Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Trip Reflections

Hello,
We are home, arrived Sunday evening.  Kitty was glad to see us, he had quite the summer living in the garage with a family of raccoons that decided to move in and mess up the garage and eat Kitty's food.  Thanks to our neighbor, Denny, for rescuing Kitty and catching the raccoons and taking them for a long ride!  

Traveling along the Cassiar Highway was nice, the weather for the most part was sunny.  We did a day trip down to Telegraph Creek, a small, almost ghost town on the Stikine River.  River boats used to come up the river from the Inside Passage to there during the gold rush era. The road was the trip!!  Gravel, narrow, 20% grades up and down river valleys, traveled over a lava dike that was not much wider than the road with straight down drops to rivers on both sides!!!  Impressive scenery.

We also spent a couple days in Hyder, Ak.  We can drive there from the Cassiar Highway, it is the most Southerly  town in Alaska.  It is also an almost ghost town located at the end of the Portage Channel. There is a salmon spawning area where the forest service has an observation deck for bear watching. We went twice and watched a black bear and then a sow brown bear with a cub fish for their meals.  Fascinating.

From there we pretty much headed home.  We did drive through the Canadian Rockys, stopped at the Rocky Mountain House, a restored Hudson's Bay Fur Trading Post near Calgary, camped at Cypress Hills in southern Alberta, then crossed the border into Montana.  While in North Dakota, we spent a pleasant  morning visiting the Theodore Roosevelt National Park. A gentler kind of badlands that has good hiking potential. We were amazed at how green the landscape was from Montana into Wisconsin.  A lot of standing water was evident and the rivers were running very high.

All the while we were in Alaska, not a single person mentioned Sarah whats-her-name!  The name was no where to be seen in Wasilla.  We did ask the gal that transferred our van to the ferry while we were on the Copper River about her, and I think Alaskans are embarrassed. Her book was seen in two places, each a grocery store check out, it was marked 50% off and it was located next the National Inquirer.  We spent a lot of time this trip around the Prince William Sound and the Exxon Valdez and the aftermath of the oil spill of some 20 years ago is still up front in the minds and people were reflecting on what changes it caused in their lives.  Small town museums gave that event most the space in their displays, even more than the '64 earthquake and tsunami.

I'll add pictures, this time the internet connection should be ok!

When we get an idea for the next trip, we will let you know!!!

Thanks for traveling with us!  Carol and Ned

Wasilla visitor center.

Hyder, Alaska


Telegraph Creek road.
Edge of the lava dike, along the edge of Telegraph Creek road.
The other side of the dike and road!
Black Bear feeding at Fish Creek near Hyder, Ak.
Success!!

Mama Griz and baby.

Where is that fish?

Got it!

Now, how did mom do it??

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Pictures from Fire

Hi, here are a few pictures of the road through fire. 



This is the line up, our van is 3rd on the left, and the next picture is what was behind us!
The line extends as far as I can see, the smoke makes the picture unclear. Some of these campers were in line for 24 hours and slept along the road.  We were in a campground and squeezed into a spot where someone left, so we were in line about 5 hours.  Then the heliotropes flew over to check the road and then gave the pilot car the go ahead.

We met the fire about 15 miles down the road.  We did see flames and evidence of a very hot fire along both sides of the road.



We are finding out that downloading pictures is troublesome to the connection and to me!!!  Takes a bunch of time and the connections cuts out and then stuff disappears!

We are in Hyder, AK now, and went to the bear viewing area along Fish Creek, saw a black bear feeding, then drove up to see Salmon Glacier, drove till the clouds closed in and we couldn't see anything!  We did see the lower parts of the glacier. 
Take care, Carol

Friday, August 6, 2010

Driving into the Fire.

Hello Everyone,
We did it! We are on the Cassiar Highway!!  We are back on our planned track.

We did travel the Robert Campbell Highway through Faro and Ross River.  Both towns are in the middle on nowhere, actually The Yukon and are former mining towns trying to survive on tourism, or just plain survive.  The road for the first 100 miles was paved/seal coated, then gravel with a chemical to make it firm. Then the last almost 200 miles it was gravel and very dusty, with construction where it was muddy.  We camped at two beautiful lakes along the way. A new road for us.  The Campbell meets the Alaska Highway at Watson Lake.

At Watson Lake we checked on the fire and highway conditions for the Cassiar Highway that goes south into British Columbia, south of the 60th Parallel. The fire is getting bigger and going right down the highway corridor, and the road is closed. They may open it twice daily with a pilot car. Maybe if the smoke is not thick.  So, we stocked up and got a camp site by the intersection of the two highways.  We washed the van there as it was really dirty from the last few days.  Campers and trucks were lining up for the wait for the opening of the road.  The line was over a mile long, It did open once on Tuesday, we hoped to go on Wednesday.  We joined the line Wed. morning, with the hope of a 9AM or so trip through the fire area, about a 50 mile escort.  The opening came at 1PM.  Helicopters were overhead checking the route etc.  Quite the excitement!  The smoke at the intersection was thick and we wondered how it would be on the drive through.  I'll try to explain via pictures.  Take care Carol and Ned

Pictures won't send AGAIN!!!  So will do it later.