Archive for the ‘adventure’ Category

Kitesurfing Homer Alaska

August 22nd, 2007 · 8 Comments

Kitesurfing Alaska - Trace Carlos ripping.

“Did you see those guys parachuting with waterskis?! Or where they kayaking with a hang glider?”

Kitesurfing Alaska - Tom Fredericks catching big air.Kitesurfing is a real attention getter, rubbernecker and comment generator. The first time I saw someone kitesurfing a few years ago I didn’t know what to say either, I just knew I wanted to find someone to blurt out some excited nonsense to: “I saw this guy and he was doing this thing on the water with a parasail and ripping super fast and flying up in the air spinning and then I don’t know what else but it looked incredible.”

It may have become commonplace in many coastal towns in America by now, but when kitesurfers are spotted in Alaska they still arouse outbursts of excitement. Lots of people in my hometown have surprised me with descriptions of UFO’s seen last weekend when they were walking their dog on the beach. I usually have the pleasure of asking them if they saw the little floating head with the big camera in the water as well. So far I seem to go mostly unnoticed, or they don’t hear my question because they are talking over me trying to explain this crazy thing they saw.

Kitesurfing in Homer Alaska - Trace Carlos.So what is kitesurfing? Basically it’s flying a huge kite that is so powerful that it can drag you around, up, and down. The kite has 4 lines attached allowing you to control its flight, it has a ‘control bar’ which you steer with, and it attaches to a harness you wear that. The surfing part happens when you get out on the water and stand on your board which is a cross between a wakeboard and a surfboard. The kite then drags you to and fro, lifting you off the water when you fly it certain ‘zones’ above you. This tangle of lines and fabric, which easily fits in a backpack, launched into a 15 mph wind will amaze anyone with its Hummer like horsepower. One of the greatest and most magical things about kitesurfing is this incredible power available without the consumption of fossil fuels; a non-motorized sport that can thrill even a diehard motorhead. Kiting brings a whole other level of excitement with it’s reliance on wind, especially when you sense that maybe your not in total control of the situation- similar to riding in your girlfriend’s car when the roads are icy.

Kitesurfer Tom Fredericks in Homer Alaska.These photos were taken in Homer, Alaska; where every sunny summer day brings a daybreeze onshore creating ideal kitesurfing conditions. A growing number of the locals have started making the most of this setting, allowing me some good opportunities to shoot Alaskan kitesurfing photos. We have been discussing plans to pioneer a few of the countless ‘unkited’ locations around Alaska, so stay tuned for trip reports from the Kite Alaska team. If you are interested in getting involved post a comment below.

Surfing Yakutat, Alaska

August 14th, 2007 · 13 Comments

Surfing Yakutat Alaska

Surf in my Alaskan hometown is a seasonal event. Seven months of the year our surfboards would sit collecting dust if we chose to sit and wait for the weather patterns to shift and the swells to surge our way again. This spring with a long summer of no surf approaching, I was excited to get the call from Don (a.k.a. Iceman)-  Alaska Airlines is having a sale . . surf trip to Yakutat at the end of May!

Surf buggy in Yakutat Alaska Some creative thinking brought about a plan to send Iceman’s four wheeler down to Yakutat on the Alaska marine highway ferry with our 12 surfboards. The 10 of us would follow along a week later in the jet. This worked out great, saving us hundreds of dollars in excess baggage charges and as a major bonus we had a beach buggy waiting for us in Yakutat. Iceman put his carpentry to work and slammed together an African-safari style rack for the wheeler that made it possible to put all those boards on the poor thing and still drive it onto the ferry.We were very excited when we found the four wheeler in Yakutat still upright despite it’s top heaviness from all our surfboards on the surf-safari rack.

Once in Yakutat we rented a suburban, piled in as many surfers as would fit, then crammed a couple more in, then exhaled all together and slammed the doors. Thirty painful minutes, and 30,000+ jarring potholes later we burst from the suburban at our beachside resort  a soggy stand of trees with a nice spongy undergrowth of moss. Surfers walk the beach in Yakutat, Alaska.We later learned that notoriously rainy Yakutat had actually broken a rainfall record the day before our arrival. The next couple hours were spent trying to find dry wood for a fire, before we finally gave up and used the four wheeler gas instead. With our domestic chores out of the way, we scrambled into our wetsuits, waxed our surfboards, and headed for the water.

