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Brown Bears
of Katmai National Park in Autumn

The Brown Bears of Katmai remains one of the most popular of our summer Alaska trips.
We also offer an increasingly sought-after opportunity to photograph these magnificent animals in the splendor of fall.

Katmai National Park has become world renowned as the place to go to photograph brown
bears. These large variants of the grizzly bear (found mainly in the interior) have been protected within the park for
generations and, with proper "people management" by the National Park Service, have grown accustomed to the human
presence. This allows the chance to photograph them without significant influence on their behavior.

The midsummer salmon run that draws Katmai's bears to the Brooks River Falls finishes by
early August, and the bears that have gorged themselves during the previous few weeks move back into the surrounding
countryside for a change of diet, feasting instead on ground squirrels, roots, tubers and berries. But, in late August and
early September, the bears utilize the feeder streams and the nearby oxbow pools to catch salmonnow bright red at
the height of their breeding cyclein a last effort to fatten up before winter.

Even if you have been to Katmai in the midsummer season, you can photograph your favorite
bears now transformed with thicker fur in preparation for winter. We'll stay at Brooks Lodge as we do on our summer trip.
It’s a wonderful time of year to visit the park.

This tour may be taken in conjunction with our Denali National Park in Autumn tour and will
give you a great overview of Alaska before it "shuts down for the season.” Or, choose to join our Brown Bears of Katmai National Park in Summer tour.



Day 1 (Sep 12) We meet in our Anchorage hotel lobby for orientation and dinner. (D)

Day 2 We fly to King Salmon and then to Brooks Camp, our base in Katmai National Park. After a
talk about bear safety, we begin our encounters with the wilderness. (BLD)

Days 35 Our days are spent in serious pursuit of photography with fishing bears as our primary
goal. We are able to get quite close to these massive carnivores (they are habituated to humans in the park), but
will maintain a reasonably safe distance. Most are seen singly or in pairs, and we may be fortunate enough to see a
mother and cubs or some very large males. In fall the bears are more widely distributed along the lower Brooks River
and have thicker, more luxuriant coats. The salmon are also a bright redechoing the fall color changes that have
taken place in the surrounding vegetation. Informal discussions about capturing dramatic action and solving
exposure problems will be held at the lodge and out in the field. (BLD)

Day 6 After a final morning of bear photography, we return to Anchorage via King Salmon. (BLD)

Day 7 (Sep 18) Participants may depart at any time today.

Please note: Cabin accommodations at Brooks Lodge require multiple occupancy. Couples may be asked to reside separately unless two couples traveling together request accommodations in the same cabin.

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