Posts Tagged ‘Glacier National Park’

Where the Wild Things Are – Part 2

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Without further ado, the second installment from Aaron Teasdale’s adventure deep into Glacier National Park:

On our third day in the wild, we awake early and gather water from an opening where Kintla Creek spills into Kintla Lake. Our goal for the day is several miles deeper into the park: Upper Kintla Lake.

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There isn’t enough snow to ski, so we strap skis to packs and hike. No matter how deep the snow in the surrounding area, a strange snow shadow in this valley perennially limits depths to a few inches. It’s this consistent lack of snow that attracts deer, lots and lots of deer. This veritable venison buffet keeps the wolves here all winter and also explains the grizzlies — no need to hibernate when you can chase wolves off their kills and score free feasts all winter long. So when we find the bottom of this avalanche path packed with delectably skiable snow, it happily waylays us for much of the afternoon.

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There are at least 40 deer feeding on the ground vegetation above and around us, while golden eagles soar through the air overhead. The tracks of my turns are visible on the left of this image. Read more…

Where the Wild Things Are – Montana by XCD

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

Writer and photographer Aaron Teasdale has spent a good chunk of the spring testing out Karhu XCD gear in the wilds of Montana. Recently back from a remote section of Glacier National Park, Aaron and two friends sent along some photos from a trip that was half-ski, half-wildlife, and all adventure. Part one below, part two to follow:

We set out for a remote corner of Glacier National Park on a sunny late winter morning, GPS and camera in hand, ready to record all of the wild and strange things we could find. Ben and I met here a few winters back working on a forest carnivore study; we spent that winter skiing and tracking together, and no place we explored harbored more odd and grisly findings than the area around Kintla Lake. When the opportunity came to ski back in and survey the area for park biologists, we jumped at the chance. Our friend Travis came along (who’s worked as a fire lookout in a tower on one of the peaks in the background — the same tower as Ed Abbey) and we set out for four days in the wilds to see what we could see.

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We ski the sweeping valley-bottom meadows for hours, coming across deer carcasses every few miles. Few people ski into this area, leaving the resident wolf pack with the run of the place. There is also at least one grizzly bear, if not more, here that doesn’t hibernate. We’ve seen its winter tracks before, but found no sign of it on this day.

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Read more…