John Langham Surfing Yakutat Alaska So began a four day surfing marathon. I am still in shock at the amount of surfing a few mid-fifty year old diehards can do. Of course, they may credit it to the handfuls of anti-inflammatories they would eat for desert each night, but pills and whiskey aside, that was still astounding feat of surfing dedication. There must be something about Alaskan surfers and the challenges that they must overcome to surf the last frontier that drives them to another level of addiction. I used my photography excuse to take rest breaks on several occasions while my surfing buddies/models just kept going, and going, and then it would get too dark to photograph, and they are still surfing. This is really saying something during an Alaskan summer where the sun doesn’t even set until after 10pm.photo with view of sunset and Mt. St. Elias in Yakutat, Alaska.

The surf was great for our entire stay, each day the wave faces shifted between chest high to a few feet overhead depending on the stage of the tide. We felt fortunate with very little rain and even some sunshine during our stay. The views of Mt. St. Elias were few and fleeting, but I did manage to get a couple photographs of it one gorgeous evening as we walked the beach to our campsite at sunset.

Iceman surfing Yakutat AlaskaFor most of us, this was our first surfing trip to Yakutat, but I doubt it will be the last. Everyone had a great time, and I don’t think I’m alone looking forward to the next time the phone rings and Iceman says Pack your bags, Surf trip to Yakutat- Yahooo!

If you have your own story to tell or questions about surfing in Yakutat (or Alaska in general) leave a comment below.

To see images from the trip - click here for a Surfing Yakutat, Alaska photo gallery.

Togiak commercial herring fishery

August 2nd, 2007 · 1 Comment

Photo of Togiak herring in seine net. Bering Sea, Bristol bay, Alaska

It’s summer time in Alaska, and I’ve been busy enjoying the season. With so many great photo shoots this summer, the ScottDickerson.com blog hasn’t been getting much attention. It’s August now and I’ve found some time to write about a photo shoot that took me out to Alaska’s Bering Sea this spring.

Cessna 175 tail dragger with Alaskan bush wheelsFor the last three years I have been joining a fish spotter friend, Brad Heil, on a two-week adventure out to Bristol Bay in the Bering Sea. We pack our camping gear (and my photography gear) into Brad’s Cessna 175 bush plane and take off from the Homer airport heading West out across Cook Inlet, over the active volcanoes in the Alaska Range, along the shoreline of Illiamna Lake, over the twisting rivers that drain down into Bristol bay, and along the coast line to the Northwest corner of Bristol Bay. Togiak Bay, and it’s neighboring bays are our home for a couple weeks, tent-camping on the beach and spending the days flying around this wild bit of the earth.

Photo of Togiak commercial herring fisheryBrad’s job is to tell the fisherman where the schools of herring are and direct them when setting their nets around the fish. My job during the Togiak herring fishery is to prevent us from having a mid-air collision with other spotter planes flying in circles above the boats. But, we all know the real reason I’m there. If I have to help Brad dodge other airplanes to stay alive, I’ll do it, but mostly I’m obsessed with shooting aerial photos.

Growing up in Alaska, I spent my summers working on commercial fishing boats, and have always loved flying in small planes. So, put me in a bush plane, flying above a commercial fishery with a camera in hand . . . life is looking pretty good.

photo of Togiak herring sac roeFor those unfamiliar with Alaska’s commercial herring sac roe fisheries, I will try and explain the basics. In the spring millions of pacific herring come to the Togiak bay area from somewhere out in the depths of the Bering Sea. They come to spawn in the shallow waters in and around Togiak Bay which is in the Northwest edge of Bristol Bay. The female herring develop large egg sacs in their bellies prior to spawning, and some people (mostly Japanese) like to take these eggs and put them in their own bellies. This photo at left shows Brad holding an egg sac taken from a Togiak herring.

Commercial fisherman during Togiak herring fishery in Bristol Bay, Alaska. The fishermen use boats called seiners to catch the fish. The boats are named as such because they use seines (type of net). The fishermen do their best with the help of their spotter pilot to wrap their seine (net) around a school of herring. Once they have the fish in their net the tender (bigger boat with large storage capacity) sends a skiff over to scoop out a sample of the herring which are analyzed to determine the percentage of the fish that are females with ‘ripe’ roe in them. If this number is not high enough the fish processing company will not buy the fish so the fisherman must let them go. Aerial photo of Togiak herring fisheryIf the percentage is good then the tender boat comes alongside the fishing boat and uses a pump to move the fish from the net into big refrigerated water tanks on the tender. A good set in the Togiak fishery can be as big as 800,000lbs of herring. The fish are chilled on board the tender as they are taken to a floating processor where the roe is extracted, packaged, and frozen before being loaded ontos very larger tramper vessel that will deliver the roe to markets in Japan.

I could go on for pages about this fishery and the adventures I’ve had with Brad out there on the Bering Sea, so if you want to know more ask in the comments and I’ll be happy to share. If you want to read more about commercial fishing see my blog post after I photographed the Sitka sac roe fishery

Click here to see a photo gallery with some of my favorites from the commercial fishery.

