Alaska Taxi

Alaska’s bush planes have a rich history that’s woven into the state’s story. Since the early 20th century, small, rugged aircraft became essential for connecting remote settlements, delivering mail and supplies, supporting prospectors and scientists, and performing lifesaving medevacs. Pilots adapted planes with skis, floats, and oversized tires to land on glaciers, tundra, rivers, and rough airstrips. Those early bush flights forged relationships between people and place, and that same spirit of resourcefulness and respect still hums through the valleys today.

In most places, airplanes are a convenience. In Alaska, they are survival. Long before highways stretched across the state, bush planes connected isolated villages, mining camps, fishing towns, and homesteads scattered across millions of acres of mountains, tundra, glaciers, and coastline. In many regions, aircraft were (and still are) the first reliable year-round transportation system Alaska ever had. The pilots who fly them are legends—equal parts mechanic, navigator, medic, mail carrier, and explorer.

Even today, many communities still depend on small aircraft as their primary connection to the outside world. Pilots still land on glaciers, rivers, gravel bars, and remote lakes. Aircraft still connect villages separated by hundreds of miles of wilderness. And old workhorses like the Beaver and Super Cub still fly daily missions across the state.

This photograph is also a meditation. Standing on a ridge, watching that plane thread the valley, I thought about how small moments—an airborne taxi, a shaft of sunlight on a glacier, the whisper of wind through dwarf birch—accumulate into the deep attachment we feel for wild places. Photography, for me, is about preserving those moments and using them to spark a deeper connection. When we feel connected, we care. When we care, we act.

If this piece speaks to you, if you find yourself moved, consider this a gentle nudge: support local conservation efforts, visit and steward wild places responsibly, or simply take a moment to be present. The wilderness around us is resilient but not invincible. Images like “Alaska Taxi” are my small way of saying these places are worth protecting.

All the Best,

David