Updates from September 4, 2007
The Kuparuk is known and written up in the guides as a good grayling fishery, but this is the only one I caught when I fished half a mile up from the road. Grayling can be fairly migratory, and perhaps they were already elsewhere preparing for winter when I fished.
Date AddedMay 1, 2011
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
Date AddedMay 1, 2011
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
Date AddedMay 1, 2011
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
This pool produced a few good grayling for me once I found a safe way down around the high gravel bluff.
Date AddedMay 1, 2011
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
Date AddedMay 1, 2011
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
A beautiful braided reach of the Sag River, with the Philip Smith Mountains in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) in the background.
A dall sheep yew and her lamb walk a trail that appears to be nothing but sheer cliff on the side of a mountian near the Dalton Highway -- I think it was Slope Mountain.
I think this picture really conveys the size of the lower Sag River.
A cow caribou behind the Kuparuk River, with the Philip Smith Mountains of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) in the background.
A herd of caribou (all cows) crossing over a hilltop near the Kuparuk River.
This is Troutnut.com's first picture of a springtail, a type of six-legged, non-insect arthropod. It's riding on the surface film under the mayfly's left tail.
Date AddedApr 22, 2011
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
Date AddedApr 22, 2011
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
Date AddedApr 22, 2011
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
Date AddedApr 22, 2011
CameraPENTAX Optio WPi
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