Sunday, June 30, 2024

Flight of the Arctic Tern (Video)

Soaring, sailing across the cloudless blue. Knifing through orographic vapor like a jet fighter. This little bird crosses the world from ice cap to ice cap every year. It is perhaps the world’s greatest traveler. It spends most of it’s time living out at sea, drifting on shattered splinters of glacial ice, or simply bobbing on the frigid surface with no land in sight. It spends northern summers in the artic only to leave and fly all the way to the Antarctic when the seasons shift. It’s a journey of 12,000 miles. In fact, each year this graceful, speedy bird will fly more than 40,000 miles. For a bird that lives 30 years, this means it will fly the distance of the Earth to the moon and back three times over. No other animal, not even the monarch butterfly or humpback whale engages in such a journey. 

This is the artic tern…

Knowing all this, it’s a privilege to have these little wanderers pitstop in a brackish pond just down the hill from my house every spring to nest and rear their young.

The slender body of the arctic tern moves through the air with its distinct chest-pumping wingbeat. It hovers in the ocean breeze until it spots a small fish or crustacean, then it plunges into the water to grab its prey. The arctic tern nests on barren islands and coastal tundra where it defends its eggs and babies with vigor, diving down and shrieking at perceived predators. It’s young live under the wings of father and mother for three to four weeks before first flight. Father and mother watch over and teach them for another month or two before they too embark on their vagabond life in the sky. These small, rather innocuous birds, are incredible.

In this video I bring my family down to a brackish pond to a tern nesting site to take do some birding, take bird photography, and while there I might as well turn my camera towards the mountains and ocean for some landscape photography, timelapse photography, long exposure photography and more. 

Enjoy!


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Monday, June 24, 2024

Street Photography in Anchorage, Alaska (Video)

In this episode I travel to the "big city" of Anchorage, Alaska to run some errands. But while I'm there, I might as well try to channel my inner Alex Webb and attempt some street photography and cityscape photography, two styles of photography which I am not very experienced at. I start off near the Atwood Theatre, meander through some of the some in the downtown area, frame up the Captain Cook Hotel, and try to find any other thing I can that looks interesting to point my Nikon D810 camera at. Also, while I'm downtown, I check out a local photography shop and purchase a 80-400mm telephoto lens and on the way home stop at Turnagain Pass along the Seward Highway to test it out.



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Copyright notice: This website and all its contents are the intellectual property of Brian Wright Photography. None of the content can be used or reproduced without expressed written approval.

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Sunday, June 16, 2024

The Hardest River I've Ever Packrafted (Video)

Welcome back to another adventure story from the Land of the Midnight Sun! 

As a whitewater kayaker of almost 30 years, I was skeptical the first time I saw an Alpacka packraft. They looked flimsy, light, easy-to-flip. What could you really paddle in a duck boat like that? But when I slid my legs into one and pushed off into the water, my expectations were blown away. 

Not only do these little boats make paddling the off-the-roads rivers and creeks in Alaska possible, they do so with remarkable ability. But just how far could I push these tiny rubber boats? Class III? Class IV? Class V?

This is the story of the hardest river I’ve paddled in a packraft.

In southcentral Alaska lies a range of jagged mountains. These gnarled peaks stab into the sky like a serrated cutlass. Though the highest of these peaks touches only 8,849 feet, no one doubts that these mountains, draped in glaciers and shrouded in mystery, are among Alaska’s most scenic and most treasured. These are the Talkeetna mountains.

Within the Talkeetna Mountains lives one of Alaska’s most popular playgrounds, Hatcher Pass. Hatcher Pass is a wonderland. Immensely popular for backcountry skiing, hiking, climbing, and photography, Hatcher Pass is natural beauty at the highest level but far more accessible than other Alaska ranges such as the Wrangells or the Brooks or even Alaska’s crown jewel, the Alaska Range, home of Denali. As you drive the winding road that carries you into the Talkeetna Range, it is hard not to notice the tumbling stream chugging along beside you. And as a kayaker and packrafter, it’s impossible not to imagine tasting yourself in its frisky rapids.

And so finally we meet the main character in this story: the Little Susitna.

Although the Little Susitna could be thought of as a peer or even competitor to Sixmile, as both are roadside runs of similar length and difficulty, their character couldn’t be more different. While the rapids of Sixmile tend to come in short, pool-drop constrictions and ledges, the Little Su is a never-ending maze of gumdrop glacial boulders and technical rapids that test your technique, endurance and skill. The takeout beer never felt as hard earned for me as it did at the end of the Little Su. In just five miles we’d navigated countless boulder gardens, scouted a dozen rapids, and survived at least six near flips.

But enough talk, let’s plunge into the action.


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Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Photography in Colorado's Roaring Fork Valley (Video)

In this episode my Spring tour of the Southwest continues. I visit Glenwood Springs and Carbondale, Colorado. Without a car or my full photography setup, I do my best to capture some landscape photography and street photography in Glenwood Springs and Carbondale, Colorado. I check out the Colorado River, Roaring Fork River, downtown Glenwood Springs, Doc Holliday Tavern, and the historic Hotel Colorado. Ultimately I captured some macro, street, landscape, Pep Ventosa-style multiexposure, and timelapse images that I was modestly happy with.




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Sunday, June 2, 2024

Landscape Photography in Southwestern New Mexico

In  this episode of Alaska Brian, I visit Silver City, New Mexico in New Mexico's southwestern corner. I visit some local trails to take pictures of old juniper and cottonwood snags, check out the Dragonfly Trail to see some petroglyphs, attempt some timelapses of a desert thunderstorm, and capture some beautiful sunset light. We also visit the famous and beautiful "catwalk" of Whitewater Canyon along Whitewater Creek near Glenwood, New Mexico. Not really a "honeypot" or iconic location, this is landscape photography in the beautiful but humble New Mexico desert.



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Copyright notice: This website and all its contents are the intellectual property of Brian Wright Photography. None of the content can be used or reproduced without expressed written approval.

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