Tag Archives: campgrounds

Alaskans

We have now been in Alaska for six weeks now. Therefore I am about as poorly qualified as anyone to make some random observations about the state and its people.

Let’s start with the state. It is huge, but if you limit yourself to paved highways you don’t see much of it. When we get back to the Canadian border we will have driven about 2,000 miles inside Alaska and we will have traversed almost all of the major highways, several out and back for double credit. In the same breath I must say that we probably haven’t seen ten percent of this state. It would take a well founded boat and a whole summer to see the fjords of the panhandle of the state. Then it would take half a lifetime to hike the wild back country areas of the state.

Homes: Huge areas of the state have a permafrost condition in the soil. If a building is not properly constructed so as to allow the soil to remain frozen, the building slowly slumps into the ground. I was surprised to find out that large areas do not have access to good water. You see a lot of pickups with a huge polyethylene tank in the back. Many homes have to truck in their water. What I call the “California Style Home” has not caught on here in rural Alaska. Log homes are very popular and considerably smaller that we of the lower 48 consider a bare minimum. You don’t actually see many of the homes along the road. You see a corridor of trees with drives that dive back into the timber every quarter mile or so. I am told that when you fly over these homesteads, each drive opens up into a nice little clearing with a home and several out buildings.

Cars: I expected to see a lot of “Cowboy Cadillacs” up here in this “bigger than Texas” state. Yes there are lots of big new one ton duallies with shiney chrome and four doors. They all have out-of-state licenses on them too. The ones with Alaska plates are older Ford F-100’s with a crumpled fender, rusted out rocker panels and either a water tank or fishing gear in back. Mostly you see the resident Alaskans driving the same cars you see in the rest of the states, usually a few years old. They all have two or three electrical plugs dangling out of the grill in front. The most popular paint job is mottled rust. Quads, four wheelers, ATV’s, ORV’s; what ever you call them are every where. There is a little snaky pair of tracks alongside every road we have traveled. People go everywhere on them. The crowning moment came when we were camped at Pippin Lake along the Richardson Highway. A family of five towed a Ski-Doo up on a trailer and launched it by our boondock camp. The oldest child was perhaps eight and he was riding his own miniature dirt bike and the two younger kids were sandwiched between dad and mom on the four-wheeler. They launched and put the kids into jackets and all piled on the ski-doo and off they went. The older boy was hanging on to his mom and standing on the back lip of the hull. Once the snow starts flying I expect the snow machines we see parked under tarps become the chief mode of transportation for the short haul trips.

Airplanes: There are unimproved landing strips everywhere. Half a dozen little old tail-draggers are hunkered down alongside each strip. Many of these have huge STOL wings with down-curved tips and oversized low pressure “tundra tires” on them. Everyone is a bush pilot around here, and I understand that Alaska has a rather high “incident rate” in their general aviation population. Indeed the FAA statistics for 2003 indicate a rate of incidents that is about three times the national average. There has been a focused safety program to lower that rate and in 2004 the incident rate dropped to only twice the national average. In all fairness it is a big state and many people fly here.

The People: We found an acoustic music festival in a small town called Kenny Lake. Up till then we were mostly on the standard tourist circuit; Denali National Park, Kenai Peninsula, halibut fishing, glacier gazing, museums and on and on. We had a unique opportunity to get to know the “down home people,” of Kenny Lake, Alaska. Don’t try to find it on a map. It is a group of loosely grouped homesteads along the Edgerton Highway that leads into Wrangle National Park and Preserve. This is the famous Copper River Valley of Alaska. We attended “The Music Festival Between the Ranges.” People arrived in cars, pickups and four-wheelers. Camped in vans, tents or just laid out in sleeping bags. We were by far the biggest rig around and the only “tourists” there. The bands were all Copper River Valley locals or Anchorage based. The music was “acoustic” but there was some flexibility there. The Piano was electronic and the base was electric. The genera were eclectic and ranged from rock and roll, to folk, jazz, classical and bluegrass. Maximum attendance ranged from 100 to perhaps 150, and at least a third of them were participating musicians. The people ranged from bearded guys with canvas coveralls at one extreme to some young gals dressed in beads and bangles with filmy semitransparent dresses and a thong with a cartridge belt full of bullets to hold it all together.

We have heard many testimonials from people we meet who claim to have visited a few years ago and just fell in love with this country and stayed.
The motto on their license plates is “The Last Frontier.” If you like the idea of having your neighbors at arm’s length, love hunting and fishing and all types of outdoor sports, then just maybe you should look this state over. You might want to take a peek in January before you make the big plunge. We have heard that 20 below is kind-a refreshing after a few days at 40 below with 20 mile winds.

We are now on our way to visit Haines, Skagway and Juneau as we start working our way back to the lower 48.

Bye from Gary, Judy, Jack, Sonja, Al and Audrey in Alaska.

