Taking the kids to meet the bears
Get up-close-and-personal watching these amazing creatures in Alaska
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Great Alaska Adventure Lodge |
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Bears on the runway?
"Routine," says Gerry Winkler, the pilot of our six-passenger Cessna. Routine, that is, when you are landing on the beach at the edge of the 4-million-acre Lake Clark National Park and Preserve — a unique habitat close to the succulent grasses bears eat, the coast where the salmon do a major summer run and the spot where bears make their winter dens.
Welcome to "bear camp," an outpost of the Kenai Peninsula fishing lodge Great Alaska International Adventure Vacations, where families come to hike, fish, raft and, of course, check out the bears.
"We had 60 bears last night," says our 28-year-old guide, Matt Vermillion, who gave up real estate and a cubicle in Virginia for Alaska. Today, from a platform 15 feet above the ground, we've got an amazing view into a bear nursery where a 3-year-old cub (all 300 pounds of her) snoozes about 50 yards from us, while a sow the guides have nicknamed Bossy and her younger cub, Lucky, graze nearby. A brown bear so blonde they call her Sugar plays in the meadow. Max Weinberg, 12, his friend Miles Singer, 13, and I are watching the "bear nursery" from a platform 15 feet off the ground at Horn Creek, which feeds into Chinitna Bay, the snow-covered peaks of the Aleutian Range reflected in its shimmering water.
It appears we've picked the perfect time to visit. Vermillion, who's called Verm, explains there are more bears than there have been in years, including three sets of triplets and three sets of twins all born this spring — some no bigger than a Black Lab pup. The ash from the active volcano on Mount Redoubt, about 80 miles north, appears to be driving the bears slightly south — right into "our" meadow. "Every day is a different show," says Caprice Stoner, a 44-year-old grandmother from Georgia, who teaches skiing in the winter. "You never know what you are going to see."
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Eileen Ogintz Max Weinberg, 12, and Miles Singer, 13, watch for bears in the meadow from a perch 15 feet above the ground at a "bear camp" at the edge of an Alaska national park. |
Our home for the night is a very comfortable yurt on a platform, complete with two cots and comforters, wind-up flashlights and very clean portable toilets plastered with Vermillion's excellent bear photos, including one of a bear dancing in a creek. In the dining tent, we're served chicken cordon bleu, salad, fresh rolls, potatoes and carrots, even wine courtesy of Dylan Hartford, the 19-year-old wilderness-loving culinary student from Washington State who confesses he, "didn't even know jobs like this existed," before he got offered this opportunity.
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Eileen Ogintz These yurts at Great Alaska's Bear Camp are safe and cozy, complete with quilts and cots. |
This is the wilderness, after all, not a zoo or theme park. But in the 12 years the camp has been here, there's never been a problem. Still, anything could happen. "We are diligent every minute of the day," says Stoner. "We want to have a benign encounter every time. We don't chase them. We don't run from them. We don't cross the creek into their habitat, either."
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I can watch these amazing creatures, some 1,000 pounds, for hours as they snooze, graze in the grass, splash in Horn Creek and tumble and wrestle in the meadow — just like kids would. Three sets of sows are in the meadow with their twins, just like moms would head to the playground on a summer afternoon.
And what a playground! Crystal clear water, majestic, snow-covered mountain peaks, wildflowers (purple irises) and nutritious salt grass.
"Bear watching is boring," declares Miles.
"Until something happens," Verm says.
Just like life.
For more Taking the Kids, visit takingthekids.com and also follow "taking the kids" on twitter.com, where Eileen Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments.
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