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About Your Hosts...
Gary and Jeanne Porter, owners
of Bald Mountain Air Service, are real Alaskans! This
might sound strange but its rare to meet Alaskans that
were born and raised here, much less be able to claim several
generations reaching back as far as the last ice age!
 About
Jeanne
Jeannes heritage on
her mothers side comes from Inupiat Eskimos that inhabit
the Northwest Arctic Coast of Alaska. These are the people
that crossed the Beringia land bridge and migrated into North
America possibly 14,000 years ago. They are a people that
have lived and flourished in some of the most hostile environments
on earth. They are Alaskas first true naturalists.
The pictures of the Eskimo women and the little
girl (left) are Jeannes mother, grandmother and great
aunt at their fish camp on the Arctic coast about 1934. The
structure behind them is a sod hut reinforced with whale bones
and a canvas tent. Jeannes heritage
has given her an instinctual connection to the cycles of nature,
the land and its wildlife.
About
Gary
Garys Family came to Alaska in the late 1800s.
Lured from Eastern Canada by the newly discovered goldfields
of the Klondike. The story tells of two great uncles that
simply disappeared up the trail of '98 never to
be heard from again. The remaining family settled in Skagway
and took jobs
building the White Pass and Yukon Railway. In later years
part of the family moved to the interior of Alaska on the
north side of the Alaska Range and started a successful guide
service using pack horses and mules for transportation. The
family had a long history of romantic adventure and some must
have rubbed off on Gary. Bush flying was an important necessity
in the years after statehood and the bug was easy to catch.
The guide service used a small piper cub to supply the camps
and it proved irresistible. Over 16,000 hours and 35 years
of Alaskan bush flying later Gary is intimately knowledgeable
of almost every river and stream in Alaska.
 Gary
remembers asking his grandmother if she knew Soapy Smith,
the most famous bad guy in the Yukon. "Oh, heavens no,"
she told him. "They killed Soapy in 98 and I wasnt
even born until 99. How old do you think I am anyway?"
Garys parents had
a business giving visitors guided tours, and as a young
boy, Gary had to wake up early and get the horses and mules
ready for the day. The local pilot made a huge impression
on him, he adds. "I can remember waiting for days in
bad weather for our local pilot to bring us news and supplies
from town. When he would finally show up, he was the most
important guy around. Always clean-shaven and always with
a candy bar. I would look at those mules and look at that
airplane. I couldnt wait to change professions! I didand
never looked back at those mules!"
Gary learned to fly when
he was just 11 or 12 years old. His parents had a beautiful
Piper J3 they used in their guiding business. "I just
couldnt keep my hands off it," he says. "I
was lucky and learned how to fly when I was just a kid. When
I first flew into Fort Yukon I thought, Wow, what a
place! I could visualize all the tough people who had
scrounged up and down these rivers and streams looking for
gold. Men with big, dirty hands and skinny dogs."
Since
those early years in the interior, Gary has hauled the
mail, flown for the government, and taken thousands of people
to thousands of places, doing a thousand different things
in every part of Alaska. For the past 20 years, hes
been flying south central and western Alaska doing just what
his father predictedflying and taking people to see
their native country. His father also predicted that someday
people would come to Alaska just to take pictures and enjoy
themselves and leave the hides on those poor old bears!
Gary and Jeanne are very
proud of their Alaskan heritage and take great care to
ensure that everyone visiting their piece of Alaska comes
away with the feeling that they have been witness to one of
Alaskas greatest treasures, the Alaskan Brown Bear.
They believe in moving among Alaskas wilderness inhabitants
without disruption, simply observing and leaving no trace.
This philosophy is the foundation of Bald Mountain Air and
the way it conducts its tours in remote Alaska. Gary and Jeanne
invite you to come and join them on their Alaskan Heritage
Brown Bear Tours and explore the land of the Great Bears.
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