Saturday, November 12, 2022

Alaska or Bust: Part 2

If you missed Part 1, check it out here!  

Chapter 1: McCarthy

August 8 - August 15, 2022

It was finally time for us to head to Wrangell- St. Elias National Park. Because we had adjusted our schedule a bit, we only had one day to rent bear canisters, find semi-normal dog food in a backwoods town, pack for our 5-day backpacking trip, and drive 180 miles to McCarthy, the last 60 of which were unpaved and unmaintained. Somewhere in the middle of all that, I had a nervous breakdown. We pushed on though, and made it to McCarthy without puncturing a tire on one of the infamous railroad spikes. Arriving in McCarthy, I could tell immediately that it was not your typical town, even for Alaska. For one, we couldn’t actually drive all the way to town. We parked our truck on one side of a footbridge and walked a mile down a dirt road into town (there’s also a shuttle tourists can take). The town is completely surrounded by Wrangell- St. Elias National Park. You take your shoes off before going into the hotel lobby, the unofficial mayor of town is a dog, and there are more 4-wheelers than vehicles on the streets. There are no paved roads or sidewalks, no trash services, and many homes don’t have running water. “Town” consists of two restaurants, one bar, one hotel, and a grocery store/liquor store/hardware store/icecream shop. I tried to soak up as much as I could but I was a little anxious about that backpacking trip. Filling out forms with questions about the colors and brands of our gear (in case of a rescue) did little to calm my nerves. 


Downtown McCarthy

The bridge leading to McCarthy

Wrangell- St. Elias National Park is 13.2 million acres, the size of Yellowstone, Yosemite, and Switzerland combined. I knew we’d only see a fraction of a percentage of the park on one backpacking trip, especially if we had to bushwhack through alders and cross glacial streams. But we had a trick up our sleeves: an airplane. Wrangell Mountain Air does backcountry drop-offs and pickups in the park, and even takes dogs! When I called to inquire about it a few months back, they said the only rule was that your dog wasn’t allowed to touch the pilot. 


Fast forward to the next morning, and as Owen and I tried to shove our packs into the tiny, 4-seater Cessna 185, I asked our pilot Bill about Denali. “Just don’t let her run to the back of the plane,” he cautioned. Otherwise, our weight would shift rapidly and we could crash. She didn’t quite want to run to the back of the plane so much as she wanted to get the hell off the plane. She was shaking like a leaf the entire flight. I can’t blame her, though. We were flying in a 40+ year old tin can of a plane, hurling through an unforgiving landscape of glaciers, mountains, and volcanoes. 


Our Cessna 185

Bear spray strapped to the outside of the plane

A tight fit

We landed at the “airstrip” at the Wrangell Plateau which was no more than two dirt tracks worn in from plane tires. It was only fitting that it promptly started raining as soon as Bill left. There are no trails in the backcountry, so we set our own path across the tundra, and after about three miles we made it to a nice looking spot on the edge of the plateau, overlooking Long Glacier. We set up our tent as quickly as we could in the rain, then laid out all our wet rain gear in the vestibules to try to dry (who were we kidding?).


Searching for a spot to camp

Smiling despite the rain

It was only around noon but we promptly hunkered down in the tent and did not leave for several hours. We passed the time by reading, sleeping, and playing War, and wagered that the loser had to get out and pee first (both of us had to go, neither wanted to go out in the rain). We even broke our cardinal rule of backpacking and ate snacks in the tent. It just. kept. raining. We finally forced ourselves out to cook dinner, and I don’t think I’ve ever had a more miserable meal in my life. By bedtime, I was freaking out that our tent wouldn’t hold up in the rain, since we had several spots where water was dripping in. And without a waterproof tent out there, we were toast. It took me several hours that night to fall asleep. 


I woke up the next morning and had two thoughts: we survived the night, and IT’S NOT RAINING! We got our first full view of Mt. Wrangell, a volcanic snow-covered monolith looming above the plateau. That day we stayed close to camp, explored some nearby lakes, and lounged in the sun and played card games. This time the wager was that the loser had to strip naked and run around the plateau. I was four cards away from losing when a plane flew overhead- a flightseeing tour. We cracked up imagining what they would have thought if they’d seen me! Eventually I did lose, but luckily the plane was long gone. 


Denali enjoying the tundra as the clouds roll in

Mt. Wrangell

Day three we decided to venture farther out to search for Cheshnina Falls. With full day packs, we navigated by map and compass across the open tundra towards the falls, not sure exactly how long we’d be out or how far away it was. During a snack break, I looked up, and maybe forty feet away there were two caribou! They ran away, then came back, and repeated the process several times. I’m just grateful they were caribou and not bears. Right around lunch time, we finally made it to a viewpoint of Cheshnina Falls. What looked like a tiny speck on our map turned out to be a 300 foot high waterfall, cascading into the verdant, green, Cheshnina river valley below. The base of Mount Wrangell wasn’t too far from us, and it beckoned us to come closer, so we hiked up to get a better look, quickly encountering a fresh dusting of snow. The walk back to camp was long, arduous, and of course it started raining. All in all, we hiked about eight miles and rewarded ourselves with the highest calorie freeze dried meal we’d brought. We capped off the night with a few rounds of War. I quickly lost two games in a row. 


