The Weather Can Change

The Weather Can Change

We’d been clamming across from Redoubt for two days and it was time to pack up our gear and head several hours over to Seward. We were going to go halibut fishing on my friend, Ralph’s 28 foot Bayliner cabin cruiser for two days out of Resurrection Bay. The cruiser was fittingly called the “Think or Thwim”, the same name as his father’s commercial fishing boat I worked on out of Bristol Bay, Alaska in 1985.

The Right Weapon For The Job

The Right Weapon For The Job

“The sound was like two rocks grinding together as the bear drug his canines across my scalp.” ~ Brown Bear Attack Survivor Wild bears are scary – period. They are not the well-kept, docile bears you find at the zoo that pace back and forth in their enclosure, waiting...
I Finally Saw A Bear

I Finally Saw A Bear

In July of 2009, a friend and I were camped not far from a salmon hot spot near Cooper’s Landing, Alaska, on the Kenai Peninsula. We’d just stowed our portable gas grill and were unpacking our sleeping bags for the night when an ambulance came flying by, sirens wailing. I looked at my friend, who cocked his eyebrows as he said, “Either there’s been a wreck, or someone got hammered by a bear.”

My Dad Doesn’t Hunt

My Dad Doesn’t Hunt

I spent most of my days after school and in the summers exploring the mountainside where we lived. That’s where I came alive. It’s where I learned to hear God speak to me. I didn’t have to compare myself with anyone; I could be whoever I wanted to be and always be the best at it. I wore hiking boots, ragged blue jeans, and a flannel shirt, and carried my BB gun, a pocket knife, and a hand-drawn hunting license I pinned to my back just to prove I belonged in this wilderness environment.

The Wave

The Wave

On July 9, 1958, one of the most remarkable events in recorded history occurred in a place called Lituya Bay, Alaska. A massive tsunami washed across the bay, wiping out everything in its path. At its peak, the wave stretched 1,720 feet toward the sky – 250 feet higher than the Empire State Building. Entire forests were annihilated in its wake and land stripped of soil down to sheer bedrock.