Surfing Alaska in winter

May 5th, 2007 · 33 Comments

Surfing Alaska - cold water winter surf

Surfing in Alaska

What comes to mind when you read that? I bet there are a wide variety of reactions. Air temperatures well below zero (typically -5 to 30 Fahrenheit), water temps from 36 to 45 Fahrenheit and ideally, a nice offshore wind. Some of you will think it’s reckless endangerment of life, some will think it sounds miserable and wonder why people do things like this to their bodies. Hopefully there is a few of you that think about how you are going to come up here to see what it feels like firsthand. If you do make a splash in Alaskan waters in the winter, be prepared to do all your feeling in the first 5 minutes, because you probably won’t be able to feel your extremities for long.

For some of us who grew up in Alaska the idea of surfing here doesn’t seem crazy at all. When I was young I saw people surfing in pictures, looked out at the ocean in front of me, and that was all it took. I borrowed a ratty old wetsuit, layered up with the long johns, put on some waterproof commercial fishing gloves, and had mom drop me off at the beach. Since those early days my equipment has evolved, but not enough. I still get so cold that I shake uncontrollably and can hardly sit on the board. I feel myself losing cognitive function as I franticly wait for that last wave I have to catch before running to the car. I use my teeth to take off my gloves since my hands have lost muscle control and all feeling. In my old truck without an automatic transmission (or a heater that worked) I would have trouble driving home because my shaky legs couldn’t operate the clutch and gas peddle smoothly. It’s an interesting show watching a wet and hypothermic surfer struggle to get from the freezing ocean to a hot shower as quickly as possible.

Alaska Surfing buddies Don McNamara and Mike McCune One of the best things about surfing in Alaska is the great spirit out on the water. Some would say it’s because misery loves company. Whatever it is, we make quick friendships sitting out there in the water, freezing together as we wait for that perfect swell. It might be just because there are so few of us that we band together due to a preservation instinct. I think there is also an element that comes when you are in the water shaking with hypothermia, you definitely hope that anyone around is your friend, and will help you get out of your wetsuit if you are too cold to open the zipper yourself. We still call each other when the waves are firing, and try desperately to get at least one other person to share the experience with us. I must say though, I’ve heard rumors of crowds in one surfing spot in southeast Alaska.

Scott photographing surfing in Alaska For a few winters I’ve been throwing the camera in the car on my way to the beach, and until last winter that’s mostly where it stayed. It’s difficult to surf and photograph on the same trip to the beach. If I go surfing first, then my hands are numb, my body shaking, and the only thing on my mind is a hot shower. If I photograph first, then I get too cold standing on the beach and the last thing I want to do when I’m that cold is jump in the water. So needless to say, a lot of amazing surf sessions passed undocumented. This last winter though, I just couldn’t stand it anymore. I was finding myself out in the water on picture perfect days wishing I was on the beach with the camera. It can just be so overwhelmingly dramatic surfing here sometimes that I had to do something about it. So this winter I started leaving the surfboard on the car and just photographing. I think it paid off, though I missed some great waves, I’ve got photos to show how nice they were. And I’ve got some happy surfing buddies. Sure they missed my company in the water, but nobody minds seeing a photo of themselves getting barreled outside the ice pack with snow covered mountains in the background. (Thanks to Donna Rae Faulkner for the photo of me photographing surfers on the icy beach)

Surfing Alaska photo - Cold water and snow covered mountainsThis last winter offered some great surfing photo opportunities with lot’s of ice on the beaches and some really nice waves. I spent most of the best surf days standing on the beach bundled up wearing a fur hat with cameras and bags hanging off me. These photo shoots are not particularly technically challenging, it is mostly about being there at the right time and knowing the subject. The photographic challenges mostly involve keeping the cameras warm enough to operate and having enough batteries to make it through a good session. I’ve started experimenting with a surf housing, but learning to use this housing in the surf with the temperatures and inconsistent surf near my home have stopped me from really learning to use it successfully. I hope to change that this year, learning to use the housing and figuring out the gear I need this summer when I can feel my fingers and the stakes aren’t so high. Mostly when I’m photographing surfing in Alaska I’m trying to focus on what makes this special. people are surfing gorgeous green waves the world-round, so what makes Alaska so special? I try and show those elements that make surfing in Alaska unique - ice, snow covered mountains, snowy beaches, uncrowded breaks . . .

See a photo gallery of Alaskan surfing photos here.

UPDATE 11/27/08:  I’ve launched a little hobby blog for sharing more session reports, location info, photos and stories about surfing in Alaska. Check it out here -  www.SurfAlaska.net

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