November 20, 2008
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Subject: Alaska - Alaska Mainland
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Pete Thayer
Posts:64

12/11/2007 1:50 PM  

169 Species on this Custom List

To upload the attached Custom list and Quiz yourself on birds that may be seen on this VENT Tour, right-click
HERE and select "Save Target As.." (You may want to rename the file AK_Mainland.xml)

Alaska Mainland Click for tour details

Jun. 16-Jun. 27, 2008

Alaska Mainland
View from Seward Highway, Alaska.
Photo: Barry Zimmer

Fabulous scenery, excellent mammal viewing, and birds found nowhere else on the continent. The Last Frontier is a must for every North American birder and naturalist.

Immense expanses consisting of range upon range of snowy mountains, glaciers beyond count, islands teeming with seabirds, coastal fjords edged with fog-drenched forest, vast boreal taiga, and untold miles of rolling tundra—Alaska's magnificence is beyond compare.

This tour offers a surprisingly complete cross section of birds. It focuses upon three very different areas: the rugged hills, tundra, and seacoast around the old gold-rush boomtown of Nome; breathtaking Kenai Fjords National Park and the adjacent Kenai Peninsula; and the sprawling wilderness in the shadow of majestic Denali (Mount McKinley), North America's highest peak.

In Nome, the birdlife has a strong Siberian element with vociferous Bar-tailed Godwits protesting from the hummocks, Yellow Wagtails hovering above the tundra, White Wagtails lurking about old gold dredges, Arctic Warblers singing from the willows, and spectacular Bluethroats skylarking against snow-covered backdrops. Long-tailed Jaegers patrol the coastal tundra while Gyrfalcons range through the hills above town.

The Kenai Peninsula yields a different avifauna with the ethereal notes of the Varied Thrush penetrating the spruce forests, Bald Eagles adorning gravel bars, and Three-toed Woodpeckers working the edges of recent burns. Our pelagic trip to Kenai Fjords National Park should produce Horned and Tufted puffins by the thousands, Red-faced Cormorant, Kittlitz's Murrelet, whales, and unsurpassed scenery.

Finally, we will visit Denali National Park where, amid hundreds of square miles of boreal forest and alpine tundra, we have a good chance to see some of the glamour symbols of the far north-grizzly bear, caribou, moose, Dall sheep, and perhaps even gray wolf. Northern Hawk Owl and Bohemian Waxwing are among the many avian possibilities.

With many birds found nowhere else in North America, incredible mammal viewing, and scenery that simply cannot be topped, Alaska is a must destination.

The Pribilof Islands make the perfect pre-trip to Alaska Mainland, while the Barrow Extension may be taken by those with more time.

Good accommodations; easy to moderate terrain; one optional hike involving difficult terrain; boat trip and in-state travel by van and airplane; cold to mild weather.

To Get (upload) a Custom List from this Forum and add it to your computer:

1. Open the Posting of the Custom List you want to upload to your computer.
2. Right-click on the word "Attachment" at the bottom of the post -- it will be a hyperlink and underlined.
3. Select "Save Target As..." and save to your desktop. (You may want to rename the file - but do not change the .xml file extension)
4. Open your
Thayer Birding Software birding program version 3.5 or 3.9.
5. Click the Custom List icon
6. In the upper left corner of the Custom List screen, click on the word File.
7. Click Import. Select the file you just uploaded to your desktop. Click Open.
8. The Custom List will now appear on your computer with your other Custom Lists. (You may rename the Custom List if you like.)


Attachment: 11211505110754.xml

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