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Kamchatka
2000 |
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In the fall of 2000 I had
the good fortune to visit and fish one of the worlds last remaining refuges
of pure strains of salmon, steelhead and rainbow trout. I kept a journal and
took several hundred photos, I'd like to share some of the images and
thoughts.
While the habitat is not
truly “pristine”, it is close. The opportunity to experience a nearly
natural river and riparian habitat was both illuminating and disheartening
given the contrast to the rivers and streams of my home. What began as a
fishing trip became much more as I became more aware of the fertility of a
healthy river.
Arrangements for the trip
were made through the The Wild
Salmon Center a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving
native fishes.
Questions? Contact me at
salmo@teleport (remove).com (Remove (remove) before sending)
Small
thumbnail images can be clicked on for a larger view.
Notes from my journal are in this color and
italicized. |
Getting There :
While chasing
the sun west does make it possible to leave Portland, OR at daybreak and
cast a line in the Zhupanova River before nightfall I took a more leisurely
approach and arrived in Anchorage a day early. With only one flight a week
missing the plane is not advised. From Anchorage it’s off to a brief
refueling stop in Anadyr and then on to Petropavlovsk. From Petro it is a
thrilling helicopter ride to the river. |
…3:45
PM- Over Seattle
– Must have been a beautiful place for fish before urban sprawl. See Bill
Gates house and the Boeing complex. Realize these sources of sprawl are also
the very things that permit me to make this trip…(I
work in hi-tech and am flying in a Boeing jet) |
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...Anadyr,
“Pit Stop”. Pilot decides to stop at ancient Soviet
airfield on Siberian coast to pick up a few gallons. First stop on Russian
soil. Rotting runway, buildings and MIGs.. |
Pit
Stop in Anadyr:
The military base at Anadyr was cold,
windy and worn. Tundra fires burned unchecked |
Just
out of picture to the left is fire a truck, windows down, both occupants are
smoking and tossing ashes this way. |
MIG
spare parts depot:
One of several decaying MIGs
scattered about. |
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Petropavlovsk:
Sub bases and airfields nearby. High unemployment
since collapse of Soviet military infrastructure.
See:
http://www.kamchatkapeninsula.com |
MIGs at the ready:
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…8:15pm (local time) Land, clear
customs, Russian Bureaucracy is sloooow. Confusion reigns as people and gear
are loaded into vans for mad dash to helicopter. Getting late, foul weather.
Pilots are eager to get going. Pull up to helicopter bone yard, pick one and
away we go. Most thrilling aircraft ride in my life. Poor weather, fog,
getting dark, rusty helio, big mountains! Fantastic! |
The ME8 ;
A workhorse. Crew of three (pilot, copilot,
engineer), a bit rusty, a leak or two, plywood seats and few working seat
belts. |