Author: Scott Dickerson

  • Polar bears swimming amongst melting Arctic ice

    Aerial photo of a polar bear swimming in the Chukchi Sea among melting ice floes.

    The adventure started with a phone call last week from the World Wildife Fund – “Scott, can you be on Kodiak Island tonight for a flight to the Chukchi Sea?” Before I could think answered “Sure, what time?”

    Slowly I learned the details of the assignment as I packed my bags. Nine polar bears had been sighted swimming in the Chukchi Sea many miles off Alaska’s Arctic coast. Now there was a rare opportunity to fly with the Coast Guard and polar bear biologists on a survey to see firsthand the polar bears plight as the sea ice they depend on melts away beneath them. This was an impressive example of agency cooperation amongst the US Coast Guard, University of Alaska, US geological survey and the World Wildlife Fund. Steve Rychetnik, videographer with Sprocketheads, and myself were brought along to document the effort.

    Our team met in Kodiak, home of the Alaska Coast Guard Air Station. Next morning we were at the base meeting the flight crew and discussing the plan as we boarded a monstrous 4 engine C-130 rescue airplane that would take us over 1,000 miles North, stopping in Fairbanks for fuel, then onward to Barrow to pickup additional Coast Guard personnel. We left Barrow and flew out over the Chukchi Sea and spent five and half hours looking amongst ice floes for the signs of life. We would fly for 12 hours total before landing in Fairbanks later the same evening.

    Finding a white bear amongst an ocean of white ice floes while flying at 200mph turned out to be a challenge. Thankfully the flight crew let Steve and I shoot out an open side door in the back of the plane. Unfortunately, from that position we had no communication with the rest of the crew who where helping each other find the bears by talking through their headsets. In the roughly five hours of searching, five bears where spotted. Through a stroke of good fortune I managed to snap a few shots of one swimming bear. Not exactly the closeup photo I was dreaming of, but considering the challenge of spotting and photographing the bear in the 2-3 seconds that it was visible out the door, I’m grateful for what I did get. The take home lesson was that next time I’ll make sure I can at least hear what the pilot and rest of the crew are saying.

    The greater story behind this mission is the fact that the sea ice these bears depend on for food and habitat is melting. The distance between the year round ice pack and land is growing rapidly and the amount of suitable broken up ice floes between is also diminishing as the water temps rise.

    You can hear a great NPR interview here with Margaret Williams, Director for WWF’s Alaska office. Also from WWF, here is a news release about the initial bears spotted that was the big motivator for making this trip happen.

    Below are a few photos from the trip. You can see more photos from the adventure online here.

    Aerial photo of melting Arctic ice floes in the Chukchi Sea, Alaska. This disappearing sea ice is important habitat for polar bears.

    Aerial photo of melting Arctic ice floes in the Chukchi Sea, Alaska. This disappearing sea ice is important habitat for polar bears.

    Aerial photo of melting Arctic ice floes in the Chukchi Sea, Alaska. This disappearing sea ice is important habitat for polar bears.

    Polar bear biologist Steve Amstrup searches for swimming polar bears out the window of a US Coast Guard C-130 while flying over the Chukchi Sea in the Arctic above Alaska.

    Group photo of the people involved in a cooperative effort to search for swimming polar bears in the Chukchi Sea, Arctic Alaska. The Coast Guard Air Station Kodiak C-130 carried the searchers on the mission.

    Once again, you can see more photos in my stock archive here.

    For my fellow photo enthusiasts: Remember that when shooting aerials it’s very important to have communication with the pilot, especially when trying to photograph hard to find objects! I learned the C-130 is not an ideal air to land photo platform, despite the pilots doing everything they could to help. I wouldn’t hesitate to fly in one again, but my dream shot list might be a closer reflection of what’s realistically possible. The photographs were taken with both a Canon 1D mark III and Canon 5D, lenses ranged from a Canon 70-200mm f/2.8 IS on the long end, to a Sigma 12-24mm for some wide interior shots. The back of the C-130 where I spent most my time is very dark and I appreciated the great high ISO performance of the relatively new 1DmIII camera for shooting portraits there. Any questions, don’t hesitate to ask in the comment box below.

  • Bear hunt in Alaska’s Katmai National Preserve

    Bear hunters it Katmai National Preserve

    After feeding on salmon near the shores of Narrow Cove in Kukaklek Lake for several hours the small female brown bear walked up the bank past the hunters and was shot, first by the hunter/client’s arrow, then by the guide’s high power rifle.

    This was not the first brown bear I’ve seen killed by a trophy hunter, but certainly the strangest ‘hunt’ I’ve experienced. It was late in the fall of 2007 and I was standing with several friends near our tent camp, we had been dropped off in Narrow Cove by floatplane the day before. The goal of our trip was to document a legally permitted bear hunt that takes place in the Katmai National Preserve in Alaska.

    This particular bear hunt has become controversial primarily because the bears being killed are often the very same bears that for many summers have been enjoyed by hundreds, if not thousands, of bear viewers that flock to Katmai. The bears grow comfortable with the presence of both bear viewers and sports fishermen and treat visiting humans with a surprising level of respect. It’s not uncommon to have a brown bear in this area wander within 50ft of a non-disruptive group of visitors. With opening day of the hunting season in Katmai Preserve things are different. Bear viewers with guns. As I personally witnessed, the bears don’t know the difference between bear viewers and bear hunters. This bear walked out of the lake and proceeded to climb up the bank well within 100 yards of the hunters who were moving towards the bear to intersect its path.

