Sunday, December 21, 2008

On the horizon

It's only moments before the sunrise. The sun is just below the horizon. We had been waiting to see the sun and clear skies. Because clouds = no experiments. Let's see..we can already see the first rays making the clouds blush on the top of Mt. Sanford.
Pull up a chair on the deck to watch the sunrise. Enjoy the steaming cup of coffee and the steaming river in -10 F.
Almost there. We can already see that the sun is hiding behind Wrangell. Once it makes it up in the sky, it'll make everything nice and toasty. Or not, you know. Stay tuned for the grand entrance.

Posted by Picasa

Morning coffee

As the sun starts giving warmth to the frozen earth, the flowing river wakes up and starts breathing. We watched this work of nature comfortably sitting close to a fire in the breakfast room with the morning coffee in hand and contemplated if the blue skies were there to stay.



Posted by Picasa

Riverview

This is the place I typically stay at in Alaska. The Copper River flows right next to the B&B, hence the name - Riverview. The river wasn't yet frozen in October. I am sure it has, by now. When it does freeze, sometimes the wolves like to cross it, so I was glad it was October. The first view here is looking across the river at the layers of shrubs and trees, each with a distinct shade. The second photograph is a log cabin at the B&B.

Posted by Picasa

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Last rays

Winter evenings in Alaska are special. The sun is usually hanging low in the sky almost all day. When it sets, the last rays turn the mountains pink. It's the most beautiful thing you'd have ever seen. Here is Mt. Sanford on one such evening from an earlier trip. This time alas, I didn't get to view this. Look how different it looks from the previous post.

Posted by Picasa

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Wrangell Mountains

A few minutes later I was looking at the magnificent Wrangell Mountains nat'l park in the distance. Mt. Drum and Mt. Sanford. These are the mountains I was looking forward to viewing from different angles for the next seven days. However, the weather decided to get in the way for the most of my trip, battering us with heavy snow fall, cloudy skies, and fluctuating temperatures. I had posted on these views back in this, this and this entries. Winter is really the best time to come here.


Posted by Picasa

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Frosted

In Alaska, the air is dry. Any bit of moisture freezes instantly, and makes the dry trees and shrubs look Christmas-y. This was my last stop before Glenallen. A lone restaurant in a long, and otherwise lonely stretch.



These are the last of the Chugach mountains/Matanuska Glacier arms seen from the Glenn Highway. Only a few miles away lie the Wrangell Mountain National Park, where my destination was.

Posted by Picasa

Saturday, October 25, 2008

In the middle of nowhere

Alaskans are amazing people. They live in the middle of nowhere. Literally. You will see houses completely out of the blue, in the middle of nowhere, at least 2-3 hours away from any major city, with no electricity or running water. Living like this is a choice, not a necessity for most of these people. It always amazes me. It seems to me like all you can do there is to live, and not much else. Generators for electricity, water is from a nearby stream,
or by melting snow, and hunting and fishing are main sources of food. Rough life, but the reward ? The beauty and serenity offered by the mountains and the calming snow.
Would you like to live here ?
Posted by Picasa

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Matanuska glacier

Okay, so one would think that if I have travelled on this road about 5-6 times before, I would know if you could see a glacier from it. But then one would be wrong. May be I was sleeping during this particular patch on my other trips, but I just came up on this glacier, and was utterly surprised. I knew there was a leg of the Matanuska glacier somewhere here, but I didn't know you could see it from the road! Or may be I did and have forgotten. In any case, here is the Matanuska glacier, as seen from the Glenn Hwy, in all its glory.



Posted by Picasa

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Shades of Fall

It's fall. In Alaska, the trees are already sans leaves. Everywhere, only 3 colors and their shades are visible. White, Blue, and Brown. Occasionally though, you see a red house propped up in the middle of all that brown.


Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

On the road again

This is the first time I've had the opportunity to stop wherever and whenever I wanted on the road from Anchorage to Gakona and take pictures. So I took advantage of it. Although at one point I had to make a conviction not to stop until and unless I see the "scenic view" road sign. Yeah that didn't last long. So anyway, these are taken on hwy 1/Glenn hwy. At one point I saw someone else taking a picture and that made for a nice frame.


