Hi! I’m from here. Right now TDX (our tourist company) isn’t letting ANY TOURISTS AT ALL on island. Since covid but you could go to the coast in anchorage,AK and ask about it. And raven would be the best to travel and maybe if you want to come you could ask the tride for housing quarantine and watch but the best time for it is in the summer. After Agust it’s super windy and rainy
Lincoln Fong Good question! The Arctic Foxes are native to St. Paul Island. The island used to be connected to the mainland, when sea levels were much lower, and these foxes became isolated when sea levels rose after the last ice age. There is another native mammal on the island, a tiny shrew, that I never did find, though I searched for it! Ancient wooly mammoth bones have been found on the island as well! As for how the foxes get up so high on the cliff - I guess they have adapted over the millennia to be superb climbers, with the best climbers having the best odds of survival because that is where most of the food can be found! Thanks for the question! :)
Houston, really nice footage! I don't see a way to contact you on your channel, but I'm interested in using some of this footage for a project I'm working on that will be part of a digital installation on St. Paul Island. Can you allow for email contact on your profile to discuss? Thank you!
This is so beautiful
Very nice, very nice indeed, your take on this!
Fantastic video Houston. Thank you for putting this together!
Breath taking places. Variety of birds is fascinating. Lovely birds , polar bears & other creatures. Nature cherish such creatures amid chilled & icy weather
Beautiful video. Thank you.
This is beautiful. And credits to the soundtrack, too!
Could you please tell me what is the best way to get there for bird watching. (company, boat, travel agent, etc.) ? Many thanks ;-)
Hi! I’m from here. Right now TDX (our tourist company) isn’t letting ANY TOURISTS AT ALL on island. Since covid but you could go to the coast in anchorage,AK and ask about it. And raven would be the best to travel and maybe if you want to come you could ask the tride for housing quarantine and watch but the best time for it is in the summer. After Agust it’s super windy and rainy
at 46:08 how did the canine predator get to the isolated St. Paul Island in the Bearing Sea, not to mention getting so far up the cliff ?
Lincoln Fong Good question! The Arctic Foxes are native to St. Paul Island. The island used to be connected to the mainland, when sea levels were much lower, and these foxes became isolated when sea levels rose after the last ice age. There is another native mammal on the island, a tiny shrew, that I never did find, though I searched for it! Ancient wooly mammoth bones have been found on the island as well!
As for how the foxes get up so high on the cliff - I guess they have adapted over the millennia to be superb climbers, with the best climbers having the best odds of survival because that is where most of the food can be found!
Thanks for the question! :)
Saludos Desde El Salvador 🇸🇻💯
Los Animales Son Vivientes Que Nosotros Los Humanos Debemos De Cuidar 👏💯❤
great video but here is the commentary
Yeah, wasn't expecting Attenborough but something along that line😆
Houston, really nice footage! I don't see a way to contact you on your channel, but I'm interested in using some of this footage for a project I'm working on that will be part of a digital installation on St. Paul Island. Can you allow for email contact on your profile to discuss? Thank you!
Hi! I’d love to learn more about your project but I can’t figure out how to share my email - go ahead and reach me at firecrown@gmail.com
Mooie opnames , proficiat , (ook ik heb er een film van gemaakt )
bedankt! uw film is ook mooi, de wereld is een geweldige plek!
Sorry, if my Dutch is terrible!
wow so much land to raise sheep
Sheep can’t possibly live here. Not the best food or living environment. Take it from A local
Just discovered these islands on Google Earth today. Im addicted to maps and geography and had no idea St. George and St. Paul islands even existed