Defining future & space.

Looking for inspiration to kick it off, I stumbled across the work of Shane Griffin, an artist and director based in New York uniquely initiate future proof sources for 2.0 technology. Uniquely communicate worldwide content via client centered ideas.

Assertively envisioneer stand-alone methodologies whereas mission-critical models.

Born out of a desire to break with conventional methodologies of our industry, our Product team holds innovation as fundamental to our mission.

Alaska is not a zoo. Not a safari park. Not a place for chance encounters.
It is the largest, wildest wildlife habitat in North America — and here, nature sets the rhythm, not us.

When bears hunt salmon, wolves move silently through the tundra, caribou migrate in vast herds across the Arctic taiga, or whales break the surface of still fjords with thunderous breath — it feels like stepping, for a moment, into another world.
A world where humans are not at the center.

Because that may be the most powerful truth about Alaska:
This land belongs to the animals.

There are more moose than people. On Kodiak Island, the largest brown bears in the world gather along rivers and coastlines during the summer months — immense, awe-inspiring creatures.
In the south, sea otters drift through kelp forests while sea lions defend their territory and orcas cut through deep blue water with quiet precision.

Above it all, bald eagles, golden eagles, geese, ptarmigans, swans, and countless migratory birds fill the skies — a paradise for ornithologists, or simply for anyone willing to look up.

Wildlife encounters in Alaska are not just about binoculars and cameras.
They are about attitude. Respect. Patience.

And often, they are about the smallest moments:
a track in the mud,
the crack of a branch,
the call of a raven in the morning mist.

It is an invitation — to become part of it.
At a distance, yet with your whole presence.


With murkl.com, you experience these encounters far from the crowds — on foot, by boat, or from the air.
Always guided by experienced locals. Always on eye level.

And sometimes, it happens in the most unexpected places:
a moose crossing the road,
a bear slowly making its way through a quiet intersection.

The rules are simple:
In Alaska, wildlife has the right of way.


murkl.com — where the wild meets your eyes.

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