Curious caribou

Cheshnina Falls

Fresh snow, fresh tracks

The next morning we woke up to bluebird skies. After staring down at Long Glacier for three days, it was finally time to go explore it. According to my park guidebook, Long Glacier is a valley glacier, meaning it doesn’t have hidden crevasses or snow bridges and you don’t need to be roped up to safely navigate. We descended 1000 feet towards the glacier and found a suitable, albeit rocky, place to get down to the glacier and up on the ice. Owen and I strapped on our crampons and tested out our new found superpowers of being able to walk on ice. Denali didn’t need crampons; she deployed her “four paw drive” as we call it, and extended her nails to get traction. She did great on the ice, though she was nervous to jump over crevasses, rightly so. In fact, she usually picked the safest line so we followed her. We found crevasses both small and large, pools of bright blue meltwater, gurgling drainage holes, and steep, jagged ice formations. It was an otherworldly, beautiful, slightly terrifying landscape to be in. Instinctively, I knew it was not a place that humans were meant to linger. Back at camp that night, we passed the time by playing more card games. I noticed a strange soreness in my right hand. Was I getting an overuse injury from playing cards too much?


En route to Long Glacier

Denali in her element

Owen messing around

The last morning of our backpacking trip we packed up our tent and the tundra looked so empty without it. What had at first felt like an unforgiving place that we needed to survive in for five days had become our little patch of tundra, our temporary home, our playground. As much as I was ready to take a shower and get out of the elements, I was sad to leave. We arrived at the airstrip about 45 minutes early and just soaked up the last views of this special place. Our plane arrived right on time and was flown by the same pilot as before, Bill. He was the first person we’d seen in five days and it felt like we were greeting an old friend. Right away he asked how our trip had been. We had an eager audience too, as Bill was dropping off three people for a backpacking trip. Even though we’d only been out there a couple days, I felt like a wise sage as they asked about wildlife, mosquitoes, and conditions we encountered. 


Goodbye, Wrangell Plateau 

Overlooking the Long Glacier

Denali found a caribou antler shed

This plane was much bigger than the one we’d flown in on- a positively spacious 6 seater- so Denali could easily lay down and seemed a lot less nervous. She did manage to leave a giant puddle of drool on the floor from panting though. To be honest, I was also a lot less nervous, as we had made it out the other side of our trip. I sat back and relaxed as we flew high above the mountains and watched sheep navigating on scree fields and moose wading through ponds.


Backcountry airstrip

We landed at the airstrip and got a ride back to McCarthy, but it was still too early to check into our hotel room so we weren’t sure what to do with ourselves. We relaxed on the hotel porch, and a shuttle driver rolled up and asked if we were going to Kennicot. It was one of those rare sunny, warm Alaskan days, too nice not to take advantage of. We looked at each other, shrugged, and said “Why not?” 


Kennecot is an old copper mill town, five miles from McCarthy along a bumpy dirt road dotted with homesteads tucked into the woods. The mill hasn’t operated since 1938, but many of the buildings have been pristinely preserved or restored. History, machines, and the history of old machines? That’s Owen’s bread and butter! He joined a mill town tour while I aimlessly wandered around with Denali. By the time we met back up, the sun disappeared and it started drizzling. We were ready for the great indoors. 


Kennecot mill town

It turned out that our time indoors was short lived. We finally checked into our hotel room in McCarthy and it was the size of a broom closet. The only way Owen and I could be in there at the same time was if we were both laying in bed. Add in our backpacking packs and damp, dirty gear, plus another bag of stuff for our two nights in town, and it was like a scene out of Hoarders. I commandeered the communal lounge area to try to sort and organize but it was a lost cause. We shoved everything back in our room and went off in search of dinner.


We went to the Potato because we heard they were having live music and figured we’d catch some of it before turning in early. A group of three people asked if they could share our table, as it was starting to get pretty crowded. We bonded after we found out that two of them, Kristen and Pat, were from New Jersey. By that point the band had started playing, and the dance floor was packed with people clad in rain jackets, boots, and even onesies. Pat offered to buy us drinks and we couldn’t turn them down. One round turned into two, three, four, and we got on the dance floor, too. At one point Denali was even standing on top of a table. It was like nothing I’ve ever experienced before. I knew a little rain doesn’t stop Alaskans from having fun, I’d seen that before. But this was more than that. This was a full blown rager in the middle of a National Park. Historically, mill workers from Kennecot came to McCarthy to get their booze fix, so I guess they’re just keeping that legacy alive.  


