High Drama in Glacier Bay & Pack Creek Photo Passenger Highlights

Glacier Bay Photography Workshop Highlights

The Fairweather Range – photo by John D’Onofrio

We wanted to share the following thoughts about our Glacier Bay photography workshop from one of our instructors, John D’Onofrio.  

High Drama in Glacier Bay

By John D’Onofrio
 
As always, I was filled with anticipation as we rounded Point Gustavus and headed up into Glacier Bay. Like many photographers, I love high drama. And if there’s a more dramatic place on Earth than Glacier Bay, with its more than 1,000 glaciers, I don’t know about it.This was my tenth trip to this UNESCO World Heritage Site, and the sense of awe does not fade. As someone who has cherished wilderness for many decades, the sheer scale of the Bay and surrounding mountains is mind-blowing. Except for the visitor center at Bartlett Cove, this National Park––larger than the state of Connecticut––lacks a single man-made object. No buildings. No roads. No signs. Not even any established trails. The opportunity to immerse oneself in such primeval majesty is indescribable.Over the course of the next five days, we enjoyed a feast for the senses (and the spirit).


Sea Lions on South Marble Island – photo by John D’Onofrio


Puffin in Muir Inlet – photo by John D’Onofrio

  • South Marble Island, covered with hundreds of bellowing sea lions and countless cormorants, perched on the rocks like dark sentinels. A humpback whale surfaces, and Tufted Puffins flutter on the surface of the water like richly adorned ballet dancers.


The McBride Glacier – photo by John D’Onofrio

  • The McBride Glacier, near the head of the less-visited Muir Inlet, where the color of the water changes to a rich aquamarine.  Exploring McBride Inlet in the skiff, we glide past towering cliffs covered in kittiwake nests. As we approach the head of the inlet, the vegetation disappears, replaced by austere, glacier-carved moraines scoured bare by the retreating ice and braided by waterfalls. Otters regard us with curiosity from passing ice floes. We linger beneath the massive face of the glacier, watching the blue ice tumble into the sea.


The ‘Ice Garden’ – photo by John D’Onofrio

  • The Great ‘Ice Garden’ at the base of the monumental Margarie Glacier, a sand bar exposed at low tide and covered by a surreal sculpture garden of beached icebergs, accessed via the skiff. Wandering among the ice, cameras clicking, is like photographing a dreamscape.


The Fairweather Range – photo by John D’Onofrio

  • The Mouth of Johns Hopkins Inlet, surely the supreme viewpoint of the awesome Fairweather Range, capped by Mt. Fairweather, at 15,300 feet, the 18th tallest peak in North America. Here, towering peaks, swaddled in ice, converge above the Bay, piercing the clouds.


Brown Bear at Lamplugh Glacier – photo by John D’Onofrio

  • The Lamplugh Glacier, where we explore another vivid blue ice garden on foot. A brown bear appears, making its way through the colonnades of ice, passing us some 100 feet away, and once again, our cameras whir.


Mother and Kid at Gloomy Knob – photo by John D’Onofrio

  • At a place known as Gloomy Knob, mountain goats gather on a precipice, grazing on the underbrush. One statuesque female is accompanied by a tiny fluffy kid that gazes down at us as we pass.


Twilight at Fingers Bay – photo by John D’Onofrio

  • Fingers Bay, where the evening light renders the Bay in a rich, painterly light. The spouts of passing whales are illuminated by the warm golden sunlight, and the glassy water reflects the mountains and clouds.

By the end of our time in Glacier Bay, I am once again transformed by the beauty of this amazing landscape, awestruck by the opportunity to experience the power and splendor of this remarkable place up close and personal, an experience that those on the occasional passing cruise ship can only dream about. For a photographer, this is as good as it gets, a chance to capture beauty that is both epic and intimate, an unforgettable experience that will live on in the images ––and in one’s heart.

I’m already looking forward to next year…
 
John D’Onofrio

NOW ON SALE – Trip #464 – October 8-12, 2025 – 5-day San Juan Islands Photography Workshop
Departs/Arrives – Bellingham
Availability: 8 Spots
Price: $3,300, 30% off, normally 4,775 per person (double occupancy)

Feel free to contact Sarah about any of our photography workshops on the David B.

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Pack Creek Photo Workshop Passenger Highlights


Brown Bear at Pack Creek – photo by Robert Landry
More of our passengers are kind enough to share some of their photos and experiences with us. Here are photos from Robert Landry with written snippets of the trip from Preble Giltz from our May Pack Creek Photography Workshop. See below for a link to his other photography. —

Sailing out the channel, the juxtaposition of the David B with the mega cruise ships was remarkable and also very validating, as I looked at the massive ships that sell a prepackaged adventure and cookie cutter experiences and knew my impending adventure would be anything but generic. Every bobbing rotation of the David B’s antique motor hums authenticity.


David B – photo by Robert Landry

The tidal pools at Wood Spit were full of starfish, mostly greenish or bluish, which was different from what I’ve seen previously elsewhere. In the back inlet there was a heron, which offered a bit of refined elegance to contrast the exotic, almost extraterrestrial, world of the tidal pool.
 

