Next, I bring you the cutest part of the trip. Jess and I were cracking up at this little baby porcupine who was trying to climb the tree next to our hotel at the Glacier Bay Lodge. I missed the best part when the baby fell up-side-down and was hanging by his feet because I was setting up my tripod. These photos were taken at 10:30pm- right about sunset time so it was dark in the forest.
I never knew a porcupine could steal my heart. |
The baby gave up and went back to the bottom of the tree and waited for its mom. |
Mom porcupine. |
Pelagic cormorants (Phalacrocorax pelagicus). |
A male and female sea otter consorting. The female is resting on an emergent rock. Later in the day, I got foraging on both the female and male. The male mostly stole the female's food. |
The female grooming. |
A humpback whale very close to shore. |
An otter with some common mergansers (Mergus merganser) flying by. |
A humpback whale slapping its tail and startling some sea otters. |
A red squirrel at Bartlett Cove. |
A bald eagle with its chick. |
An old male mountain goat. |
Nesting tufted puffins (Fratercula cirrhata). |
Nesting tufted puffins. |
Nesting tufted puffins. |
Reid glacier from Reid inlet. |
Under the edge of the glacier. |
Glacial ice. |
Water dripping off the glacier. |
Under the edge of the glacier. |
Looking at Reid inlet from the glacier. |
The south side of Reid inlet. |
Rocks on the glacier. |
Water pouring off the glacier. |
The mountains are smooth and bowl-like because the glaciers move through quickly and carve out the land. |
The snow-covered peak is Mount Fairweather, the tallest peak in Glacier Bay. It is over 15,000 feet high. |
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