    Do the bear hunters in Katmai Preserve practice fair chase? That is a question that our documentation efforts were to answer. For some, the issue of fair chase in this hunt is good reason to discontinue it. There is also an argument that the bear population in the surrounding areas are being compromised by the hunt. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game claims the latter is untrue and state that they believe the number of bears killed is sustainable. Some don’t agree with the ADF&G’s claim and point out that the bears migrate long distances to this spot because it is one of (if not the) last places for bears to fatten up on salmon before their winter hibernation

    Katmai National Preserve bear hunt appears in National Geographic Magazine July 2008 Issue.
    The above photo appeared on the cover of the Anchorage Daily News, and the July issue of National Geographic Magazine contained a short article with the photograph as well. The hunt was was covered by video on KTUU in Alaska as well as a popular YouTube video.

    Speaking for myself only, I would like to make it clear that I do not have contempt for the hunters I photographed. The photographs were not taken to demean anyone involved. The discussions and consideration that the video and photos have prompted is good, and will hopefully foster wise decision making.

    Below are a few photos from the two days I spent on the shores of Narrow Cove on Kukaklek Lake, Katmai National Preserve, Alaska.

    Brown bear sow and cub in Narrow Cove on Kukaklek Lake in Katmai National Preserve

    brown bear cub eats a dead sockeye salmon from the shores of Narrow Cove on Kukaklek Lake in Katmai National Preserve.

    View looking East from Narrow Cove, Kukaklek Lake, Katmai National Preserve.

    Aerial photo of a weather system moving over Kukaklek Lake, Katmai National Preserve, Alaska.

    The slideshow / gallery below features more images from the hunt. Click on the images to visit my online image archive.

    Please type your intelligent opinion or comment below. Angry comments will be moderated.

  • Alaska Aviation Trade Show ’08

    Dreams of flight at the Alaska Aviation Trade Show 2008After first hearing about the Alaska Airmen’s aviation trade show last year I looked forward to attending this spring. Last month I attended, photographed, and had a booth at the show. With such a concentration of aviation types and businesses, it was a good opportunity for me to get to know the aviation market for photography in Alaska a little better.

    The event is all about aviation with lots of airplanes on display ranging from historical and modern military aircraft, helicopters, cargo jets, sea planes, experimental bush planes, and private jets. Dick Rutan tells the story of his non-stop flight around the world in voyager IAlong with the airplanes is a hangar full of manufacturers and dealers of aviation supplies displaying their wares. As a bit of an aviation nut myself I really enjoyed the weekend there in the hangar chatting with other flying enthusiasts and oogling over all the fancy toys that make my cameras look cheap for a change!

    A highlight of the show was hearing Dick Rutan tell the story of his non-stop flight around the world in Voyager I, an aircaft designed by his brother Burt Rutan.

    A few photos from the weekend:




  • AlaskaFolio in The Surfer’s Path

    Alaska surfing photo copyright Scott Dickerson. Magazine layout copyright \"The Surfer\'s Path\"

    The surf has owned me since I was a youngster. Even after I started photographing professionally I never actually thought I would stay on the beach during one of those very rare and precious surf days in my Alaskan hometown. Sure, I loved making photos, but as I told my friends, when pressuring them for some company in the water, ‘the surf waits for nobody.’ It was about half way through last year that I had to break the news to my surfing obsession that yes, I had fallen for another. Now don’t take this wrong, it’s still all about the waves, I just found my hypothermic brain wandering at times, thinking about what an amazing photo I was in. Wondering if I captured an image of this moment, could it be traded for a warmer wetsuit?

    The paragraph above introduces the “AlaskaFolio” – an eight page spread that was published in The Surfer’s Path issue 65 (March/April 2008). This marks the real debut of my Alaskan surfing photos, and I’m proud to have them released in such a respectable surfing magazine with a strong commitment to environmental sustainability.

    I’m eagerly looking forward to more surfing adventures in the ‘Last Frontier’ and may the excruciating decision of whether to surf or photograph live on!

    Alaska surfing photo copyright Scott Dickerson. Magazine layout copyright \"The Surfer\'s Path\"

    Alaska surfing photo copyright Scott Dickerson. Magazine layout copyright \"The Surfer\'s Path\"

    Alaska surfing photo copyright Scott Dickerson. Magazine layout copyright \"The Surfer\'s Path\"

  • 1% For the Planet

     
    One Percent for the planet has a proud new member.

    Scott Dickerson Photography has just joined the ranks of over 700 other businesses who “embrace the notion that the sustainability of the natural environment is fundamental to the sustainability of business” by being members of 1% for the planet.

    My fellow members and I have made a commitment to invest 1% of gross sales to preserve our natural environments. This is 1% of sales before expenses, for every $1,000 that I bill a customer this year $10 of that will be donated to an environmental non-profit of my choice. This is great, I can now quit donating randomly throughout the year and I’ll have a great answer for those phone money requests.

    1% for the Planet has a simple mission statement: “Use market forces to drive positive environmental change by inspiring companies to give.”

    Joining forces with the many respected 1% member companies is exciting and an honor. My customers will now clearly know that I have a real commitment to conservation. It’s also my hope to encourage other business owners to consider joining me in this resolution of giving back to our environment.

    In that spirit I would like to suggest that you take a moment to check out the very nice OnePercentForThePlanet.org website. If you operate a business I hope you will join me, if you operate a non-profit that works to protect and preserve our environment I suggest you look into becoming a member also.

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