Red-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta canadensis) are usually a common visitor to my bird feeder, however this is the first time one has been spotted at the feeder during the 2018-2019 winter.
If high temperatures melt snow and that leads to a bear’s den getting flooded, that’s another reason the bear might head outside. It’ll likely try to find another den, Farley said.
Authorities warned that drivers should use caution in the area due to the potential for additional rockslides.
A Fish and Game biologist urges people to give the animals space.
It has been a month since the 7.0 earthquake in Anchorage. Are these sinkholes which suddenly appeared related?
Despite it almost being January, an Eagle River homeowner has captured footage of a black bear awake and active around her house.
Northwest crow (Corvus caurinus) pair nesting in Anchorage, possibly north of range.
Hundreds of people have combed the terrain near Big Lake, but there’s still no sign of LaVerne and Van Pettigen.
From Eagle River to Wasilla, people on private wells are contending with cloudy water -- and worse.
Seismologists called the quake the most significant in the state’s largest city since 1964, in terms of how strong the ground itself shook.
At least one car was on the ramp at the time of the quake, a photo of which circulated on social media Friday morning.
Spruce beetles damaged nearly 600,000 acres of forest in 2018, and the damage continues to grow.
The latest tally of beetle kill shows more than 550,000 acres of forest with dead spruce from the ongoing infestation this year alone, much of it in Mat-Su.
Erosion of Kincaid beach bluffs accelerated compared to previous years.
Lightning strikes seen Monday in Cook Inlet and on the Kenai Peninsula were heading toward South Anchorage, a meteorologist said.
Black bears have taken over a Juneau arboretum, shut down a fish-cleaning facility in Cordova and added to an unusually high year of bear kills in Anchorage, prompting one wildlife authority to call this summer the "craziest" year of bear encounters he's seen.
You're not imagining things: September's weather has been one for the record books, for both the warm weather and unusual streak of sunny days.
Discolored spruce (Picea sitchensis) needles
State transportation workers found wet ground may have contributed to the small landslide, despite the lack of recent rain.
"They are extremely fresh-looking, as if it were the springtime."
All Topics
All Countries
Any Date
Apply