Looks like our flight is not gonna be here to pick us up, so I’ll try to steal this weak wi-if signal and post a few details of our bear hunt.
The most spoiled I’ve ever been on a bear hunt. Lindell Boats heard I had a tag and called to see if we’d be interested in staying on the boat they had harbored nearby. As much as I’m gonna get crap for living on a 42’ boat for a week, I enjoyed the comforts of not sleeping in a small tent in this wet climate.
Jim “Hawken” Baichtal is the one who encouraged me to apply for Alaska black bear again. I’ve never bear hunted this island, so the adventure of exploring new places was alluring. He was equally supportive of the Lindell invitation. We’d use his skiff to run around the bays and islands looking for bears. He vowed he was only shooting a “special” bear, which given his collection of bears 20”+ black bear skulls, it seems he’d not be removing his Hawken from the case.
As with most Alaska trips, weather adds more suspense to the logistics. After deplaning in Ketchikan, Taquan Air told us it was too rough to land, so we’d better get to the ferry terminal, quick. They hauled us down there and we got on board with a few minutes to spare.
With me on this trip was Jace, our videographer who I first met on the docks of Petersburg while he was an intern with the USFS. When I asked for volunteers to film this hunt, Jace was first to respond. He lives SE Alaska as much as I do. And, he’s fully aware of the conditions he’d be asked to film in. Nothing like a big blast of salt water spray or a Tongass downpour to decommission a few thousand dollars worth of camera gear.
The most spoiled I’ve ever been on a bear hunt. Lindell Boats heard I had a tag and called to see if we’d be interested in staying on the boat they had harbored nearby. As much as I’m gonna get crap for living on a 42’ boat for a week, I enjoyed the comforts of not sleeping in a small tent in this wet climate.
Jim “Hawken” Baichtal is the one who encouraged me to apply for Alaska black bear again. I’ve never bear hunted this island, so the adventure of exploring new places was alluring. He was equally supportive of the Lindell invitation. We’d use his skiff to run around the bays and islands looking for bears. He vowed he was only shooting a “special” bear, which given his collection of bears 20”+ black bear skulls, it seems he’d not be removing his Hawken from the case.
As with most Alaska trips, weather adds more suspense to the logistics. After deplaning in Ketchikan, Taquan Air told us it was too rough to land, so we’d better get to the ferry terminal, quick. They hauled us down there and we got on board with a few minutes to spare.
With me on this trip was Jace, our videographer who I first met on the docks of Petersburg while he was an intern with the USFS. When I asked for volunteers to film this hunt, Jace was first to respond. He lives SE Alaska as much as I do. And, he’s fully aware of the conditions he’d be asked to film in. Nothing like a big blast of salt water spray or a Tongass downpour to decommission a few thousand dollars worth of camera gear.