Well I've returned from my trip to Haines, Alaska, and five full days of shooting on the Chilkat Eagle Reserve. There were more birds this year than I've seen in prior trips. But the weather was horrible. There was some form of precipitation 24/7 during my entire stay/shoot. Hour by hour it varied from pouring rain, drizzle, fog, sleet, heavy/wet snow, then back to rain. And all the while temperatures were between 32-36F(0-3C). Keeping kit dry and myself (reasonably) warm and dry was no trivial effort. The weather conditions coupled with less than eight hours of daylight made for about six hours of useful light each day and some tough shooting. The one saving grace was that the short days limited the time one was exposed to the wet/cold. Evenings were spent drying things out so I'm just getting around to editing photos.
The Chilkat Eagle Reserve encompasses 50,000 acres (20,000 hectares) of land along the Chilkat River Valley. The last salmon run of the year, primarily chum/dog salmon, occurs here which is why the birds congregate. The greatest concentration of birds occurs about 20 miles upriver from Haines at the confluence of the Chilkat and Tsirku Rivers at a place the natives call the "council grounds". The name refers to the hundreds of eagles sitting in groups appearing to be holding council not because people held council here. The fish arrive and birds gather in mid-October. The gathering typically lasts through the end of the year. From here most of the birds head south for the winter.
In addition to the weather challenges, shooting was more difficult this year due to changes in the course of the river. The Chilkat is a glacial river often called a "braided" river due to the multiple intertwined channels and sloughs. The entire valley bottom is fine glacial dust and smooth gravel. The course of channels in the river change constantly. Due to such changes I was unable to access areas where I have had successful shooting in past years. One thing in particular is that it was very difficult to find birds perched on drift wood that were close enough for good FF portraits
Well at any rate, here are a few photos to get a sense of the place. It is beyond my skills with still photography to do justice to the literally hundreds of birds that were visible at any given time. I'll post other threads with some BIF shots etc.
1) A look across the valley during one of the brief spells that the rain had slowed to a drizzle and the mountains were visible.
2) It's not hard to see where the council grounds got its name.
3) Snow
4) More snow. Unfortunately it wasn't cold enough for the snow to stay on the ground for long.
5) And fog, dense at times. Yes I know more detail could be pulled out with various PP tools. The intent here is to represent things as they appeared to my eye at the time.
6) I wasn't the only one having difficulties with the weather conditions. Check out this landing. Tab through them in the light box.
7) Woops!
8) Ouch!
9) Yeah, I meant to do that.