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Our Alaska Trip Part XXV: Time Is Precious

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  • Alaska & Canada
  • and RV Life: Travel
July 24, 2010
6

    July 24, 2010

    This is the 25th in a continuing series about our trip through Canada to Alaska

    Let’s start with the question: “What is Wrangell-St. Elias?” [answer below]

    Our caravan is designed to give us a sampler of what Alaska has to offer. It’s like trying to see all of Colorado or North Carolina in two days. It makes us want to come back to spend more time here. The biggest difference is the time factor. We drive 180-300 miles between destinations, and there are numerous things to see along the way.

    Thursday, we stopped for glaciers and waterfalls, sped by moose and looked at towering, snow-covered mountains. When we arrived at our campground, our fellow caravaners asked if we stopped at the railroad tunnel, site of a shoot-out, and other notable places. Others said they had just gotten back from the other side of the bay, where Mama Bear was showing her three cubs how to catch fish. The dozens of people salmon fishing had to scurry out of the way while they ate. Too much!

    Our strong suggestion is that you try to spend as much time in Alaska as your resources allow. Around every corner are more wonders to behold.

    Whether you are into just passively enjoying the splendor of the scenery or are interested in more active pursuits – like fishing and hunting; photography and bird-watching; whitewater rafting and kayaking; native culture, homesteaders’ living conditions; mining history; geology and the northern lights (in the winter); hiking and biking, or the many more things that have filled us with excitement – you’ll need time to see it all. Since Alaska is a long drive from the Lower 48, it’s not a trip most people will make more than once (I hope we will be back in a few years).

    We have delved into most of those pursuits and know there is much more we haven’t seen or done that would we like to experience.  We know that can be said of everywhere in America and Canada, but in Alaska, it’s all so immense. Unfortunately, the distances between most spots are great, so what takes a few hours to get to elsewhere takes a day of driving here.

    Our Catamaran, The Valdez Spirit, Plows Through Ice to Reach the Glacier

    Our Catamaran, The Valdez Spirit, Plows Through Ice to Reach the Glacier

    Another reason to have more time is the weather.  We have been extremely lucky on our tour. The rain has passed and the sun has greeted us on just about every scenic and history tour we have taken. But cruise boats don’t go out in the heavy fog, Mt. McKinley hides from Denali visitors most days, and a walking tour of Dawson City with dirt streets could be miserable in the rain.

    A Close-Up View of the Imposing Meares Glacier

    A Close-Up View of the Imposing Meares Glacier

    While our visit has been fantastic, the one thing we have missed the most is having the opportunity to get to know locals, which mostly means people who have been here 7 to 35 years. By the very nature of wanting to live in Alaska, they are interesting, usually different, and probably fun to talk with. Those we have met fall into those categories, so we wish we could spend more time getting to know them.

    Rafts of Sea Otters Were Comic Relief on our 10-hour Cruise

    Rafts of Sea Otters Were Comic Relief on our 10-hour Cruise

    One of our buddies in the caravan, who has been the butt of many jokes about sleeping through lots of the best nature tours and cruises startled me Thursday when he said he would love to move here. Alaska is that kind of place…people come for a visit and then, like our boat skipper Friday, go back home, pack up what they need and make this their permanent home. It happens all the time.

    Think about it.

    And now for the answer: Wrangell-St. Elias is America’s largest National Park. At 13.2 million acres, it’s six times the size of Yellowstone. The park contains the entire Wrangell Mountain Range and most or parts of three other ranges. Nine of America’s 16 highest mountains are here. There are two roads going into it and 9.6 million acres is a wilderness, which means no motorized vehicles equipment allowed. So how is it that you never heard of Wrangell-St. Elias? We have visited 39 of the 56 national parks plus lots of national memorials (like Mount Rushmore), etc., and we never heard of it either. And, oh yeah, what we’ve seen – albeit a very small area – was an unexpected, spectacular treat as we drove along miles of its border.

    Peaks Peek Through at Wrangell-St. Elias National Park

    Peaks Peek Through at Wrangell-St. Elias National Park

    We considered taking one of those remote roads into the park from Valdez, where we are staying until we computed that it would be a 350-mile round trip, plus a hike and a $50 fee to tour a 14-story mill.

    Maybe next time …

    From the “Never-Bored RVers,” We’ll see you on down the road.

    A Summer Friday Night in a Small Town Previous
    Touring the Columbia Icefield Next
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    6 comments

    1. Pingback: my homepage

    2. Craig

      How do I find this whole series ? We too are heading North next summer and would love to take advantage/ be aware of your adventure. Thanks, Craig

      0
      July 26, 2010
    3. Jim Mahan

      What special equipment do you recommend for your RV, i.e. Arctic package, etc.?

      0
      July 26, 2010
    4. Dick Tracy

      My wife and I are here in Alaska on our 2nd RV trip to this wonderful land. First time was in ’05 right after I retired and we made it a 125 day trip. Back again this year for nearly the same.

      I have enjoyed reading your blog but think you shorted yourself this time by not at least going into the Wrangell St. Elias visitors center just off the highway below Glennallen. We drove our Saturn SL toad into the park over the McCarthy Road on both trips. This year was far easier as the road in has been greatly improved to a good gravel route and only 59 1/2 miles each way. We even took an unanticipated 90+ minute flightseeing this year from McCarthy out over the Bagley Icefield and the mountains. A trip that started at 7 PM and the light cast great shadows that allowed the contour of all the snow shapes to stand out brilliantly. You can tour the mine facilities on your own too. It is well worth the trip so be sure to include it on any future opportunities.

      0
      July 25, 2010
    5. Tim Millington

      Next time take the tour to see the copper processing building at McCarty. We did in 2007 and it was one of the best trip of our 10 weeks in Alaska. We got to meet the locals and had a wonderful experience in the park. I have enjoyed your blog and thank you for posting your travels.

      0
      July 24, 2010
    6. Karla and George Gallagher

      Hi Barry and Monique,

      My husband and I have been following your Alaska trip with a great deal of interest. We have lived in Anchorage, Alaska for 40 years and just retired to become full-time RV’ers this fall. We are both retired as of July 1 of this year and are looking forward to adventures on the road.

      Many visitors do not realize the vastness of our state and that you cannot see everything in one visit. We hope that if you are in Anchorage or the surrounding area that you would contact us and we would love to meet up with you and others in your caravan.

      We hope you will contact us. I do not know if this message will give you my email because I a new at this forum. I am on Facebook – Karla Gallagher, Anchorage, Alaska.

      0
      July 24, 2010

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