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We offer Alaska raft trips that offer scenic views, wildlife viewing, fishing, and whitewater.
Custom group Alaska rafting adventures are available on request. If have interested in something special or participating in an exploratory expedition, please contact us with your ideals or to see what plans are being made.
Kongakut River - 10 day Arctic National Wildlife Refuge Rafting Safari. Explore Alaska's remote Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) by raft on the "river of caribou". Our trip coincides with the annual migration of the 130,000-strong Porcupine caribou herd and passes through some of the world's most pristine wilderness.
Lake Creek - 7 day Whitewater Rafting and Fishing Adventure. Our favorite fly-in wilderness adventure river, great combination exciting whitewater and great Alaska fishing. Lake Creek offers almost continuous Class II/III whitewater with a few Class IV rapids, five species of salmon, rainbow trout and arctic grayling.
Chulitna River - 4 day Denali Raft Adventure. An excellent family adventure and sampling of Alaska's best wilderness and geography at a casual pace. We travel through Denali State Park, upper Susitna Valley and take out near Trapper Creek, a historic gold mining town. |
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Humpback Whale - Megaptera Novaenglia
Wildlife Whale Watching Glacier Cruise
Locally called Wide Bodies" by the tour boat captains in the Seward/Kenai Fjords area.
Basic Facts
The humpback whale is a member of the Balaenopteridae family of baleen whales. Whales in this group feed by straining prey through baleen plates lining the roof of their mouths. Male humpbacks reach an average of 46 feet and 25 tons, females an average of 49 feet and 35 tons. The humpback has a distinctive body shape and unusually long pectoral fins (flippers), which are nearly one-third of their total body length. The dorsal fin shape varies, but is often a small triangular nubbin with a step or hump most noticeable when the whale arches its back to dive and from which it derives its common name. They are often white or partially white in color and the underside of the fluke (tail) often has white markings unique to each whale.
Humpback whales are listed as an endangered species with a worldwide population estimated in 2007 at 30,000 to 40,000 whales. The North Pacific population seen in Alaska is estimated at around 6,000 whales.
Habitat, Range and Local Sightings
Humpbacks travel between winter breeding grounds and summer feeding grounds. The animals that spend their summer in Kenai Fjords National Park winter in Hawaii and Mexico, and may travel as far as the Chukchi Sea. Locally, we find humpback whales throughout Resurrection Bay and the waters surrounding Kenai Fjords National Park. Several spots near the Chiswell Islands also attract feeding humpbacks.
Food and Survival Strategies
Humpback whales spend from mid-April until November feeding around Kenai Fjords National Park. Each day a humpback eats approximately a ton of food. When feeding, 12 to 36 ventral throat grooves allow a humpback whale’s mouth to swell to enormous proportions. A humpback can hold 500 gallons of seawater laden with prey in its mouth. Using its tongue, the animal pushes the water out through up to 400 two-foot long baleen plates hanging down from each side of its upper jaw. The prey catches on the baleen and is swallowed. Euphausiids (krill), copepods, and small schooling fish, such as white capelin and herring, make up much of a humpback’s diet.
Reproduction and Young
Humpbacks breed and give birth during the winter months in Hawaii and Mexico. Gestation lasts about 11 months, and every one to three years a single calf is born. Twinning happens occasionally, but often only one animal will survive. At birth, a calf is 16 feet long and weighs two tons. Humpback calves stay with their mothers and nurse heavily, building a fat layer, before making their first migration north to Alaska’s cold waters. Young calves, as well as older whales, must watch out for transient orcas, their biggest predator.
Male humpback whales sing songs in their winter breeding grounds. The songs contain two to eight "themes" always sung in sequence. A whale can sing for 20 minutes or as much as seven hours. Singing may be used to show a whale’s dominance among males competing for a female. Male humpbacks interested in mating with a female become her "escort." They follow behind and below a female cow and calf, waiting until the female is receptive. A male sometimes instigates a skirmish using its barnacle encrusted chin and the front edge of its pectoral fins as weapons against a rival. Older males often show scarring along their backs from these interactions.
Human Connections
The extensive migration of the humpback whale underscores how rich an environment the Kenai Fjords ecosystem is: Swimming nearly 3,000 miles, the humpback comes all the way to Alaska to feed. Here, it finds water with enough nutrients and oxygen to support the volume of food necessary for its sustenance. During the summer months, it is able to add the three to four inches of blubber necessary to see it through the winter.
Historically, humpbacks were hunted for their oil, meat, and baleen. Humpbacks proved an easy target for hunters because they tend to feed close to land. By the time a ban on international whaling was drawn up in 1964, the population of humpback whales was as low as 1,000 animals.
A comprehensive study known as the Structure of Populations, Levels of Abundance and Status of Humpback Whales, or SPLASH, initiated in December 2003, hopes to further refine our knowledge of North Pacific humpback populations. SPLASH research took place in Russia, Mexico, Alaska, and the Philippines. The research goal is to understand population structure and assess status trends and human impacts to the humpback population.
More general information on Kenai Fjords National Park is available at:
Kenai Fjords National Park
We would like to thank the NPS for the above information.
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Backcountry Safaris
P.O. Box 1397 Seward, Alaska USA 99664
1-907-205-5900 • Fax 1-907-205-5902
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Backcountry Safaris is a member of the following trade and travel organizations:
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Humpback Whale Related Links |
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Kenai Fjords Wildlife |
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Kenai Fjords Birds |
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Kenai Fjords Related Links |
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Sea Kayaking Related Links |
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Kenai Fjords Related Links |
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Suggested Reading |
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Kenai Fjords Weather |
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Current Seward, AK Weather |
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Did You Know?
Alaska is the size of: 114 Connecticuts; 277 Delawares; 88 Hawaiis; 69 Massachusetts'; 61 New Hamphires; 470 Rhode Islands or 2 Texas’. In fact, if Alaska were to split in half and form two states, Texas would drop from second largest state to third. |
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