Tag: alaska

  • Airstreaming to Alaska – Chapter 13: Tok to Valdez

    Airstreaming to Alaska – Chapter 13: Tok to Valdez

    Posted January 25, 2023 – Narrated by Carmen
    To listen to the podcast, click the play button

    Airstreaming to Alaska

    “It’s from an Aleut word, Alyeska. It means ‘that which the sea breaks against,’ and I love that.”

    Alaska, land of myth and mystery.

    Richardson Highway
    On the Richardson Highway south of Gulkana

    It’s Shangri–la, Xanadu and Tír na nÓg.

    valdez
    Prince William Sound near Port Valdez

    It’s Through the Looking Glass …

    richardson highway
    South of Copper Center on the Richardson Highway

    Where The Crawdads Sing,

    homestead trail valdez
    Homestead Trail, Valdez

    The Fortress of Solitude,

    glenallen
    Near Glenallen

    and Beyond The Wall.

    valdez glacier
    Glacier on Prince William Sound near Valdez

    Before the cruise ships found it, getting to Alaska was a heroes journey of purpose and destiny – a trek that required talent, experience and superior genes. Even Today, over-landing there and back is like dancing on stairs.

    worthington glacier
    Worthington Glacier

    If you don’t pay the AlCan tax (losing an axel or windshield, your pride or your stride) then you are one lucky duck.

    taylor highway
    Taylor Highway south of Chicken

    Romanticize Alaska and she will break your heart. Idealize her and she will out you as a fool.

    richardson highway
    Near Tonsina Lake on the Richardson Highway

    Alaska doesn’t play truth-or-dare, because that would imply that your pitiful ego is worth her time.

    gulkana
    Gulkana River

    Truth is, Alaska’d just as soon kill ya as look at ya. She’s crazy-beautiful, but make no mistake, engagement – on her terms – is undeniably coherent, logical and uncomplicated. “Look at me” she says, “Hear me out.”

    richardson highway
    South of the Hub of Alaska

    At first glance, nothing’s there. That’s because there’s so much there, there. Our perception needed time to acclimate.

    valdez
    North of Valdez

    Alaska is all about layers piled upon layers. Once you begin to see them, it’s like having eyes for the first time.

    richardson highway
    South of Copper Center

    In the beginning, the free-ranging sun caught us off guard as it moved across the tundra flanked by a Bob Fosse chorus line of long-legged stratus clouds. The show, literally, never stopped because, here, Darkness has been conquered.

    taylor highway
    All light but no sunshine. Taylor Highway south of Chicken, Alaska

    Even from the roadside you can identify layers of forest, lava domes, flow deposits, shield volcanoes, stratovolcanoes, glacial ice and several different climates.

    Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
    Wrangell-St. Elias National Park

    Alaska’s layers extend into the culture.

    valdez museum
    Seal gut hood parka, early 20th century from the Valdez Museum

    We marveled that for thousands of years Alaskans have engineered a fragile truce with this volatile place.

    valdez museum
    Dip net with wooden handle, extension, and net rim from the Valdez Museum
    To learn more about Dip netting watch this episode from Simple Living Alaska

    Against all odds, Alaskans joyfully weave a proud legacy into the elements,

    valdez museum
    Alutiiq headdress from the Valdez Museum

    charm the land

    valdez museum
    Eyak Ceremonial Paddle from the Valdez Museum

    and reap reward.

    solomon gulch
    Fishing near Solomon Gulch, Valdez

    We may call it survival, but Alaskans call it joy.

    valdez

    Alaska is layers of soul, mystery and sorrow,

    In his childhood, Jim survived a fatal car accident so we always pay attention to roadside tributes.

    heroism, ambition and long-lost dreams.

    George Ashby Memorial Museum, Cooper Center
    George Ashby Memorial Museum, Copper Center

    The vastness overwhelms. Alaska is bigger than we envisioned. Even while outfitted with GPS and maps, this was a labyrinthine journey.

    valdez
    Valdez

    The Drive

    The majority of the 77 mile, 3-hour stretch from Chicken to Tok is on the Taylor Highway.

    taylor highway

    A combination of pavement and graveled dirt, the 64 miles to the Alaska Highway junction was in slightly better condition than the Top of the World Highway.

    taylor highway
    Taylor Highway north of Tok

    Still, legions of pot holes forced us to the wrong side,

    taylor highway
    Taylor Highway

    and the snow heaves prompted frequent stops to consider our options.

    taylor highway
    Taylor Highway

    Tok

    On an Alaska roundtrip, Tok is the only village overlanders will see twice: once upon arrival and again, on the way out. Remote, quiet, and low key, the residents here live the subsistence lifestyle, hunting moose, bear, rabbit grouse, and ptarmigan.

