AKSkeeter
Well-known member
I worked at the University in Fairbanks and remember seeing 2 chocolate labs sitting in the back of a pickupAll bird dogs are great! That said, we started with labs in Alaska in 1989. We used to fly two down to South Dakota every fall and hunt for a month. After moving back to the lower 48 we have a smorgasbord of hunting opportunities, everything from dusky (blue) grouse to desert quail. We even had a marine mammal biologist in Fairbanks train one of our pups to find seal holes and polar bear dens when he was doing surveys on the North Slope.
We are on our 5th generation yellow lab (the one in my pic at left) and will pick up the 6th generation in March. I'm 74 so this one is likely our last, though who knows, maybe I won't fall apart completely in the next 10 years. Yeah, their tail is a weapon, ours retrieves dirty socks (and underwear) from the laundry hamper, they know no strangers, and they take over the bed at night, but what would life be without them?
Thanks for starting this AKSkeeter. I love all of the photos.
behind the ONeill Building. They were used by a arctic marine scientist for locating seal holes on sea ice.
The scientist was Brendan Kelly...this was the mid 1990s.
https://alaskamagazine.com/authentic-alaska/wildlife-nature/a-nose-for-seals/