It's 10°C and light drizzle
in Katmai.
Local time 00:30,
sunset at 23:13.
LiveKatmai
10°
🌦Light drizzle
Feels like 8° · UV 0
Wind
4 km/h
south-southeasterly
Humidity
86%
Rain
0.1 mm
Pressure
1014 hPa
Sunrise → Sunset
05:46 → 23:13
17h 27m daylight
Air Quality
17 · Good
PM2.5 · 3 µg/m³
Running 7.3° below the seasonal average.
Bring an extra layer.
UV index: 0
Mood: Rainy
The week ahead
Today
🌦
13°9°
91%
Sun
🌦
14°10°
21%
Mon
🌦
12°10°
69%
Tue
🌦
14°10°
82%
Wed
🌦
14°12°
89%
Thu
🌦
13°10°
71%
Fri
🌦
11°10°
54%
Hour by hour
now0408121620
Temperature, next 24h
What's it like
In Katmai, right now.
Katmai rain — 0.1mm drifting over the Brooks River. The bears don't mind; salmon season waits for no weather. The forest darkens, the river swells.
Common questions
When are the bears most active on the Katmai cam?
Peak activity is during the salmon run, roughly late June through September, with July being the most spectacular as dozens of brown bears gather at Brooks Falls to catch sockeye salmon leaping upstream. A second peak comes in September as bears fatten before hibernation. Through winter the bears den and the cam is quiet. The cam runs on Alaska time (AKDT/AKST), so check the local hour — bears fish actively around the clock during peak season thanks to the long northern daylight.
What's the weather like at Katmai National Park?
Katmai has a cool, wet subarctic maritime climate. Summers are mild — typically 10-18°C — and often grey, rainy, and windy, even at the height of the salmon run. Winters are long, cold, and snowy, with temperatures well below freezing. There is no truly warm season. The weather can change fast, sweeping in off the Gulf of Alaska, which is part of what makes the live cam so atmospheric: you see the real, raw Alaskan conditions in real time.
Where exactly is the Katmai bear cam?
The cameras are on the Brooks River in Katmai National Park, southern Alaska, roughly 460km southwest of Anchorage. The most famous angle is Brooks Falls, where bears catch salmon mid-leap. The area is true wilderness — no roads lead there; rangers and researchers reach it by float plane. The cams are run in partnership between the National Park Service and explore.org, bringing one of the planet's great wildlife spectacles to anyone with a screen.
Can you see the Northern Lights or other weather events on the cam?
The Katmai cams are focused on the river and the bears, and most activity is during the bright summer months when nights are short and the aurora is hard to see. However, the cam beautifully captures Alaskan weather — rain sweeping the river, mist on the spruce, the first autumn snow on the surrounding peaks. For the changing seasons and dramatic northern skies, the shoulder months of September and early October are the most visually striking.