At the Potato

A big crowd came out to listen to the band "Free Creatures"

We stayed until the band ended. Due to some poor planning on our part we were out of dog food and couldn’t feed Denali dinner until we got more. We had some back at the truck, parked a mile away across that bridge. Kristen, Pat, and Kristen’s brother Dave were camping across the bridge so we agreed to all walk together. It was midnight, pitch black, and we had no headlamps or bear spray. At one point, I was talking to Dave when we realized Pat was gone. Eventually, he reappeared and said he dropped his wedding ring and then found it, somehow, in the dark. At the time, it was the funniest thing and we couldn’t stop laughing. We parted ways with our new friends, retrieved Denali’s food and some odds and ends, and then trudged back to town.


The next morning we were both exhausted but we dragged ourselves to breakfast. It was included with our stay; there was no way I was missing a free breakfast. The restaurant was crowded and a fellow traveler we’d met yesterday asked if she could share our table. I was in no mood to make small talk with a stranger but said yes anyway. I guess she took a liking to us and offered for us to live in her cabin outside Anchorage over the winter. An interesting prospect!


After breakfast we took a shuttle to Kennecot to do a hike I had been eagerly anticipating: the Root Glacier. Years ago, I saw a photo of a hiker on the Root Glacier and I’ve wanted to go ever since. In real life the glacier was spectacular but surprisingly crowded! At one point, I counted 30 people. It made us miss our solo experience on the Long Glacier during our backpacking trip, but we did our best to avoid the crowds as we explored. This glacier was smoother and flatter, making it a lot easier to walk on than Long Glacier. Afterwards, we treated ourselves to gigantic sandwiches loaded with prosciutto, pork, bacon, and melted cheese from the Meatza Wagon. The perfect antidote to our hangovers. 


Exploring the Root Glacier

Denali was very curious about the pool

That evening we finally had time to relax. I caught up on my journal and tried to organize our hoard of gear. Before bed I was craving a little night time snack, so off we went in search of dessert. The grocery store was closed, the bar was out of desserts, and so was the Potato. There was only one place left: the fancy Salmon and Bear Restaurant. We were dressed in our dirty hiking clothes and by that time it was 9:30pm but I was desperate so I tentatively walked in and inquired. They had dessert! A chocolate torte with apricots, plated beautifully. I could’ve eaten three of them, easily. We got chatting with the server, who turned out to be the owner of Leyla, an old wooly Siberian husky we’d seen around town who looked just like Denali. The locals had even taken to calling Denali “Little Leyla.” It was nice to finally meet him and trade stories about adventuring with huskies and traveling in Alaska. As I was wondering just how much the fancy chocolate torte was going to set us back, he said that it was on the house. The only way our night could’ve been better is if a bag of chips materialized among the clutter in our room.


The next morning it was finally time to leave McCarthy. We enjoyed one last delicious, free breakfast, wandered among the dirt streets, and said goodbye. Even though we’d only been in town a few days, I was beginning to feel like a local. I’d fed some of the town dogs, helped search for a missing dog, hell, a few more days here and Denali would become a town dog! I was torn about leaving because there was so much we hadn’t seen, so much to still explore. But we desperately needed to organize and dry out our gear, wash dishes, restock on (reasonably priced) food, and do laundry, and we just couldn't do any of that in town. We were ready to move on.


Denali conspiring to join the pack of town dogs

McCarthy, in a nutshell


Chapter 2: Nabesna Road

August 16 - August 18, 2022


Some 200 miles from McCarthy is the start of the Nabesna Road, a 42 mile gravel road that enters the northern part of Wrangell- St. Elias National Park and is rumored to be even more remote than the McCarthy Road. With freshly laundered clothes and a restocked pantry, it was time for one more adventure in the park.


All in all, we spent three days and three nights along the Nabesna Road and experienced a little bit of everything. There was plenty of time for lazy mornings in camp, meditating on lake shores, and watching sunsets. It was just what we needed after our escapades in McCarthy. We didn’t lounge the entire time though…One day we hiked to old mine ruins at the top of steep, loose rock. We didn’t want to go back down the same way, so we bushwhacked through a long lost trail with strangers we met on the hike. Back at the truck, we encountered two hunters who had just spent three days making multiple trips to carry out a Dall sheep they’d gotten on a packrafting trip. I’m 99% sure they both had trench foot.


Sunset on the Nabesna Road

View from above the mine ruins

That night in the campground, a dog wandered over to us to say hello. His tag identified him as Buddy Jake from the hunting lodge down the road. Denali was quite fond of him, so later that night I took her for a walk to look for Buddy Jake again. As we walked by another couple’s campsite, the woman there sputtered that a dog (presumably Buddy Jake) had just chased off a grizzly bear! I immediately turned around, retrieved Owen and our bear spray, and then we went looking for signs of the bear and for Buddy Jake. We ended up at the hunting lodge where the owner’s kids came out to talk with us. We learned that Buddy Jake is a Karelian Bear Dog, which are bred to hunt big game. When we told them that he apparently chased off a bear, they said it was probably just a squirrel. I’m not sure who to believe…


Denali's new friend Jake

The next day we set off to hike the Skookum Volcano Trail. The first part of the “trail” followed a rocky stream bed. After rock hopping and zigzagging across the stream for hours, I started referring to the hike as the “Stupid Volcano Trail.”  Eventually we made it out of the creek bed and climbed a steep grassy slope up to a pass. We recovered for a long time at the top and watched 9 Dall sheep running around not far from us. Not such a stupid hike, after all!


