I arrived in Aniak, Alaska on a flight with four passengers on board.  In my pocket was a caribou tag, fishing license and ...

... a black bear tag that I hoped to use on a bear, wolf or wolverine, whichever critter screwed up first. George Siavelis, who was to be my Alaska guide for the next 10 days, picked me up at the airport. My first impression of George was okay, possibly because when he laughed - which he did a lot - he reminded me of one of my colleagues back in Holland. George talks with great enthusiasm about the country he calls home. He knows a lot about it too! He is a good observer, intelligent, and I am quickly captivated by all he has to say about the wilderness, animals, and people of Alaska.

In the evening we eat caribou, quite tasty, followed by strawberry cake with cream and too much coffee. I'm back in the cabin by eleven, packing my gear for tomorrow's trip. I turn in at midnight. George will pick me up at 6:00 AM. Very little sleep; too much Alaska coffee, too excited and feeling jet-lag.

Yet, I'm up before six the next morning and ready for the adventure. The weather is overcast with low-hanging clouds, although that will change and the Alaska sun will shine for the next 2 weeks while I’m here. We go down to the river and load the airplane.Custom jet-raft We taxi out to the middle of the river and take off. Some 200 km of untouched wilderness later, we land on a lake. One of George's boats (a custom jet-raft) is already moored there. It's an aluminum frame with two inflatable floats without any real bottom. Just places where you can lash bags. According to George, it is a kind of unique design. It does have a more shallow draught than a standard jet-boat, which is particularly handy in shallows. We head off downstream using the engine. After a while we drift with the current, George steering the boat skillfully past shallows and rocks. The river is splendid. It meanders, splits into two, three or even four channels all dotted with islands and gravel banks. There are willows everywhere, gnawed away by beavers, numerous beaver lodges. Here and there the secondary channels are dammed.Only days later do I come to truly appreciate what an incredibly beautiful valley this is. An unspoiled primeval valley stretching for what seems like forever and it is surrounded by mountains, and more valleys stretching hundreds of kilometers.

George steers us to shore at a gravel bar where we’ll pitch camp for the night. We take our gear out of the boat, prepare a meal and then climb a hill taking our binoculars to "spy out Bert grayling fishingthe land". We see several caribou, here and there, in the valley or on the slopes. One hour later I see something black moving a long way away. When I look through George's large spotting scope it turns out to be a bear - quite a large Alaska brown bear according to George. After setting up the tent I catch my first arctic grayling. Later George broils it on a rock, which proves very tasty. My first night's sleep in the wilderness is uninterrupted.

We spend the next days watching caribou, black bears and grizzlies everyday. Days of relaxation, full of peace, some fishing and every evening and morning bears and caribou in the scope.                                                          

15 August 1997
On this memorable morning we once again climb the hill to "spy out the land". If the black bear, which we have spotted three days in succession, shows up again we will cross the river and wait near the spot where we have seen him in the evenings. However, there is no black bear to be seen, but another brown bear who has apparently chased off the black bear. While we are sitting quietly watching, George suddenly becomes excited. He has spotted a wolf standing in a grassy spot, between the low spruces on the opposite river bank. A splendid sight. Just as quickly as he or she appeared - it disappears again. In the evening we go on watch again. There is one large, lone brown bear on the opposite side of the river, and on our side of the river, quite a ways off, a grizzly with two cubs. The she-bear and one of the cubs seem almost white in the glow of the low evening sun just before it disappears behind the mountain. The other cub looks practically black. We will come across these three bears two more times.

The bald eagle remains perched in the top of the black spruces. As I study him carefully through my binoculars I suddenly discover the nest in the broken top of a spruce. A gigantic nest with just one, almost grown, young eagle flapping its wings.

16 August
This day turns out to be an eventful day though I am not aware of this when I wake from a peaceful sleep in our tent. George is a splendid story-teller, and can paint with words to captivate his audience. In the morning we sit contented on our lookout along the river gazing at the slopes bathed in the morning sun watching caribou or whatever else we can find and enjoy. Suddenly I hear a sound which reminds me of the ship's horn on a large ferry but a long ways away. George says, "wolves". We gaze through our binoculars and there they are suddenly in our sights on the top of a bluff across the river. The valley is transected with old dry river courses surrounded by bluffs. And now something develops which George has only witnessed once before in his lifetime. More and more wolves appear on the top of the bluff; six very large wolves and two slightly smaller; eight wolves playing and chasing each other in the hot sun.

The alpha wolf is clearly distinguishable, extremely large and powerful. The other wolves behave like young dogs around him. The entire pack now lay bathing in the sun on the old bluff; some of them occasionally playing with each other and with the alpha. It is such a wonderful sight it brings tears to my eyes. Meanwhile, George is teaching me much about them and their behavior. I had hoped to be fortunate enough to see just one wolf in Alaska, even once, if only for a few seconds, but knew the chances were slim to none. But here I was watching a whole pack of them for nearly an hour. George has a great deal of respect for wild animals, especially wolves.

Suddenly, the alpha wolf gets up and trots off the bluff down into the willow bottom. Almost in unison, all the other wolves follow in single file down the trail into the willow bottom. I Bert's wolf tell George that I can’t believe what we just been watching for an hour. George just stares across the river watching to see if any of them come out of the willows, but none seem to. Out of the blue, George asks if I feel like going on a long hike on this beautiful day. He tells me that he believes the wolves will bed not far off the bluff as it is very late in the day for them to even still be out and about. George suggests that we cross the canyon and spend the evening on the bluff overlooking the willows the wolves disappeared into. He admits it’s an outside chance of actually successfully stalking wolves on foot, over a mile or so away, but we need a hike. The weather is beautiful, we have seen bears on that side every night so far, and maybe, just M-A-Y-B-E, the wolves will show themselves come evening. I agree and so we’re off. We use the raft to cross the river, and then I follow George as we make our way through the willow bottoms and old creek beds, circling downwind of the hopefully stationary wolves. We have to make a big 2 or 3 mile circle around them. This hike proves easier than we had thought. There are caribou and moose trails everywhere. Around 1:30 PM we are just 800 or 900 meters away from the bluff. We stop here, eat, and lie dozing in the sun for the next 3+ hours, until about five. Then, stealthily, we cover the last distance and inch our way over the crest of the bluff. According to George there is little chance of our seeing the wolves, and even less getting a shot at one, but "you never know", he says. We sit down, each looking a different way, and wait for about two hours. Suddenly, one of the wolves appears in the dried-up river bed, no more than 60 meters away. Two seconds later and a second Alaskan wolf appears. We hardly dare breathe. George whispers in my ear so low I can hardly hear "It’s a smaller one, wait for the big one". We expect to see more wolves Bert's caribouany second. There must be more in the vicinity. The wolves come closer and closer until they are barely 25 meters away. One of them gnaws nervously on a branch a little. They then disappear one by one in the low willow shrubs. We wait another half an hour, both of us worried we won’t see them again. Then, they reappear in the open between the willow shrubs. A splendid sight - the two wolves in the old river bed. Once again they come to within twenty meters distance. The first, a male, now appears to sense something's wrong and gazes penetratingly up at the bluff where we are sitting as quiet as statues, with cramps in every part of our bodies from not moving an inch in the last 3 hours. It is getting late, it might be a long hike b