    First, we washed the rig.

    tok

    Then, we pulled into our friendly, clean and hospitable refuge, Tundra RV Park.

    tundra rv park

    After settling in for a three-night break from the road, we made time for Fast Eddy’s.

    fast eddy's restaurant
    Fast Eddy’s
    fast eddy's restaurant
    Spruce soda and/or spruce beer is a botanic foodie delight in the Great North. It settles the stomach and cures the snow-heave blues.
    fast eddy's restaurant
    Fast Eddy’s World Famous Fried Mushrooms. Jim loved ’em but the green pop was enough for me.

    Later, we stopped in for a nightcap at The Tundra Bar. How lucky can you get?! Earl, the honorary Mayor of Tok, treated us to a complimentary moose call.

    Gulkana

    This was one of our favorite fee-free overnight destinations.

    gulkana

    As guests of the Ahtna Athabaskan Villagers, we had a glorious Alaska experience on this Wild and Scenic River

    gulkana
    gulkana
    gulkana

    We arrived early to ensure a spot on the shore of Gulkana River at the site of Old Gulkana Village in the Copper River Basin.

    gulkana
    Gulkana River Rest Stop
    Coordinates GPS 62.269674, -145.386716 (62°16’10.8″N 145°23’12.2″W)
    gulkana

    Between Tok and Gulkana we could have enjoyed the entire season, but we had a five-day reservation on Prince William Sound. So, the next morning we had to pull ourselves away and move on to …

    Wrangell-St. Elias National Park

    The largest National Park in America, Wrangell-St. Elias is 13.2 million acres with several visitor centers.

    Due to poor road conditions the rangers didn’t recommend driving into the park. Heavy rain was projected for the next few days, so we attended a ranger talk and watched Crown of The Continent, a film about the park. Then, we took a stroll around the grounds and explored the museum.

    Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
    Wrangell-St. Elias National Park

    Copper Center

    We stopped at Copper Center intending to have lunch at the Old Town Copper Center Inn and Restaurant. But, with the virus on the loose again and no open-air dining option, we skipped lunch and took a quick tour of the museum which had recently opened after a two-year closure.

    copper center
    copper center
    copper center
    copper center
    copper center

    It began to rain heavily with patchy fog so we moved on to our first coastal village destination …

    Valdez

    valdez

    We could barely see what we were missing.

    richardson highway
    Richardson Highway south of Copper Center

    In fair weather, the 117 mile drive through the Chugach Mountains on the Richardson Highway into Valdez must be spectacular. We hoped to see some of this area under clear skies on our way back.

    Richardson highway
    Richardson Highway north of Valdez

    The rain never let up but thanks to the LuLu Belle our Valdez experience at Bear Paw RV Park wasn’t a total loss.

    lulu belle
    lulu belle
    lulu belle
    lulu belle
    lulu belle

    Jim had a fascinating (though wet and miserably cold) day on the water.

    During a brief break in the rain we took a self-guided walking tour around the village.

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    valdez
    valdez
    valdez brewing
    Valdez Brewing Company

    Soggy, cold and exhausted from days of mud, fog and travel-fatigue, we drove over to the west side of the bay to fetch dinner like pros.

    valdez
    valdez
    Peterpan Seafoods

    Jim seasoned our locally sourced salmon with some California sunshine and we closed our eyes and thought of a warm, dry southwest day. The magic worked!

    Hello Sunshine Salmon & Taters

    What a happy surprise! Our adventurous San Diego friends, Ben and Ruth, happened to see us drive by. Later, we met up on a heated patio to exchange Alaska stories over cocktails and watch the news about the historic heat wave of 2022.

    Here’s to roughing it in The Great North in the good ol’ summertime 🥂

    valdez

    Alaska is from an Aleut word, Alyeska (al-lee-YES-ka) which means, “that which the sea breaks against.” Those words attend to a bundle of conflicted feelings and impressions I gathered about Alaska: Futility and Bliss, Expanse and Limitations and, as Ben puts it, “the Agony and the Ecstasy.”

    Alyeska also describes that electric thrill when some indescribable beauty so arrests my heart’s imagination that it ups and tries to muscle past my fear and bone, determined to press on and go before me – lashing against my chest as if it can fly, go aloft, take wing.

    valdez

    You can see our exact route on this map.

    *photos in this post (unless otherwise noted) were taken and copyrighted by Living In Beauty.


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