I am still here -- Now headed for Zion NP
Wow -- the first time that I have been able to get onto RTA properly for some time... thought I had been banned or something! Sorry, Mark, to have missed you the other day. Glad we have that worked out for Friday now!
Mark Sedenquist's Note: {Banning a RoadTrip Guru, would be a rather remarkable turn-of-events....}
Glad you guys enjoyed the report. I enjoyed the trip like you wouldn't believe. Even if the advice given on this forum that it was too much in too short a time was a little too close to being true for my liking. Other than 'The Dempster', I think it was about perfect... if they cut that out, fly up to Tuktoyaktuk from Whitehorse, then spent more time in the parks along the way I would say that it would be perfect! Met a great group of people who I now miss terribly... and put on a bundle of weight what with all that drinking and the 'free' food! So now I need to get hiking again!!
Get me out of Anchorage, now!
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Having just said my goodbyes to Kristina (or Princess as she had become known) I suddenly started to feel quite sad - the previous evening had been so much fun that it had somehow slipped my mind it was a farewell party and it was only now, as I stood alone in my hotel room, that it started to hit home. I knew right then that there was only one thing to do - get out of Anchorage at the earliest opportunity. I checked at the front desk and discovered that there was a shuttle about to leave for the airport - I bought myself a little time by bunging the driver five bucks to wait and hurriedly grabbed my stuff from around the floor of the room and shoved it, as best I could, into my bag. I then joined the other passengers on the bus, all of whom were glaring at me for delaying them for 30 seconds of their busy lives.
The hotel clerk had suggested that I would only need to be at the airport an hour before my flight but, when I arrived, it was soon quite apparent that they were hopelessly out of touch and I'd never have made my flight if I'd listened to them. It seemed every man and his dog was trying to get out of Anchorage that morning and, just to make matters even more frustrating, they all seemed to have turned up with huge coolers and boxes of fish to check-in which was causing a real headache for the poor check-in girl, not to mention those in the queue. To add insult to injury, when I did finally make it to the front of the line, the news was broken that there was a delay on my flight to Juneau and I would likely miss my connecting flight as a result. "When will the next one be?" I enquired, "Same time tomorrow, sir", came the reply. Awesome.
Having received the full treatment at security once again (have I done something to upset someone?) I made my flight to Juneau where, on arrival, we were greeted with what they described as a ‘security breach' but what amounted to a large black man in a stunningly stylish blue PVC raincoat and pork pie hat walking around and looking out of place. Now, maybe I'm being naive here, but if I were a terrorist, I wouldn't dress up as a character from a Dick Tracy comic strip. Whatever, it sent several huge fat security guards running through the terminal and caused so much commotion that my connecting flight hadn't been allowed to back off the gate. When calm returned I asked the dispatcher if there was any way that I could still get on my flight. Anyone who has seen the TV programme that follows Easyjet on ITV would expect to receive a resounding ‘no' at this point so you can imagine my delight when I was told, no problem, and the doors were reopened. As they say - everything happens for a reason and, whilst that poor ‘terrorist' would likely be spending the night in jail for looking suspicious, I would, after all, be spending mine in Glacier Bay. Thanks man!
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17 minutes after taking off we were touching down again in Gustavus - just the sort of flight that I like. The airport at Gustavus was quite comical - a short runway necessitating a lively pull-up followed by a U turn back down the runway to what they lovingly referred to as the ‘terminal'. I am not sure that the word terminal is appropriate - barn may be better - but the daily arrival of a 737 was obviously akin to the return of a Space Shuttle for the locals who came out in their droves to watch the spectacle.
The reason that I was visiting Gustavus wasn't the result of some bizaare challenge to go on the world's shortest flight to the world's smallest airport: it was simply, with the lack of connecting roads, the easiest way to get to Glacier Bay National Park. Anyone who has read my blog previously will know that I love visiting national parks and I certainly wasn't going to pass up an opportunity to visit one of Alaska's most beautiful whilst I was on the doorstep. I had decided to do it in what I thought was going to be some style by staying at the Glacier Bay Lodge but, on my arrival, I was somewhat disappointed to find that the accommodation was every bit as basic as the old school bus which had just shuttled us in from the airport. Not that I was going to get too excited about it - I could have been spending the night on the airport floor and there I was in one of Alaska's best-loved national parks - and I was determined to enjoy it. But before I could do that I needed to take a quick nap.
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I hadn't had much sleep on my last night in Anchorage, with one thing and another, so it wasn't altogether a massive shock I woke from my nap and took a look at my watch to discover that it was 6am! I had booked myself on an eight-hour boat trip through the park and had to be down on the boat dock within 45-minutes or I would lose my slot and the money that I had paid. I hadn't come all this way to do that so I jumped out of bed, grabbed a quick shower and fresh clothes, and then hurried down to the boat dock. Being on my own again, after so long as part of a group, I felt somewhat subdued but still managed to thoroughly enjoy the trip. I had found Alaska a little disappointing for wildlife so I was delighted to finally discover the reason - all the wildlife was in Glacier Bay - the place was teeming with it Things got even better when the crew kindly loaned me a pair of their binoculars so that I could get a better view. "Bears at ten o'clock" was quickly followed by "humpback whale at five o'clock". I was tempted to pipe up with an "alligator at three o'clock" but was distracted when we suddenly ran aground on a sandbank. Thankfully, as the crew lowered ladders from the bow of the boat onto the sand, someone explained that we had purposely beached ourselves so that we could pick up kayakers. This news that the boat doubled as a ferry service for kayakers came, I have to say, as something of a relief!