Posted by Picasa

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Ice fjord of Ilulissat

During my stay in Greenland, I took at trip to a northern Greenlandic town called Ilulissat with a polish friend. It is one of the most beautiful places I have ever been to. The town is situated near an ice fjord. The Greenlandic ice cap near Ilulissat is one of the fastest retreating glaciers in the world (3 meters/hour!!!), which creates floating ice bergs in the fjord. Above picture is approaching Ilulissat passing over the icebergs.

We camped near Sermermiut, which is a place to see the retreating glacier. The glacier used to be all the way out here and since it is retreating so fast, people would hike up to these benches on top of the surrounding mountains and watch the glacier calve. Now, there are only icebergs, but you can hear the calving among the icebergs breaking the silence from time to time.



When I showed some of my pictures to someone living in Greenland for a few years, he was surprised to see water here. When he visited here last (not so long ago), he saw only the glacier and it was impossible to take a boat in this place. Now, we saw waterways like this among the glaciers (it would not be wise to take a boat in there though!). A recent BBC article expresses concerns over melting ice caps.

Thursday, July 27, 2006

Flowers in Greenland


It's true. There ARE flowers in Greenland. This is the national flower of Greenland, known as Niviarsiaq, meaning 'young girls'. This is the season to see them. They grow everywhere they find some land and water, even in between rocks and ice, defying all odds.


Another widespread variety - Harebell.

..and Arctic Cotton, also known as Cotton-grass.

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Ice Castle

This is my first post on Greenland, or more correctly, Kalallit Nunaat, as it is known in Greenlandic/Kalallisut. The 81% of the area in Greenland is covered by ice, known as the ice cap. It is one of THE coolest sights. This is on the western border of the ice cap, known as Russel's glacier. We basically just sat there and saw the pieces of ice falling from the glacier into the river flowing below and wondering about global warming. I was here last summer also, and the only part that remained same was this, which I like to call the ice castle. Most other ice features that I remembered, disappeared into the river below.
Changing this blog from Alaska to 'The cooler side of life' to include pictures from my trips to other cold places also. This will mainly have pictures from Alaska and Greenland and may be some pictures taken at other places during winter.

Monday, July 17, 2006

Waiting for Spring ?


These tea tables and chairs remain all-year around near the bank of the Copper river flowing in the backyard of the B&B I stay at. In the winter of course they are half buried in the snow, but they always seem to me that they are waiting for the spring.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Revisiting Aurora

Revisiting some pictures of spectacular Alaska aurorae. At this experiment facility, our goal is to create 'artificial aurora', so natural aurora is always so fascinating to us that we keep our experiment running on the side when it appears and dash out in -30 degrees F. My first post was on aurora, which also said something about the mechanism that causes aurora.

All the tripods were taken while trying to take this one. So the picture is a little blurred. I like it however, because it looks like a brush art instead of a photograph.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Serenity


This was the most peaceful place I have ever visited. It was very soothing both to the eyes and to the ears. Very white as evident from the picture. No sound of people or cars, only a gentle sound of water flowing beneath the surface of ice. This is Lake Portage.

The Portage glacier used to be all the way out here and a visitor center was built on the edge of it, but the glacier has retreated since and now you can only see the remnants of the glacier like in the pic below - the part that is strickingly blue. You can't see the glacier from the visitor center. You have to keep driving further and cross a tunnel to get here. It is very hard to see even then. This is 12x zoomed.

And they say global warming is a myth.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Classic Western


I was driving in downtown Anchorage when I saw this truck. So very western :). I couldn't resist. Applied some sepia and film grain from Picasa to give that old rustic feeling.

Friday, May 12, 2006

Glowing

It was a beautiful day. The clouds actually provided a nice vivid background. That's all I have to say for this picture actually.
Contemplating...

On the way to Portage, I stopped at this scenic view point to eat my lunch. I was about to be done when this person came and stopped right in front of me. Then he went down to near the ocean. It was pretty windy outside. He probably was a rock climber. This was an irresistable shot.