Skookum Volcano Trail

Chapter 3: Homebound

August 19 -  September 3, 2022


With our big adventures in Wrangell- St. Elias behind us, it was finally time to start heading home. We didn’t need to be back to California until September 3 so we had some extra time for explorations along the way. In the Yukon though, the options were limited. Hell, we could barely find places to camp. Our first night back in Canada we camped at a pull-off just off the highway. It was pretty sad. The next night we vowed to do better. The Milepost mentioned a one mile access road to Lewes Lake, which sounded promising. After a couple wrong turns down private driveways, we found the lake. It more than made up for last night’s crappy spot: it was one of those sunset-and-a-beer kind of nights. I didn’t think the site could get any better until Owen woke me up in the middle of the night insisting that I look outside: the northern lights were flickering across the sky!


Short hike in Kluane National Park

Enjoying the fading light at Lewes Lake

Blue skies at Lewes Lake the next morning

The next day, we wanted to stay in an RV park so we could do laundry and take showers. We were still in the middle of nowhere in the Yukon, so there weren’t a lot of options. We came across one RV park and took a quick tour (always a good idea before you pay for the site, we’ve learned). The laundry area was fine but the bathrooms had a weird smell and the showers were like something out of a horror movie. We decided to stay anyway. Why? Because Owen said he’d used worse showers, as if that were appropriate justification. All in all, it wasn’t the most glamorous place we’ve slept, but it got the job done.


We continued south on the Alcan Highway, into British Columbia and through Liard Hot Springs. We weren’t Liard newbies; we stopped there four years ago on our motorcycle trip up to Alaska, and were thrilled to be back. We hit a little snafu, though: the main campground was full so we had to camp in the overflow area. For the same price as a regular site we got a dirt parking lot and world’s most fly-infested pit toilet. We also learned that BC Parks had recently constructed an electric wildlife fence around the campground, but not around the overflow lot. The fence was to keep out the bears, but I guess they figured the campers at the overflow lot could fend for themselves. There was a pretty scrappy group of older Canadians camping near us that I would’ve bet money on against a griz. Any remaining frustrations disappeared though, when we soaked in the hot springs. It was just as we’d remembered: a lush, peaceful oasis. 


The path to the hot springs

The first major town we came to south of Liard was Fort Nelson. We pulled in hangry, hot, and dirty. We sulked at the visitor’s center for awhile, then bought some cold drinks and resolved to find a dispersed camping site. Just as we’d found a site on a river bed and pulled out our drinks, Owen noticed a minivan stuck in the sand nearby. We drove over, hooked up our toe strap, and pulled them out. The minivan’s occupants were a young couple, their 3-year old daughter, and their friend. They asked if we wanted to hang out for a bit, and Owen and I looked at each other and said “Why not?” Famous last words. 


Sometimes when we help people with car troubles, we get offered twenty bucks. This time, we got offered cocaine. It wasn’t immediate though. Over the course of the next couple hours, we collected wood, built a fire, drank our drinks, they ran home to get their dog so he could meet Denali, they ran out to get Tim Horton’s coffee. Then the cocaine came out. We graciously declined, then entered into a fascinating, albeit hard to track conversation about the meaning of life, the universe, and outer space. When they finally left, Owen and I kept shaking our heads and asking each other what the hell just happened. The only casualties were: tons of bug bites, sand everywhere, and a slightly later than intended bedtime. Even so, we immediately decided to take a break from helping strangers with car trouble for the time being.


The next day we checked into a hotel to rest and commenced our extreme recovery method of laying in bed and watching movies all day while feasting on pizza and popcorn. The rejuvenating effects wore off quickly, though. After Fort Nelson we had long days of driving through a Canadian heat wave, which I didn’t know was possible. We cooled off in spray parks, in random rivers, and with icecream, but without A/C in the truck we were pretty miserable. Then one night, Owen’s sleeping pad sprung a leak and completely deflated, and Denali refused to share her pad with him. I didn’t think a 31-year old was able to have a temper tantrum, but I was wrong. 


