorage Coastal Wildlife Refuge.
Anchorage side of Turnagain Arm between what the humans have built up and the westernmost extent of the Chugach Mountains.
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61°04'40.44" N 149°49'35.62" W
Where the Turnagain Arm starts majorly narrowing.
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It's a beautiful marsh with beautiful surroundings and over a thousand yards of Class A boardwalk and viewing platforms.
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32 - 61°04'36.41" N 149°49'33.80" W - 01510 feet
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33 - 61°04'37.66" N 149°49'30.46" W - 01140 feet
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Great excuse for scope time. Sky's clear but wind's rather stiff.
Greg points out areas in the north/entrance/boardwalk end in which the marsh is being taken over by alder. When it doesn't get managed/removed it's bye-bye marsh habitat.
Pair of Sandhill Cranes way the hell out for fun scope target practice and sharing.
Down the Seward Highway there are a couple pull-off areas for viewing the marsh. A lot more open water and visible and undoubtedly present birds - including ones tending nests. Mew Gulls, Arctic Terns, Red-Necked Phalaropes, Long-Billed Dowitcher, Wilson's Snipe...
Backtrack into Anchorage about five miles for a group lunch at the Firetap Alehouse, then on to Seward. Big picture:
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The route is almost indescribably spectacular and beautiful. Virtually unlimited lush green isn't an unpleasant change following lotsa early season Seward Peninsula and far side of the Alaska Range.
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Pick up a herd of Sheep grazing up on the steep slope on the left in fairly short order and the endless mud flats on the Turnagain to the right are intriguing and good for Eagles every now and then.
Clear all the rivers, creeks feeding into the head, drive two and two thirds miles downstream on the other side, cross Ingram Creek...
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...and turn SW into the Kenai Peninsula interior. Relevant stretch of the Seward Highway in red, Alaska Railroad where not parallel with the Highway in yellow.
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Five Stretches, starting from the Turnagain Arm end, running:
- 1 - SouthWest
- 2 - NorthWest
- 3 - SouthSouthWest
- 4 - EastSouthEast
- 5 - South
The high point of the Highway is about 1370 feet at Summit Lake near the middle of Stretch 3.
I'm so blown away by the beauty of this ride that I can't believe it I've never really heard of it before in this kind of context.
We get to Seward, check into the Best Western, and walk a couple hundred yards to the Alaska SeaLife Center at the end of the Seward Highway - which has been Third Avenue for very close to all of its final mile. It's a super first rate zoo / aquarium / rehab / display / museum / educational facility.
I start at the top with the birds - puffins and other alcids, sea ducks, kittiwakes... Fake cliff habitat above, surface at eye level, underwater viewing below. I could stay there all day watching and talking with the staffers. Down below there's a viewing tank with a scary looking bull Steller's Sea Lion making passes. I guess eighteen hundred pounds before finding the sign that says seventeen.
Back to the motel for a wee bit of settling in and reorganizing time before we mobilize for our group dinner at Ray's Waterfront. There's an Audubon bird group going out on one of the Kenai Fjords tour boats the next day - like we'll be - getting a briefing in a commons room. I eavesdrop and note that there's an older guy in the back who sounds like he's really got his shit together on these things. After they break up I ask him if it would be totally moronic to bring a scope along. "Yes." Yeah, I was afraid so. This was definitely gonna be a job for the stabilized glasses.
Several of us head up on foot, most do the van that Greg's driving, I ride shotgun. I'm looking to the side and notice a crow. We've had no shortage of Ravens and Magpies everywhere we've been but this is the first crow. I mention it.
Greg: "A crow? Not a Magpie?
"No. A crow. Fer sure. Just hanging out on four feet up on a branch ten feet off the side of the road."
He backs up. "Wow! New species! Northwestern Crow. Good eye, Tad!"
(Thanks, but not really. We weren't far from driving over him.)
He's a city park bird, not the least bit concerned with us, wide open clear view, beautiful light, got three buddies with him, an addition to the species list. We take him in, it's kinda cool, but he looks just like the Common Crow everyone and his dog sees by the hundreds every day of the week and year in the Lower 48. And there's an argument that this is just a subspecies of the Common anyway.
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We park and disembark near Ray's with some time to explore the harbor area before dinner. There's a pier at which the victims of the day's halibut boat expeditions are weighed in. Easy to find, follow your nose. Not really an unpleasant smell but no one isn't really concerned about being in the right ballpark. We've been advised that we're gonna score Sea Otters so I allow myself a little hope for getting my first ever in the wild.
But just beyond the weighing station and a few yards out from the near edge of this fishing/tourism industrial harbor with zillions of people all around there's half a dozen Otters floating on their backs and chilling out. This is NOT how I was expecting to see them. Really wasn't expecting to see any at all.
And there's this Border Collie going absolutely nuts. He thinks he's got stuff from Mars, has no idea what they are or what he's supposed to do with them. I'm pretty sure he's dying to round them up and herd them into a paddock. Finally parks himself down prone on the edge of the nearest dock and focuses like nothing you've ever seen before. I was pretty sure his owner was gonna need to hit him with a tranquilizer dart to get him back in the car and back home.
I knew some of this before but one of the SeaLife Center people had just brought me up to much better speed before with a pelt as a teaching aid. Sea Otters have zilch in the way of fat/blubber to serve as insulation and are totally dependent upon an extremely dense and heavy fur covering to keep them alive in these environments. And they spend a lot of time on the surface cleaning and grooming. The rear feet - which are essentially flippers - are bare skin and a substantial problem with respect to heat loss and you'll notice that they're held out of the water when these guys are basking on their backs.
Dinner with a beautiful view. Eagles and Ravens all over the place. I'd hoped to have had Mountain Goats well before this point in the trip and scanned the available slopes. Worked on a pair of candidates for a good while before having to write them off as rocks.