| First view of the coastal mountains in AK. |
| We're guessing that this is Wrangell-St Elias Area. Where ever it is, the mountains looked huge, very snowy and very remote. |
| View from the plane after landing at ANC. |
| View from the B terminal. You are really IN the mountains in Anchorage. |
| For our first outing in AK we stopped at Potter Marsh which is just a few minutes south of town. A long boardwalk provides great views of wildlife and access into a beautiful spot. |
| We had the whole place to ourselves, an uncommon occurrence on a Sunday morning in the summer, but in the fall almost all the tourists are gone. |
| Trumpeter Swans are frequent visitors to the marsh. We also saw Bald Eagles, Jays, Chickadees, a Shrike, Woodepeckers, lots of ducks, river otters and moose. |
| It rained quite a bit but Layton was a good sport. |
| Grandpa walking in Kincaid Park, a large park near the airport. |
| Layton and I soaking in fall color and constant drizzle. |
| Devils Club. |
| Didn't see much in here except a few small songbirds but it was still a neat spot. |
| Moose at the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center, a several hundred acre park, at the beginning of Turnagain Arm about an hour south of Anchorage. This was a perfect place to familiarize us with the locals. |
| Baby Moose |
| Musk Ox |
| Perhaps the best way to see a Grizzly is from the safety of your car, on the other side of large fence. |
| Grandpa takes a photo op on the way to Seward. |
| In Seward it had been raining for almost two weeks straight so the road the Exit Glacier, something I'd hoped to see, was closed because of flooding. |
| View of Seward from Nash Road. |
| Layton displays a feather on the shore of Resurrection Bay. |
| Resurrection Bay |
| Lots of boats in the Seward harbor. |
| Leaving the harbor for Kenai Fjords National Park on our wildlife cruise with Major Marine in Seward. |
| Sea Otter chillaxin' in Resurrection Bay. |
| All the whales had left the area a few weeks earlier but the scenery was spectacular and we still saw some wildlife. |
| Psyche was high despite the 40 degree wet conditions. |
| Stellar Sea Lions are on the decline so it's great to able to still seem them. |
| These puppies get over 500 lbs! |
| Iceberg floating in a lake at the base of a glacier we couldn't see because of the low clouds. |
| Down time at the Best Western. |
| Coastal rain forest above Seward. |
| Lush furry trees. |
| Horned Puffin at the Alaska Sea Life Center. This was a perfect place to learn about the marine locals. |
| Pakak and Mitir are baby Walrus that were rescued somewhere up north in July. |
| Tern Lake, between Anchorage and Seward. |
| Torrential runoff in a stream outside Whittier. |
| First view of Denali (Mt. McKinley 20,320 ft.) in the Alaska Range. |
| Our spirits were pretty high since the temps were nice and it was the first time we'd seen the sun since arriving in Alaska. |
| We felt pretty lucky that we could actually see the summit since the weather had been pretty dismal thus far. |
| Laeser Boys |
| Always smiling. |
| It's a long drive from Anchorage to the Denali Park entrance... We drove about 1200 miles during our week long trip. |
| The park HQ was a ghost town and all the hotels/services were closed for the winter. |
| In comparison to Southeast Alaska the trees in Denali are short, because it's much drier. It's an almost desolate landscape. |
| We saw almost no wildlife except a few Gray Jays, Magpies, Northwest Crows, Ravens and Boreal Chickadees. |
| When Denali does appear from behind the clouds you can see how really massive of a mountain it is. |
| Grandpa looking for squirrel and moose. |
| At Savage Creek Layton and I found a craggy outcrop that had a few nice looking boulders, some with chalk. We scrambled to the summit of a neat tower feature for a brief climbing experience. |
| Back in the Anchorage area we went back to birding. Hay Flats near Wasila (Sarah Palin's hometown) had some great scenery. |
| In the forest above Palmer Hay Flats. |
| Layton kept a journal and had to do some homework while out of school for the week. |
| Hatcher Pass above Palmer |
| We opted NOT to take a hike here... |
| The scenic Little Susitna River which runs along the Hatcher Pass Road. |
| Jim Lake |
| Alaskan Cottonwood |
| At the Eagle River Nature Center... |
| Layton being a good sport at the Eagle River Nature Center. Here we saw some Coho Salmon, learned about the Alaskan native animal tracks and scat. |
| On our last day we awoke to an inch of fresh snow at the Golden Lion Best Western but... |
| ...by 10am the skies cleared and we took a hike above the Turnagain Arm in the Chugach Mountains south of Anchorage at McHugh Creek. |
| The fall colors in the sun were amazing in the Chugach. |
| View of the Kenai Peninsula looking across the Turnagain Arm from the Chugach's McHugh Creek trail. |
| Moose scat, maybe, with a BIG brown bear footprint in it. Gross but kind of cool... |
| This State Park is the third largest in America with over 1/2 million acres. That's a pretty nice backyard. |
| Layton scrambling over some neat glacially carved slopes. |
| Low tide at Turnagain Arm. |