Brown bears are skilled hunters, and Katmai National Park & Preserve provides a vast, unspoiled area for them to travel in search of food. To prepare for the coming winter, the bears of Katmai have watched and learned the habits of sockeye salmon.
In the past weeks, the place to be has been Moraine and Funnel Creeks, located in the Katmai Preserve. These two creeks run in the high tundra, at eleven hundred feet, where the landscape has been carved into smooth slopes and gentle ridges by ancient glaciers. The salmon begin arriving in early August after an impressive 100-mile journey up the serpentine Alagnak River and through Kukaklek Lake. Here, the brown bears await the salmon's arrival. In this picture, a brown #bear makes intimidating eye contact while chasing salmon. Photo by Rebecca Wilks (www.sharetheexperience.org)
— at Katmai National Park & Preserve.
In the past weeks, the place to be has been Moraine and Funnel Creeks, located in the Katmai Preserve. These two creeks run in the high tundra, at eleven hundred feet, where the landscape has been carved into smooth slopes and gentle ridges by ancient glaciers. The salmon begin arriving in early August after an impressive 100-mile journey up the serpentine Alagnak River and through Kukaklek Lake. Here, the brown bears await the salmon's arrival. In this picture, a brown #bear makes intimidating eye contact while chasing salmon. Photo by Rebecca Wilks (www.sharetheexperience.org)
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