Posted on Sep 9, 2023
'Bear cam' viewers save stranded hiker in Alaska
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Posted 8 mo ago
Responses: 4
I have fished there and got to watch the Bears catching Salmon as they swim upstream. He's lucky the Salmon were running or he'd have been dinner.
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."There is no cell service on Dumpling Mountain - or anywhere else in the remote park.
Viewers got in touch with Explore.org staff, who were able to reach the National Park Service.
A moderator on the web cam page told the vigilant camera watchers: "Thanks viewers for letting us know. Explore is aware and able to get in touch with Katmai. They are also reviewing the footage."
The company said "staff disconnected the webcam's public feed but continued to monitor live images through webcam controls and shared further updates with National Park Service staff".
"The park sent a search and rescue team to find the hiker, who was caught in windy and rainy conditions with poor visibility," Cynthia Hernandez, a spokesperson for the National Park Service, said in a statement to the BBC.
Park rangers found the hiker at 18:48 local time "unharmed, and brought the hiker back to safety".
Explore.org shared the video clip of the stranded hiker on X, formerly known as Twitter and wrote: "Bear Cam saves a hikers life!"
Viewership for the Alaska bear cam surges ahead of Fat Bear Week, which this year takes place in early October.
Fat Bear Week is a popular online contest held by Katmai National Park that crowns one bear the fattest of them all as the animals bulk up on salmon before hibernation.
With seven cameras around the park, it is typical for people to tune into the park's popular bear fishing spots.
But the hiker was lucky people were also watching the alpine tundra of Dumpling Mountain - a considerably less picturesque spot, which was shrouded in fog when he was seeking help on Tuesday."
..."There is no cell service on Dumpling Mountain - or anywhere else in the remote park.
Viewers got in touch with Explore.org staff, who were able to reach the National Park Service.
A moderator on the web cam page told the vigilant camera watchers: "Thanks viewers for letting us know. Explore is aware and able to get in touch with Katmai. They are also reviewing the footage."
The company said "staff disconnected the webcam's public feed but continued to monitor live images through webcam controls and shared further updates with National Park Service staff".
"The park sent a search and rescue team to find the hiker, who was caught in windy and rainy conditions with poor visibility," Cynthia Hernandez, a spokesperson for the National Park Service, said in a statement to the BBC.
Park rangers found the hiker at 18:48 local time "unharmed, and brought the hiker back to safety".
Explore.org shared the video clip of the stranded hiker on X, formerly known as Twitter and wrote: "Bear Cam saves a hikers life!"
Viewership for the Alaska bear cam surges ahead of Fat Bear Week, which this year takes place in early October.
Fat Bear Week is a popular online contest held by Katmai National Park that crowns one bear the fattest of them all as the animals bulk up on salmon before hibernation.
With seven cameras around the park, it is typical for people to tune into the park's popular bear fishing spots.
But the hiker was lucky people were also watching the alpine tundra of Dumpling Mountain - a considerably less picturesque spot, which was shrouded in fog when he was seeking help on Tuesday."
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