STOL Super Cub
Typical Bush Plane, STOL Super Cub
Music Festival Between the Ranges
Pickup Band – Mike, Doug, Mary, ???,
Bob and Mike, Plus Daisey

Into Canada:

We have lots of relatives in Colville and Kettle Falls Washington. We stopped at Buena Vista where two of my aunts, Lindell and Shandon, live. I brought along my guitar and played music for over an hour. I had a wonderful time playing and I think everyone there enjoyed themselves. We then moved on to a campground in Kettle Falls and cousins Benny and Monty and his wife Marilyn dropped by for a visit. We met up with Judy’s sister, Sonja and Jack at the campground and we spent the evening planning our trip to Alaska. Continue reading Into Canada:

Newbies:

There is no end to the ways to find new friends and enjoy new experiences as an RV’er. Long time friends from St. Helens, Ray and Peggy Derrick, invited us to join a group campout by the Verde Valley Chapter of the Escapee Club. We were somewhat hesitant about boldly driving in and asking to join without reservations. Peggy assured us that we would be welcome. Continue reading Newbies:

Pooped Puppies and Barking Dogs:

Pooped Puppies and Barking Dogs:

There are days when I think we are taking this fitness thing too far. Then there are days that I know we are. The past two days are a perfect example.

Near El Paso Texas is a small State Park, Hueco Tanks. It is only 860 acres and has campsites for 20 campers and only half a dozen of them would fit Arcturus, so we got lucky. The campground itself is somewhat unique. You get locked in at 6:00 P.M. and you are not allowed to leave the campground area until 8:00 A.M. the next morning. (They do allow for emergencies.) Each day you must register for touring the park, either the self guided area or the larger guide led area. Only 70 persons are allowed to be active in the park at one time. We were lucky again we were able to get a reservation for a guided tour. Here is a link to the official Texas Parks site.
The history of the place is very interesting, but I will let you read that for yourself. The park is in a level plain and there are three mountains within the park, North Mountain which is open for self guided tours and rock climbing of all sorts. South Mountain and East Mountain are off limits unless you are with a guide.

Here is how our two days at Hueco Tanks went:

Day 1: We registered for the self guided tour on the North Mountain. However, Judy thought we should get a bicycle ride in first. So we spent nearly two hours touring the rural roads around the state park. Now we are properly warmed up so off we go to explore the North Mountain. You can walk around the mountain on level ground all day long, but to really see it and to have a chance to see the ancient pictographs, you must climb the mountain. It is really a walk up climb on smooth rounded granite boulders. I was packing the GPS, so I have to be honest about this. Our highest point of the climb was only 110 feet above the general level ground. Now think about this, walking up the stairs in a ten story hotel can be taxing, but it is no real killer, right? We spent over three hours doing this, not once but several times. Hauling each other up onto boulders as big as cars tumbled helter skelter over this mountain. At one point we climbed up to one of our higher vantage point and ran into some youthful rock climbers. They call it “Bouldering.” It is the real thing that the gymnasium walls try to emulate with cute little hand holds bolted to a plywood wall. They find rock walls and try to climb them with fingers, toes and I suppose teeth if necessary and everything powdered with rosin. This cute young (18-20 ish) thing asks. “Are you lost?” “Oh, no,” I pipes up, “I have my GPS, I know exactly where I am.” What I didn’t tell her is we were making it up as we went and had no idea where we would go next, or how we would get back. I should also point out that Judy was not particularly happy with our route, but she perked up considerably when she spotted some hand rails across the rolling expanse of granite. The prospect of a proper trail was appealing. I figured that walking around this mountain was about like hiking on a small island in the San Juans. As long as you don’t get off the island by getting in the water you can hardly get lost. We slept well.

Day 2: Up early and pre-flighted Arcturus for immediate departure after the guided tour. We met Heinz, our guide, at 10:30 and started touring East Mountain. Heinz is 65 and does this several times a week, for fun! We didn’t climb as high as Day 1, but we clamored over boulders every where we went. Then many times we laid on our backs and slithered under house sized boulders to look at pictographs overhead and try not to think about what would happen if something slipped. Now what you see in the sheltered recesses of the North Mountain is “historic graffiti” from the 1800’s when the Butterfield State line had a way station here at Hueco Tanks. On the East Mountain we saw pictographs that are thought to be 6000 years old. The reason this spot was so important to all cultures that used it over the centuries was the water that collected in the depressions in the rocks. These are what are called “tanks,” and they are a natural phenomenon in the weathering of these granite mountains. The second days efforts extended over four hours and covered some five miles. We will sleep well again tonight!

So now we send our greeting from New Mexico where we have our barking dogs propped up.

Slithering Under Boulders
Members of the Tour Group Slither Under Boulders to see Pictographs
Pictograph
Here is one of the Pictographs That We Looked At