
The Black-legged Kittiwakes hang out all over the icebergs in the Arctic.
Views of Sequim, the Olympic Peninsula. . .and beyond
The Black-legged Kittiwakes hang out all over the icebergs in the Arctic.
So this is a Brunnich’s Guillemot chick landing in the water after jumping or often after being PUSHED off the CLIFF because it’s time to migrate to Greenland.
Here is dad who flew right after him to protect him from the Kittiwakes and Glaucous Gulls who swoope right in to munch the defenseless chicks. THe chick black head can be seen to the right of dad. He was a good dad, he reared up and snapped at all the gulls trying to get the chick. He then hid the chick under the cliff wall at the waters edge while he continued the battle. Then he acted like he could find the chick until the gulls went away (we were all devastated thinking the chick had drowned). Suddenly when all was clear he went and got the chick.
Chicks, we were told, can’t fly for almost a month. Chick and dad will swim to Greenland together!
Here’s a shot of our puffin’s cousins in the Arctic. The colony was huge. BUt it was SOOOOOO HARD to get a shot of them from a Zodiac. The buggers are fast and small. It didn’t help that it was our 1st zodiac excursion of the trip.
I loved this shot when I saw it. We were hiking and it looked like this boulder had rolled down the glacier (which was actually on the other side of the bay.)
That “lil” boulder…was bigger than a bus!
Bears were photographed in the high arctic at above 82 degrees N at the ice edge.
That’s what polar bears are called in German… I think that is perfect!
This bear was seen at the edge of the permanent ice edge at about 82 degrees north–that’s WAY up there. But she looked healthy and was very curious about us.
We were fortunate to encounter 22 bears. All but one seemed very healthy.
This mom and cubs were feeding on the very last remains of a whale. The cubs were thought to be about 1 year old.