Denali vegged out too

We still had some extra time before we needed to be back in California and we decided to spend it in Jasper National Park. Arriving in the park felt like arriving at an oasis after days of trekking across a desert. The heat broke, the rain came, and there was stuff to do! Hikes and restaurants and bars and campgrounds and dog parks. The options were overwhelming. Finally we settled on a plan. One day we strolled the Valley of the Five Lakes loop and saw the quintessential bright turquoise waters of the Canadian Rockies, made even more dramatic by the moody skies. Another day we brought Denali canoeing for the first time on Maligne Lake, and luckily didn’t capsize in the 40 degree water. The day after that we hoofed it up the Sulphur Skyline Trail, fought heavy winds, and were rewarded with 360 degree views at the summit. Each night we retreated to our tent at Whistlers Campground, which was just renovated with brand new bathrooms and showers that were always spotless. The days of horror movie showers were behind us! But it almost felt too luxurious, and I missed the simplicity of primitive campsites. 


Maligne Lake

Mt Edith Cavell

Sulphur Skyline

From Jasper, it was two full days of driving to get to our friends’ house in North Bend, Washington, near Seattle. We drove along the mountainous Coquihalla Highway that crosses 11 major avalanche tracks. Our final border crossing back into the US was easy enough, though when the border agent asked what was in the truck, Owen blurted out the only things we weren’t supposed to have: lunch meat and lettuce. He waved us through anyway. 


Mt Robson, BC

We arrived at Madeline and Evan’s house that evening and for the next day and a half did what we always do when we’re together: ate delicious food, consumed delicious drinks, and enjoyed the outdoors. Our method of travel was stand up paddle boards (another first for Denali!) There’s nothing finer than spending a warm summer day on the water with good friends and good dogs. 


Lake Wenatchee, WA

From Madeline and Evan’s, we had two days of driving and one night of camping until we were home. Our last night of camping in southern Oregon we feasted on hot dogs, chips, and flavored water. Not as fancy as our steak and broccoli meals in the beginning, but it was just as enjoyable. The crickets were chirping, the moon was out, and I didn’t want our trip to end. The next morning, as we approached the California border, a familiar sight greeted us: wildfire smoke. Yup, we were definitely almost home.


Just a few miles from home we stopped at the Summit Store, our local mountain grocery store, for dinner. It felt surreal, sitting there on the patio eating sandwiches, talking about how the trip went. All in all, we were on the road for 56 days, camped 41 of those nights, and drove approximately 10,000 miles. We could finally talk about our amazement that the truck didn’t break down, that nothing major went wrong (neither of us wanted to jinx it on the trip, so we never talked about it). I wish I’d taken a photo of us that night at the Summit Store. I’d spent so much time outside I got freckles around my lips, and it’d been so long since Owen cut his hair and beard that he’d gone “feral” (his words, not mine).


Despite the fact that these blog posts were so long, there was so much I left out. Like how I finally learned to truly drive a manual. Like the time I saw a bear cub and thought it was a black cat. Like meeting a guy at a remote campground in Alaska who lives 15 miles down the road from us in California. Like how we got asked multiple times if we were mushers, if we were from Alaska, and if Denali was a sled dog. Like the fact that we consumed over 70 granola bars, a useless stat that I decided to track. 


One of our goals for this trip was to have the space and time to figure out what we’re doing with our lives, and what our 5-year, or even 2-year plan is. We didn’t find the answers to those questions in Alaska. Instead, the trip reminded me of the values that I’ve had deep down for awhile now: that a simple life is the most enjoyable, that suffering allows you to more fully appreciate the good times, and that being outside fuels the body, mind and spirit like nothing else.


It’s been over two months since we got back from Alaska. There have been more adventures and more travels, but I’ll save those for another time.

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

Alaska or Bust: Part 1

Journal entry, August 10, 2022: “Where do I even begin? I’m currently lounging in the tundra staring at a wall of mountains dusted with snow. They drop steeply to the Long Glacier below. To my left is the enormous, glaciated Mount Wrangell, its top hidden in clouds. It looks like it’s so close I could reach out and touch it. Owen is playing cards and Denali is napping in the sunlight. 24 hours ago, I thought we might die here.”

Wrangell Plateau

We were on the Wrangell Plateau in Wrangell- St. Elias National Park, 20 miles as the crow flies from the nearest road, from any semblance of civilization. To explain how we got there in the first place, I need to start at the beginning, one month prior and 4,000 miles south.


Chapter 1: California, Oregon, and Washington 

July 10 - July 16, 2022


The morning of July 10, our departure day for our two-month long road trip to Alaska, we were still packing up our 1987 Toyota 4Runner, carefully selecting any last essentials we’d likely need. We packed our tent, sleeping bags, backpacks, warm weather gear, rain gear, and basic cooking supplies. Two changes of clothes made the cut, as did my camera, a few books and some toiletries. Everything got neatly organized in the custom drawers that Owen made for the back of the 4Runner. Between those, our Bodega refrigerator, and Denali’s gigantic dog bed, there wasn’t space for much else. 


Our cooking supplies in the drawers Owen made

Perched on her gigantic bed

This was a trip we’d been planning for months, a trip only possible because we’d begged our bosses for the time off and both taken pay cuts. But as we neared departure my overwhelming emotion was one of uneasiness and anxiety. There was just so much that could potentially go wrong... getting COVID, a car accident, a sprained ankle, a bear attack, the list was endless. Luckily, I’ve always found something energizing about being on the road, and it was no different that day. Once we rolled out, the noise in my head quieted and I felt a sense of freedom wash over me.


