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Saturday, June 26, 2010

June 25th




THE DETAILS:

THE WEATHER: Well, we were forecasted for rain and it looked like the whole day was going to be a wash out but it has turned out to be a gorgeous day! High of 71 and partly cloudy.

THE DISTANCE: We left Cantwell around noon time and arrived in Talkeetna around 4:00. A total of about 120 miles.


I spent the morning on the computer believe it or not. Cantwell had a great WIFI connection so I did some banking, etc. on line. We were on our way back down the Parks Highway through a stretch of territory called “Caribou Pass”. It was beautiful. Mountains in the background and tundra in front of us. Of course we never saw a caribou (as usual) but it sure looked like the perfect setting for them. As the road descended and gave way to thicker forests and larger trees, it looks more like New Hampshire! We got to the 14 mile cut off north up to Talkeetna and discovered that was a quaint little town that is somewhere between back-woods Alaska and small-town tourist trap. The road up here was more like a suburb road in a major city due to its paved bike trail that paralleled the road and all the street signs looked modern and new. As we neared the end of the spur road we could just barely make out a gorgeous view of Mt. McKinley in front of us. We’re going to try to get a picture of it if the clouds break up tonight.

This is actually base camp for Mt. McKinley hikers and a great spot for flying to the mountain for an aerial tour. We see many hikers around the area. The road literally ends in a round-about that has a bunch of quaint shops selling a ton of Alaska memorabilia. There is the constant sounds of small aircraft overhead landing and taking off from a lake and a train’s whistle in the distance. Unfortunately we were unable to get the campground we wanted due to it being full so we settled for a “dry” camp site just about a half mile away. We may get a spot at the real campground tomorrow - hopefully. (Dry camping, in case you didn’t know, is where they offer a piece of land you can park your RV that has a picnic table and fire pit but no hook-ups. No water or electric. So we’ll be running off of battery tonight. We’ll have water & electric but at a reduced strength.)

We will spend a few days here for a couple of reasons. #1.… it looks like good fishing in the area. The guy who checked us in said the king’s are starting to run. That’s fish talk for: the king salmons are starting to head up river! #2... Pastor Paul told us of a church here in town that we would like to check out on Sunday. #3... I have a bunch of work still to do on the computer (end of the month bills, ugh!) and I could take care of it at the campsite if they have a good connection.

So we spent the evening driving around the area on the motorcycle. It is a lot of fun seeing the country side that way. We did some grocery shopping and walked around the little shops and enjoyed a Canadian made beer before retiring for the evening.

PS: Rick, the table to my right are all Germans. It was fun to listen to them talk it up all night long!

4 comments:

  1. Deb,

    Here's a cool site that gives you reviews of different camp grounds. This one is for the "dry" camp you mentioned:

    http://www.rvparkreviews.com/regions/Alaska/Talkeetna.html#CGID10899

    and here is the one with hook-ups that you will hopefully be in now:

    http://www.rvparkreviews.com/regions/Alaska/Talkeetna.html#CGID5538

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  2. Hey Deb and Gary, Remembering Adam on his birthday, as always. Hope you have a blessed weekend at the camp...dry, wet or otherwise. Peace and love, Martie and Dave & the crew

    ReplyDelete