Salcha, Alaska sits in the Tanana Valley of the Alaskan interior just south of Fairbanks, and it’s the base for a private birds-in-flight workshop that puts photographers inside a professional duck blind inches from launching waterfowl. Led by award-winning Alaska wilderness photographer Todd Whetstine, this half-day session blends technical camera coaching with a front-row seat to Bald Eagles, Trumpeter Swans, Sandhill Cranes, and a host of dabbling and diving waterfowl.
Your classroom is low and quiet: a real blind placed at a proven wetland site Todd has scouted for years along a braided river and sedge marsh. The setup compresses distance so you’re composing against sky, ripple, and tundra-edge trees rather than guessing at distant silhouettes.
You’ll dial in shutter speeds, burst modes, autofocus tracking, and aperture choices specific to each species under varying Alaska light. Todd teaches anticipation of behavior — the small cues a swan gives before a power-launch, the moment an eagle tucks its wings — turning reaction into prediction.
Composition is part of the brief: you’ll learn to place a bird against dramatic Alaskan late-day light, to use low-angle reflections, and to include the dark lines of black spruce and river ice when they appear.
This is private instruction limited to two photographers per session, not a roadside setup. The blind location and ethic focus on repeatable, ethical shooting opportunities — close, but not intrusive — and Todd’s methods have been refined after guiding more than 10,000 photographers through Alaska.
Expect a half-mile to three-quarter-mile hike on mostly flat ground; moderate fitness and steady feet make the approach comfortable. Bring your longest lens, spare batteries and cards, a sturdy monopod or tripod, and layered clothing—Alaska’s light shifts fast and temperatures can swing.
Beyond images, the workshop connects you to the Tanana Valley landscape: braided channels, sedge flats, black spruce stands, and the seasonal rhythms that make the interior a magnet for migratory birds. The region is part of the ancestral lands of the Tanana Athabascan people, whose relationship with river and wildlife reaches back generations.
Photographers who are serious about sharpening flight technique, mastering autofocus tracking, or simply returning home with frames that stop a viewer will find this focused, high-value half day impossible to replicate roadside. Small groups, real blinds, and guided anticipation turn fleeting wildlife moments into reliable learning experiences. Book with Todd Whetstine near Salcha and trade blurry wings for frames that deliver impact.
Sessions are limited to up to 3 guests, require a minimum age of 13, and last roughly 3.5 hours; meeting logistics are provided at booking for the short walk from the trailhead located near Fairbanks. This is a chance to learn techniques in Alaska’s interior with an expert guide.