Alaska is named “The Final Frontier” for good purpose: lower than one % of the state is inhabited by folks. With a timezone simply 4 hours behind New York, it’s onerous to imagine that you just’re nonetheless in America whereas experiencing the great thing about its remoteness, pure panorama, and naturally, its wildlife.
Planning a go to could be daunting as a result of it is inconceivable to see every little thing the state affords in a single journey — particularly if you happen to’re seeking to spot wildlife. Nonetheless, expedition firms like Pure Habitat Adventures create experiences for vacationers to entry areas which might be in any other case unreachable. This consists of the journey I launched into: staying at a grizzly bear camp on the shore of Lake Clark Nationwide Park and Protect.
Pure Habitat Adventures makes a speciality of eco-friendly, small-group nature and wildlife excursions all around the world. Partnering with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), its focus is offering immersive experiences in pure habitats, typically in distant environments with conservation and sustainability as their precedence.
My lengthy but rewarding journey to get to bear camp began by flying into Anchorage after which taking one other flight to Homer, Alaska, the place I spent the night time. This was adopted by a bush airplane flight, which solely allowed 35 kilos of non-public baggage per particular person, to Lake Clark Nationwide Park and Protect. The 45-minute flight to the nationwide park captures the center of Alaska in a single glimpse — flying over energetic volcanoes, large glaciers, and limitless views of pine timber.
The bear camp sits on the park’s shoreline inside an electrical fence, and friends all the time stick with a information exterior of the campsite. I used to be greeted by two naturalists, husband and spouse Mike and Jessica Morgan, who have been my guides for the subsequent 4 days.
The group was small, with simply 13 friends of varied ages (there have been retirees, too) and backgrounds. It doesn’t matter what stroll of life folks got here from, the frequent thread amongst us was our love for watching grizzly bears of their pure habitat, uninterrupted.
Through the three days at bear camp, the every day schedule included breakfast, bear viewing, lunch, bear viewing, dinner, one other bear viewing, and slumber. Whereas it sounds repetitive, it did not get boring.
Other than the joy of seeing bears, there have been leisure actions like glad hour and academic shows woven into the itinerary.
The meals, underneath the helm of chef Chris Nau, have been wonderful, with dishes like veggie scramble and pancakes for breakfast, bean chili and sandwiches for lunch, and pork chops for dinner. (A standout dish for me was the salmon dip served as an appetizer.)
The tent lodging at camp are rugged luxurious: a twin-size mattress with an emergency bathroom (only for liquid excretions) and an area heater for when it will get chilly at night time. Morgan even ready rubber water bottles crammed with sizzling water to maintain us heat — a considerate contact that went a good distance. There are two communal non-public bogs with showers, that are very clear.
Arguably the largest adjustment was that there was no cellphone service on the campgrounds, however this turned out to be a nice shock, because it was the primary time in latest reminiscence that I used to be compelled to be within the second.
Jessica Morgan, who has been a bear information in Lake Clark Nationwide Park for 3 summers and has labored as an expedition chief for Pure Habitat Adventures for 4 summers, informed Journey + Leisure that Lake Clark is a singular place to see bears.
“Lake Clark gives one of the vital intimate bear viewing experiences on this planet due to the dense inhabitants of bears that congregate attributable to their meals abundance. Their meals supply of sedges, clams, salmon, and berries is so ample that so long as they’re well-fed, they go about life as regular,” Morgan, who beforehand labored as a bear information in Yellowstone Nationwide Park and Canada’s polar bear nation in Churchill, Manitoba, stated.
My first bear recognizing was intimidating (as a result of these creatures can run as much as 40 mph) and delightful. The expertise felt surreal since I wasn’t at a zoo or in a automobile, however out and about in a distant nationwide park watching these majestic animals of their territory. My preliminary worry wore off rapidly and remodeled into gratitude — I felt so fortunate to be there.
For fellow explorers, my recommendation is to be affected person. We noticed about eight bears per viewing however on one event, I noticed round two dozen in a meadow. And on one among our final viewings, I used to be fortunate sufficient to have a mama bear and cub stroll proper by me. Had this been my first sighting, I’d have been scared however by the point this occurred, I used to be well-informed about their behaviors.
“These bears have multi-generational expertise of people appearing in predictable methods (i.e. viewing from the identical park websites, strolling at a gradual and methodical tempo, and all the time avoiding startling a bear),” Morgan stated. “The explanation we will get near the bears with out being intrusive is as a result of we sit and observe them going about their every day life.”
Seeing these highly effective animals up shut was one of the vital exhilarating moments of my life. And being fully lower off from actuality — I didn’t get up to social media notifications, texts, or information alerts — even when only for a couple of days, felt as if I used to be dwelling in a snow globe with large brown bears among the many serene backdrop of a meadow with limitless mountain ranges. I launched into this journey anticipating to see bears, however I didn’t look forward to finding a lot peace and tranquility.