(Title photo: Ice Dragon Teeth. Ice stalagmites and - stalactites forming teeth-like ice sculptures. Close-up taken along the Yukon River in Whitehorse.) It could all be so warm and fuzzy I read a love story generated by AI. Not more shallow than any of today's junk-books. Authentic enough and quite sweet. My wife read an… Continue reading Sinister Perils are looming behind today’s AI-Hype. Don’t become an “AI-Lemming”!
Tag: Yukon
Ice Art – my Way of shooting amazing Winter-Scapes
Winters in Whitehorse are not only cold, but can be grey and long - I found that Vitamin D supplements don't really cut it. So whenever the sun is out, I'm out there exploring ever changing ice- and snow-scapes. Nature's beauty can be fleeting: What may be an exceptional motif now can be gone in… Continue reading Ice Art – my Way of shooting amazing Winter-Scapes
Why the Millennium Trail is the best Covid-Therapy: Critters, Encounters and Ice Wonders
To maintain our sanity and fitness, my wife and I walk the Millennium Trail in Whitehorse almost daily. But this trail is about much more than the five picturesque kilometres along the Yukon River. Ice Photography I have a secret patch along the river that never freezes and generates ever changing wonders of ice. Mother… Continue reading Why the Millennium Trail is the best Covid-Therapy: Critters, Encounters and Ice Wonders
Canada’s Yukon – Things You Never Knew
Bears and People The number of bears and people in the Yukon is about the same - roughly 37,000 - in a space about the size of Spain! About 85% are black bears, 15% are grizzlies plus a few polar bears. Most people live in the capital Whitehorse (27,000). Dispelling some Myths about the Yukon… Continue reading Canada’s Yukon – Things You Never Knew



