Despite 2020’s coronavirus pandemic causing cancellation of a number of park photo trips, Traveler’s Rebecca Latson still managed to visit several of the National Park System’s units in a safe, distanced manner. Over the year, Rebecca shared tips, techniques, and favorite places to photograph as well as how to stay safe and healthy while doing so. Here’s a look back at her articles and photos.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, deciding that a sprawling gold, copper, and molybdenum mine proposed to be built near Lake Clark National Park and Preserve in Alaska was not in the best interest of the public, refused to issue a crucial permit needed to move the Pebble Mine forward.
Photographing birds help flesh out the story of a national park or protected land you visit. Those photos also teach you something about bird life and their environment. You don’t have to be a hardcore birder or an expert in avian photography to photograph birds. Photographer Rebecca Latson provides tips and examples of birds she’s captured on the fly (pun intended) in this month’s photography column, with the aim of helping you and your camera capture your own cool national park bird shots.
We are not alone in this world. We share it, obviously, with wildlife and marine life, and the vegetation that grows on land and in the oceans. How we treat those landscapes can have detrimental impacts to those other life forms.
In a 180-degree reversal of an Obama administration finding, the Trump administration on Friday said an open-pit mine on the doorstep of Lake Clark National Park and across from Katmai National Park in Alaska would not harm the fisheries of Bristol Bay, a decision quickly denounced by conservationists.
There are bear bells, bear boxes, and bear-proof containers, but how many of you have ever used an electric bear fence? That's being proposed as a requirement this year when you're camping within a half-mile of the Cook Inlet coastline at Lake Clark National Park and Preserve in Alaska.
Contributing editor Rebecca Latson starts out the New Year with another national parks quiz and trivia piece.See how much park knowledge you possess before checking the answers at the bottom of the article.
Alaska's ability to properly manage fish and wildlife in the state is being hindered by "national policies which simply do not recognize the unique management situation in Alaska," according to its new governor.
Have you visited Hawai'i National Park and gotten close to the Kīlauea Volcano, enjoyed Paradise at Mount Rainier National Park, climbed to the top of Lassen Peak in its namesake park, or hiked down to Crater Lake? If so, you've placed yourself in the midst of some of the country's most dangerous volcanoes in terms of the threats they pose, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.