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The trip passed in no time but was thoroughly memorable; The wildlife viewing in particular I loved (we saw eight - ten grizzlies, humpback whales, sealions, seals... we even saw an eagle swoop down and carry a duck off for lunch!) And then there were the breathtaking glaciers: simply stunning. It was fun to wave at the passengers on board the cruise liners as we sailed on by and almost right up to the face of the glaciers. They'd paid all that money and couldn't get any closer than a couple of miles to what they had come to see - they must have been pissed to see us cruise on by!
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Arriving back at the boat dock around 4pm, I could perhaps have made the daily flight out to Juneau if I had hurried but I wasn't booked to fly until the following day and, not being able to face the hassle of getting the airline to switch me onto a different flight, I decided to stay put and enjoy the local area instead. When it came down to it though, I just couldn't enjoy it. It felt far too remote for my liking - the once a day flight had me feeling trapped - and, well, my mind kept wandering to my newfound friends who were now elsewhere: many of them making their way back home to Europe at that precise moment. I felt sad and couldn't wait to get on the flight back to Juneau the following day.
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I stayed at the hostel in Juneau (very clean and very cheap in case you're thinking of going) for three days whilst I waited for my ferry which was going to take me south to Bellingham. Now Juneau is a nice enough place but I don't really think that it deserves more than a day or two as a visitor. Maybe I'm being unfair - there were some good hikes around there which I didn't do due to the appalling weather - or maybe I'm not: you'll just have to go there and judge for yourself. The most annoying thing about Juneau wasn't the weather - which was pretty poor - but the constant stream of cruise ships arriving and departing: no wonder the locals seemed to hate tourists!
Whilst I was in Juneau I took the bus across town to visit the Medenhall Glacier with a fellow Brit who was staying in the same hostel. Whilst I was there it hit home how I had become totally spoiled since I'd left London: I arrived with the attitude of ‘another day, another glacier', snapped a couple of photos and wandered back towards the bus stop. Only then did I stop myself and think how exciting it would have been to see a glacier back in the UK. I turned around and headed back with a fresh attitude and thoroughly enjoyed hiking up to it.
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The other real highlight in Juneau was my pilgrimage to the Alaskan Brewing Company. I had become a big fan of their work over the past weeks and I felt compelled to visit - especially when I heard they were giving away free samples to visitors! I had expected to have to endure an hour or so of being regaled with boring facts about how beer is brewed but I couldn't have been wider of the mark. As soon as we arrived we were given a free beer - always a good start - before heading off quickly on our ‘tour'. We made it perhaps a hundred feet or so to a glass window looking onto the brewery before our guide - a crazy guy whose name I didn't catch but who quite clearly missed his vocation as a comedian - insisted we turn back for a refill. Right then I knew this was gonna be my sort of tour! We returned again to the glass window where he chatted for five minutes or so, posing for photos as he went, before leading us back to the bar once again. At this point he announced the tour was over and we should just drink as much as we wanted. My type of tour indeed!
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The final day I spent by walking out to Douglas on the other side of the river for no apparent reason other than I could. After I had got that out of my system I headed back to Juneau and spent the day at the library using their free wifi to catch up with my email and to get some preparation work done for the next leg of my trip. Soon it was time to head back to the hostel to pick up my bag and head off to the ferry for my 1.45am sailing.
The ferry terminal was 13 miles and a $35 taxi ride away from downtown so I'd planned to take the last city bus out as far as I could and walk the rest of the way. This was a fine plan but one which almost saw me and another guy from the hostel murdered by the locals who weren't amused by our big backpacks as they stumbled onto the bus in various states of pissed. Eventually we made it off alive and started to head off down the dark windy road towards the ferry terminal. Unsure if we were going the right direction we managed to flag down a passing taxi driver by standing in the road, jumping up and down and waving our arms about. If I were him, I'd have guessed that we were fresh out of the asylum and driven on past. I guess it's just one more example of that Alaskan spirit. I loved it up there.
I had been looking forward to riding the ferry down to Bellingham for quite a while - the scenery was said to be quite beautiful - and I had even managed to book a cabin to make the three day/four night journey that little more comfortable. It soon became apparent that what I had been told about the boat being full of characters was completely true and I spent a couple of hours getting to know some of them before heading off to bed.
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By the time I woke next morning we were arriving in the small town of Sitka and I was pleased to hear that we would be staying in port for three hours. I jumped off the boat, turned left out of the port and headed out to do some hiking on some nearby trails that came highly-recommended. Back on-board the ferry I settled down on deck and watched the world go by. By the time it was time for bed again I was wishing that I was out on deck in a tent enjoying the party.
A couple of days later we sailed in to the port of Bellingham and I disembarked, said my goodbyes to another group of friends (though I think it is fair to say that these were slightly crazier than the last ones!), and headed off to a local hotel. The journey from ferry port to the hotel, along the busy interstate and past endless McDonalds and Starbucks, was quite a shock to the system. For a moment I was wishing I was back on ‘The Dempster' but, several hours later, having had chance to reacquaint myself with the ‘real world', I'd regained my senses. I was no longer pining for the road from hell but I was pining for Alaska and the Yukon. I knew I would - I just hadn't realised how much until now.
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Originally published on - and Copyright retained by - Boogity, Boogity, Boogity
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