We fell into an easy rhythm the first couple days as we drove through northern California, Oregon, and Washington. What I loved most was that our days were so simple: drive, set up camp, cook dinner, clean up, walk Denali. No Zoom meetings, no endless emails, no house chores. We sat around after dinner drinking cold beers, just happy to be outside. Camping felt like such a simple joy. 


Shasta-Trinity National Forest, northern CA

A relaxed morning in North Cascades, WA

Our first major stop was in the Cascade Mountains in Washington. By night, we camped in moss draped forests, and by day we drove alongside clear, raging rivers, and powerful waterfalls. One night, we were jolted out of slumber by a freight train horn blasting just 50 feet from our tent (that’s what we got for choosing a site near the train tracks!). We feasted on bratwursts, pretzels, and beer in Leavenworth, a Bavarian themed town in the middle of nowhere. We hiked almost to Heather Pass, high above Lake Ann, turned around due to lingering snow, and glissaded part of the way back down.


Checking on the truck on the crazy mountain roads

Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest

A couple days into the Cascades, we dealt with the first challenges of the trip. One afternoon, the hub of our tent pole snapped as we were setting it up, which rendered the tent unusable. Seeing as we were living in it for the foreseeable future, this was a major issue. After freaking out, then weighing several different options, ranging from buying a new tent ($$$$) to finding a mechanic’s shop and using their tools to repair the pole ($), we finally came up with a solution. We ordered a replacement hub which would be shipped to an REI store in Alaska that we could pick up in a couple weeks. In the meantime, Owen bought a nut, a washer, and a screw which held the pole secure. With that crisis behind us, we decided to find a cheap hotel in Bellingham so we could get clean and relax. After reading online reviews, I determined that the affordable hotels were $150 - $200, and had bedbugs, homeless encampments nearby, stained linens, and reviews with titles such as “DO NOT STAY HERE” and “Worst place I’ve ever slept.” Finally, we decided to splurge and spent $300 on a bed-bug free room. Instead of bed-bugs, we got a gorgeous soaking tub, four free drinks at the bar, and made to order breakfast. It was easily the fanciest hotel we stayed in the entire trip, and I have zero regrets.


Cooling off in Ross Lake National Rec Area

Cleaning up after dinner in our fern-filled campsite

Chapter 2: Canada 

July 17 - July 26, 2022


We crossed into Canada at a small border crossing north of Lyden, WA. We had all our paperwork prepared - truck registration, insurance, Denali’s rabies vaccination - and didn’t need to show any of it. The border patrol agent was more interested in how we were able to take so much time off this summer. 


We drove north on highway 99 towards Whistler, which followed Howe Sound and wound through granite mountains and misty forests dotted with waterfalls. It wasn’t until we checked into our Airbnb in Whistler and I perused a guidebook that I realized we had been driving on the Sea to Sky Highway, a famous route known for its spectacular scenery. Our time in Whistler was a whirlwind. We explored Whistler Village, marveled at the mud-splattered downhill mountain bikers, and I even found a lake on a trail run with Denali, aptly named Lost Lake. 


Going on a stroll through Whistler Village

After Whistler, we continued north along the Sea to Sky Highway to the West Access Route and then onto the Cassiar Highway. The landscapes were stunning, with gigantic snow covered mountains, thick forests, sparkling lakes, and wildlife sightings. I was almost grateful for the sections through flatter agricultural and timber land, as it helped recalibrate my capability to be awed. It was on these roads that I opened up our Milepost guide for the first time. The Milepost has mile-by-mile information on all the roads in western Canada and Alaska, and it became our bible for the next several weeks. It was how we found campgrounds, grocery stores, elusive free WiFi, scenic lunch spots, even short hikes.


Along the Sea to Sky Highway

At this point in the trip, we usually stayed in Provincial campgrounds, and we were in such remote areas that we never had trouble finding available sites. For $20 Canadian ($15 US), we got a flat site, pit toilets, and the peace of mind of not being completely alone, in case a bear decided to stumble into camp at night. While bears were a threat in the back of our minds, a more regular nuisance was the humble but ever present mosquito. To keep them at bay, we donned rain gear, used a Thermacell, built smoky fires, doused ourselves with DEET, but ultimately ended up hiding from them in the truck or in the tent on many a night. No lazy nights lounging in our chairs drinking beers anymore. 