Heron – photo by Robert Landry

After a bit, we headed to the wooded area, which had a glacier in the background. Everything is so ephemeral in this environment. Tides, mist, animals, nothing is stagnant, and yet so much seems timeless. As we moved into the forest, it also had a primeval quality, but capturing its essence required being in the moment.
 
The trip to the back of the fjords in Fords Terror makes you feel so small. The cliffs are high and steep, and you can only imagine the water is just as deep. I believe I heard Jeffery say the water was about 450 feet deep. Everywhere there was life, from bounding cascades to the moss and lichen to the miraculous trees that manage to take root in the crevices of the rocks. The fjords have a maze-like quality, seemingly going on endlessly. This all adds to the timeless feeling.

 
Waterfalls – Photo by Robert Landry
 
It’s interesting how we all visited the same spots during the workshop, and yet we all produced very different visions of what we saw and experienced. It’s really nice to share. Seeing how other people processed images gave me some new ideas and techniques. It was also a nice was to “revisit” spots through others’ eyes.
 

Bald Eagle – Photo by Robert Landry
 
Any part of the second to last day could have been a stand-alone vacation! It was a busy and adventurously full day that started with an early departure to see the Dawes Glacier. Very soon after departing Dawes Inlet, we started to see regular ice floes. I should have outfitted myself sooner, as it got cold quickly and while I was inside pulling on extra layers, I saw an almost iconic  ice floe with 2-3 seals, exactly the shot I wanted!
 

Seals – photo by Robert Landry

The ride to Sandford Inlet, where we ended up anchoring and spending the final night, was filled with sighs of amazement and a general sense of satisfied fulfillment. The Dawes Glacier experience really touched all the senses, the booming sound of the falling ice, the sight of every shade of blue imaginable, the feeling of mist, the cold, salty smell of the water and ultimately the earthy, almost granite-like taste of the ice that we added to our whiskey to toast the day. It was fulfilling in every way!


Dawes Glacier – photo by Robert Landry

– Preble Giltz with photos by Robert Landry
https://www.facebook.com/RobertLandryNaturePhotography

 

San Juan Islands 5-day Workshop

San Juan Islands Photography Workshop

Mount Baker – photo by John D’Onofrio

We wanted to share the following thoughts about our San Juan Islands 5-day photography workshop from one of our instructors, John D’Onofrio.  

Archipelago of Dreams: The San Juan Islands

I’ve been photographing the San Juan Islands for more than 30 years, and I’m still newly amazed at the beauty of this awe-inspiring island paradise. 

The San Juans have been a world-famous cruising destination for many years, but only recently have they begun to be recognized as one of the premier photographic destinations in North America. And with good reason: These islands offer everything from intricately carved shorelines to sensuous madrone forests to vast panoramas of sea, sky, and snow-capped mountains. Wildlife is abundant: whales, sea lions, seals, otters, eagles, herons, and more. The San Juans are arguably the most beautiful – and diverse – archipelago in the contiguous United States.


Madrone – photo by John D’Onofrio

On our excursions on the David B, we focus on the world-class natural areas in these beautiful islands, including the San Juan Islands National Monument, created by President Obama in 2013, and the beautiful Washington State Marine Parks. These special places are accessible only by private boat. Places like Sucia Island, with its statuesque madrone forests and a surreal sandstone shoreline carved into fantastic patterns by the elements.  This amazing, artfully weathered stone is called ‘tafoni’, and as a photography subject, it’s world-class.


Tafoni in the Golden Hour – photo by John D’Onofrio

Patos Island is another remarkable photo location with its historic lighthouse standing vigil against a backdrop of epic glacier-covered mountains. We’ll get up close and personal with the lighthouse on a shore excursion.

Stewart Island offers beautiful grassy headlands and a view of the Canadian Gulf Islands (and another photographically stunning lighthouse). 


Turn Point Lighthouse – photo by John D’Onofrio

Jones Island is a spectacular Marine Park, with a trail system that provides easy access to both sublime shoreline vistas and evocative coastal forests. 

And autumn is the glory season here, after the summer yachting season has ended, and silence prevails. 

This five-day adventure provides plenty of time for personalized photographic instruction and a comprehensive exploration of Adobe Lightroom to refine your images and take your photography to the next level.


Misty Cove – photo by John D’Onofrio

I’ve spent a lot of quality time in these magical islands, photographing the beautiful land and seascapes, and I can tell you that the experience on the M/V David B. is in a league of its own. The combination of boat, skiff, and onshore excursions provides an optimal photographic palette – and a chance for a ‘deep dive’ into this remarkable northern marine paradise.

Bucket List for photographers? No doubt.

20th Season Begins

On Thursday, April 24th, the David B and her crew departed Bellingham’s Squalicum Harbor and is currently heading north through the Canadian Inside Passage to Ketchikan. We had a lovely turnout last weekend with many folks stopping by to tour the boat and talk with the crew during our spring open boat. It is humbling to think how this all started so many years ago for Jeffrey and Christine. We hope you will join us sometime soon so you too can become part our story amongst inspirational wilderness and breathtaking wildlife all while surrounded by the coziness of the David B and Christine’s incredible gourmet food!

