1 Attachment(s)
RVing road trip in Alaska
My husband I drove our RV to Alaska in 2009 so some things may have changed. We came into Alaska at Chicken, then drove to Fairbanks, making a big loop of almost all the roads In Alaska. We had purchased the Alaska Tour Saver coupon book before leaving. The attractions and experiences that are discounted vary from year to year but it can save you a lot of money. I noticed they have a discount through January 5, 2019 —worth it if you plan to visit several attractions in this year’s book.
In Fairbanks, highlights there were a visit to Chena Hot Springs (they do have cabins to rent), University of Alaska Museum, and The Robert G. White Large Animal Research Station run by UA to see muskox.(There is also a muskox farm in Palmer, near Anchorage.) Another highlight was a tour to the Arctic Circle. We chose one where you go up by van and fly back. I would have liked to do one that went all the way to Prudhoe Bay but this was still an excellent trip. We saw the Alaska pipeline up close and had a demonstration of permafrost plus lots of mosquitoes!
From there we went to Denali National Park. We lucked out with a clear day of viewing on our all-day Kantishna Experience bus tour. As others have mentioned, a tour is the only way to go to the end of the road. Long 12-hour day but worth it.
We spent a few days in Anchorage. George was in Alaska for the Good Friday earthquake in 1964 so we rented bikes and visited Earthquake Park and continued on the bike path that follows the Cook Inlet for quite a few miles, coming upon a moose and her calf! We saw a couple of museums in including the Alaska Native Heritage Center. I believe we had a coupon for the Grandview Day trip on the Alaska Railroad. We took it from Anchorage to Portage and bused back.
Attachment 4840Another special experience was watching the bore tide in Turnagain Arm near Anchorage. We drove down to Alyeska to watch since George had been a ski patrolman there when stationed in Anchorage and we wanted to look around. There are also pullouts along the highway to watch the tide. We watched one man kayaking the leading edge of the tide! It can be up to 10-feet high if you catch the right day. You can find a estimate online of the height of the tide on various days, depending on the phase of the moon.
On the Kenai peninsula, our favorite place was Homer. We enjoyed the bookstore and coffee shop and used a coupon to do a boat tour. The weather was lousy so it wasn’t the best. Homer is the base for a number of tours via airplane to view bears but you do need good weather to fly.
Our best boat tour was out of Valdez on one of the glacier and wildlife tours, using a two-for-one coupon. The trip started out in fog but the sun came out soon, lighting up icebergs and glaciers. We watched a glacier calve and saw all sorts of marine animals including humpback and killer whales, porpoises and otters. It was magical! We bought cases of canned salmon at a Valdez cannery to bring home, practical since we were in an RV. Some travelers bring an extra freezer along for fresh salmon.
From Valdez we drove to Tok, then back on the Alaska and Cassiar Highways. We saw the most wildlife in British Columbia in Banff and Jasper National Parks and along the Alaska Highway on our trip north.
It's beginning to come together
Thanks everyone - this is great. I'm now beginning to build the foundations of our trip (looking like a clockwise circuit taking in Anchorage > Talkeetna > Denali > Fairbanks > McCarthy > Valdez > Whittier > Seward > Homer > Anchorage).
I'll start filling in the gaps and come back when I've taken things a bit further.
Must include THE PIPELINE.
Peter, while in Fairbanks be sure to take a trip north to Livengood, where you can see the pipeline, its history, construction and maintenance (the pig in the pipe). Can't recall where exactly it is, but it is before you get to Livengood, right on the highway - can't be missed. It is one of the few places where you can actually get up close with the pipeline, and touch it.
Lifey