Relaxing on her perch

Luckily there were plenty of sights to lift our spirits. The drive to Salmon Glacier in British Columbia was one such gem. It was listed in the Milepost as an unassuming side trip along the Cassiar Highway that we decided to take. Along the way, the towering mountains were covered in snow, glaciers, and waterfalls. We saw a mama bear and her cub in front of Bear Glacier. The road passed through Alaska briefly, in Hyder, known as Alaska’s friendliest ghost town. The main activity in town was to get “hyderized” at the local saloon by downing a shot of Everclear. We came through at 11am, right as the bar was opening, and Owen couldn’t resist. The bartender spelled out the rules: no sniffing, no sipping, and it must be downed in one swig. He complied and received an official certification card. Back on the road, we noticed the Sprinter van in front of us had a flat tire, and Owen was feeling a little friendlier than normal, perhaps due to the Everclear. We waved the driver down and Owen quickly helped him patch it up. The driver insisted on giving Owen $20 as a thank you! Eventually we arrived at the viewing area for the Salmon Glacier. I ran around feverishly taking pictures from every angle. On the drive back to the Cassiar Highway, we could barely take in any more scenery. At the first stop we came to with free Wi-Fi, I took out my phone and scrolled through Facebook for something ugly to look at, to try to recalibrate.


Along the way to Stewart, BC

Hyder, AK

Salmon Glacier

A couple days after the Salmon Glacier we were ready to try our hand at finding a hotel in remote Canada. Out of a whopping two hotels in Dease Lake, British Columbia, which is more than I expected for a town of 450, one luckily had a room available for the night. We commenced our typical hotel routine: 

  • Step 1: Look pitiful and beg to check in early to maximize time indoors.

  • Step 2: Do chores- take showers, do laundry, wash dishes, dry gear, comb Denali.

  • Step 3: As a reward for chores being complete, lay in bed and watch TV until brain is mush.

  • Step 4: Leave the room only to find dinner. On this night we ate from the one restaurant in town that wasn’t the gas station, called The Shack and prayed that we didn’t get food poisoning.

  • Step 5: Get dirty immediately after checking out while accidentally brushing up against the muddy, dusty truck. Count down the days until we can stay in a hotel again.


Luckily we didn’t have to wait long to stay in a hotel again. From Dease Lake, we took the Alaska Highway to the Klondike Highway and arrived in Dawson City on our wedding anniversary. To celebrate, we splurged and found a hotel room. We strayed from our typical hotel routine of maximizing time indoors and instead spent the day exploring Dawson City. It was an… interesting town. It’s a well-preserved gold rush town and thrives on tourism, but there are also active gold mines in the area and the colorful characters that accompany that industry. And in some ways, it was no different than any other small town, where everyone knows your business. Exhibit A: Owen stopped in the hardware store and overheard people talking about the old 4Runner from Cali, aka our truck! After a couple hours of exploring antique shops and old buildings in town, we were tired of the tourist scene. We hopped in the truck and explored the dirt roads on the outskirts of town. We’d repeat this routine in many towns throughout our trip. I enjoyed it because it gave me a chance to check out the neat little cabins and camps tucked in the woods. Owen had another motive, though- he was looking for old 4Runners and the potential to find rare parts, like inclinometers, that could be found nowhere else. 


Dawson City, Yukon Territory

10:02pm: still light out

Waiting for the ferry to cross the Yukon River


Just north of Dawson City, we encountered the real reason we had chosen this particular route into Alaska: the Top of the World Highway. With a name like that, how could we resist?  It was 80 miles of mostly dirt road, unimpeded views of the mountains, and zero visitor services. 


Chapter 3: Alaska (the beginning)

July 27 - August 7, 2022


We crossed into Alaska on the Top of the World Highway at a tiny border crossing, where the border patrol agent was more interested in checking out our old 4Runner than looking at our paperwork. Why did no one want to see our paperwork?! We headed towards Anchorage via the Taylor Highway, Tok Cutoff route, and Glenn Highway. The scenery was incredible: endless views of the snow-covered Alaska Range, the Wrangell Mountains, and the Matanuska Glacier. By the time we arrived in Girdwood, along the beautiful Turnagain Arm, south of Anchorage, I could barely take in any more epic views. 


Border crossing along Top of the World Highway

Stopped in a town named Chicken, AK

Sheep Mountain, AK

It turned out that the antidote to my funk was going on a hike in Girdwood… to see more beautiful views. But it was totally different being on foot. What we originally intended to be a quick late afternoon jaunt turned into a five hour epic hike to Crow Pass. Along the way, we met a tourist hiking with a gun, who I thought was a hunter, but was just doing it for the photos. Then we met a mountain biker with a husky, who I thought was a wolf, hunting for small critters. We hiked past mine ruins, scree fields, the snow-covered Chugach Mountains, alpine lakes, the Raven Glacier. The highlight was watching a group of five mountain goats running, playing, and eating, not far from us. It was still light out by the time we made it back to the truck at 9:30pm but we were exhausted and starving, and I was ready to drive straight to a restaurant and devour an entire pizza. The universe must’ve heard me because five minutes later a group of backpackers walked up to us with a pizza box and asked if we wanted their leftovers. Hell, yes!