If you would like learn how it all started, you can always read Christine’s book “More Faster Backwards – Rebuilding David B

20 years of Looking Back at Bellingham
Even though our 2025 season is essentially sold out, but we still have spots available and select discounts on one of our 8-day Alaska trips in July. This cruise is round trip out of Juneau, with an itinerary that captures the unique essence of SE Alaska including wildlife, fjords, and glaciers. See below for pricing and availability.Trip #458 July 26 – August 2, 2025
Departs/Arrives: Round Trip Juneau
Availability: 6 spots (two queen cabins and twin bunk bed cabin available)
Price: regularly $8,375 per person with double occupancy – now $5,875 (30% off)

If you want to be a part of our 20th season, just contact me. Here you can see our current 2025 and 2026 schedules: https://northwestnavigation.com/schedule-and-rates

Sincerely,

Sarah
Reservations, Shore Support and Cat Staff

A Hike at Fords Terror with my 78-year old Dad

Reflections on My Father

My dad passed away this past November at the age of 87. In the time since, I’ve been reflecting on what his life meant to me, my family and others that he knew. He was super proud of me, and the David B, and wore his David B hat whenever he went out.

There’s a really beautiful time as your parents age when the roles start to reverse, and “parenting” becomes taking care of your parents like they did for you. It doesn’t happen overnight; it starts slowly. I wrote this for our newsletter nine years back, and we’re reposting it in its entirety. It might have been the beginning of the reversal.

Kirk and Jeffrey holding glacier ice in 2016.

 

A Hike at Fords Terror
– With My 78 year-old Dad

My dad gets around pretty well, so long as the path is flat and he has his hiking poles, but he isn’t able to do much that’s really rocky or too steep. So this past summer when we were anchored at Fords Terror he politely declined to go with the rest of the family on the hike. 
 
This was kind of a problem for me because I really wanted him to see it. I really think it is the most stunning place we go ashore in SE Alaska. First, the anchorage is surrounded by these amazing waterfalls, some coming down the sheer walls of the fjord for three to four thousand feet, and of course there’s the “Terror” itself, with the current rushing through the narrow spot, making standing waves four feet high. But when you go ashore it gets even more amazing. 
 
What suffices for a trail goes up to a place where you can look down on the rapids and even start to get a peek up the fjord behind the rapids. Then you walk over a little moss-covered granite rise and you come to the most amazing thing — the kettle ponds. Carved out of solid granite by the action of the glacier passing over the top of the rock, these little ponds, ranging from three to twenty feet across, are just full of lily pads. It’s an amazing sight. This summer, on an early trip to the spot, I stepped off the trail to let one of my guests pass so she could see and I actually heard her gasp when she saw them. It actually took her breath away.
 
“I know you told us about this beforehand, but I can’t believe how beautiful it is,” she told us later. 
 
So when my dad was on the boat this past summer, I really wanted him to see it. But the first part of the hike is slippery and seaweed covered, then there’s the section that’s steep, muddy and in a sort of slot through the granite only to get up to the section where the narrow trail pushes through the underbrush and up a muddy ravine. It finally comes out on the slippery moss-covered granite, and that’s where you get this astonishing view. 


The view from Fords Terror
 
And he had just declined to go. This is the man that has been hiking and backpacking since before he was in college. This is a guy that has hiked the Rockies, the Cascades, the Sierras, the Brooks Range, summited Mount Rainier, Grand Teton and trekked in Nepal around Everest. He is the father that took me and my sister backpacking so we could experience the beauty of nature. He started us when I was just four, and we went every year until we were “too old” (teenagers) to go on family vacations.  Now here we were on a family vacation and he had said “no.” 
 
So I convinced him. For once, I could show him an amazing wilderness spot. The rest of the group went ahead while we hiked and scrambled. At one point, I held him steady by his belt loops. Later he even had to crawl on his hands and knees. It was a lot of work for both of us, but we made it.  And he got to see this place that his adult son now takes people to experience the amazing  beauty of nature. 
 
Just like he used to take me. 
 
He thanked me for my persistence too, when we got back to the boat, and I really think he enjoyed the hike, even though it was tough for him.
 
We hike at Fords Terror on almost all of our trips in Alaska, unless there are unusual circumstances. It’s really majestic. I really want people to see it, but I won’t force you to go. 
 
I’ll steady you by your belt loops if you need it though. 
 
Captain Jeffrey

P.S.
If you would like to experience Fords Terror for yourself, just email Sarah. We still have three July 2025 trips that are now on sale.

Spring Open Boat Tours – April 19-20, 2025

30-minute Spring Open Boat Tours – April 19-20, 2025

Come see the David B and crew before they depart for their 20th season in Alaska!

We will take appointments for small groups to tour the David B, meet the crew and have all your questions answered.

Dates: Saturday and Sunday, April 19 & 20, 2025

Times: 12-5pm (30 minute appointments only)

Cost: Free to everyone

Reservations: Required – Email Sarah by April 15th to reserve your time slot!

Location: Bellingham, WA in Squalicum Harbor – Gate 5 at Slip D-06

Can’t make it to Bellingham? See our Virtual Tour Video below.