Photographing the Bears at Brooks Falls
If you're coming to Brooks Falls with a camera, a few things matter a lot more to you than they do to the average visitor. I've watched plenty of photographers work that platform, and the ones who go home happy tend to get the same handful of things right. Here's what I'd tell you before you book.
Time of year
For the classic action shot, a bear at the lip of the falls with a salmon in the air, you want mid-to-late July, when the most bears are working the falls. For big fat bears in beautiful light with the platform nearly to yourself, late August into September is hard to beat. The tundra turns gold, the crowds are gone, and the bears are at their heaviest. Just know that by September the biggest bears hold the falls while the smaller ones spread along the river, so if it's specifically the falls-jumping shot you want, lean July.
A few platform realities
One that catches photographers off guard: tripods aren't allowed on the main viewing platform. Plan to shoot handheld, and bring something to help steady longer glass (mono-pods are allowed). During busy July stretches they may also cap your time on the main platform at 30 minutes at a stretch. The good news is you can rejoin the queue as often as you like, and you can keep shooting from the lower river platforms in between, so you're rarely without a vantage point.
You're shooting wild bears from fixed platforms at a respectful distance, so reach matters. Long glass earns its keep here. And the light at the falls is best early and late in the day, same as anywhere.
The variable that beats all the others
The single biggest thing separating a great set of images from a frustrating trip is simple: time on the ground. The more days you have at the falls, and the better-timed your hours, the more keepers you bring home. A single day is a gamble, especially because Katmai weather can wipe a day out completely. Photographers who build a real shoot around one weather-exposed day are the ones who tend to leave disappointed.
That's the whole case for giving yourself more than one day and not carrying the weather risk alone. The full Brooks Falls guide covers the logistics, and the trip-cost worksheet will price out a multi-day shoot. If you'd rather have the days handled and the weather backed up so you're actually out there when the light's good, that's what we do.
Katmai B&B, King Salmon, Alaska. Prices and schedules are current estimates and change with the season. We confirm everything in writing before you book.
Planning a trip to see the bears yourself?
Before you book anything, watch my free training. It's the stuff I wish everyone knew first, whether they come with us or plan it on their own. Watch it here →