Chugach National Forest

After Girdwood we headed to Seward, on the Kenai Peninsula, with no real concrete plans for what to see. We stopped at a campground along Resurrection Bay near downtown to eat lunch, and decided to camp there for the night. As we set up our tent we got chatting with a guy named Wes who works for the City of Seward. We made plans to meet up with him and his girlfriend for dinner that night. But first, we stopped at a fish weir on a nearby creek. We really wanted Denali to eat fresh salmon in Alaska, and as Owen and I aren’t big into fishing, she’d have to catch one herself. Wes assured us that she had the best chance of catching one at the fish weir. The creek was choked with hundreds of salmon, but at first Denali didn’t seem interested. Then we realized that she didn’t notice them under the water. As soon as they jumped out of the water, she flipped out. We devised a new strategy, which involved me splashing through the water to try to scare the salmon into jumping up. This failed epically, but it sure was fun. 


Looking for salmon on the fish weir

I assumed that Wes and his girlfriend, Lexi, would invite us to their place in town. I should’ve known this would be dinner, Alaskan style. They told us to meet them at a dry river bed along the way to Exit Glacier. We arrived at a mecca of people hanging out, camping, and driving adventure rigs. We cooked tacos on our camp stove and chatted, sharing stories of adventure, work, and life. Then we all headed to a bar in downtown Seward to check out live music. It was a true locals dive bar, cash only, with some interesting regulars. We had to leave Denali in the truck, and when I peaked out to check on her, the band was also outside taking a break. They said that from the stage, they could see her through the side door and she was staring at them the entire time! We didn’t head back to our camp until after midnight, and it was the first time on the trip I had to use my headlamp. Our second day in Steward was a little less fun, since it rained almost the entire day. We went for a scenic drive, unsuccessfully looked for a dog friendly coffee shop, and finally hunkered down in an Ace Hardware store. We had an elaborate meal planned for dinner that we did NOT want to make in the rain, and the universe seemed to answer our pleas when we found a public, covered picnic shelter with amazing views of the water that we cooked in while staying dry.


Sunset in Resurrection Bay

Our last stop on the Kenai Peninsula was in Homer. We originally hadn’t planned on going, but when we polled Alaskans we met along the way, multiple people named Homer as their favorite place in the state. Homer was certainly beautiful, but it also tested my patience like no other place had. Our first night was easy: we strolled the crowded Homer Spit, set up camp on the beach, and talked to a very eccentric and chatty old guy camped next to us. The next morning is when things went south. We had tea and coffee with our new friend, but I didn’t want to spend all morning being talked at, so I politely but firmly excused us from the conversation. We hopped in the truck to drive to a trailhead when it started raining, again. A mix of emotions hit me- sadness over the rain, guilt that I told the old guy off, frustration because there was nowhere to go to be alone and sulk- and I started laughing and crying simultaneously. Unfortunately, the roller coaster of emotions was a common occurrence throughout the trip. But now that I’ve had time to reflect on it, I’m grateful. Each rainy, buggy, gear-malfunction low made the good times that much more rewarding. I felt like I was living life fully, not just watching time go by in our usual climate controlled, sterile, comfortable world. 


Homer boat harbor

Sunset along the Homer Spit

A successful hike, once the rain stopped

After all our adventures on the Kenai Peninsula, we were ready to relax for a couple days. We had just the thing planned: a stay with Owen’s cousin, Shayla in Anchorage. Our timing worked out well, as Owen’s uncle was also visiting. Our stint there was brief but restorative: we took hot showers, did laundry, and dried out and repaired gear. We even had time for some fun. One day, we hiked nearby Flattop Mountain, and as we were picking blueberries on the descent we spotted two bull moose a couple hundred feet away. Perhaps even better than our wildlife spotting was getting to enjoy fresh Alaskan fish and game. One night, we had coho salmon that Shayla had caught just the previous day, and the next night we had pasta with caribou that Shayla’s now-husband had hunted. Fishing and hunting is such a key component of the culture and way of life in Alaska, and I was grateful we could experience a part of that. 


Flattop Mountain

Denali even helped us pick berries

Soon enough it was time to leave Shayla’s dry and cozy house and continue on. Of course, it poured the night we left and the next morning while we camped just outside of Whittier, in Prince William Sound. To give you a sense of the type of terrain we were in, Whittier can only be accessed by boat, plane, or by driving through a 2.7 mile long, one-lane tunnel. The tunnel was carved into the rough rock and so narrow it was kind of claustrophobic. I almost expected to emerge into Hogwarts or Mordor. 


Instead, we emerged into Whittier. Whittier was not part of our original itinerary but when someone we met a few weeks earlier suggested we take the ferry from Whittier to Valdez to shorten our drive, we figured why not? We took Denali for a rainy, muddy hike to tire her out, then loaded the truck onto the ferry’s car deck. Dogs have to stay in your vehicle during the ferry ride, so we said goodbye to Denali then went up to the passenger decks to watch the ferry leave port. By that point the rain had stopped, the clouds started to clear, and we finally got a glimpse of what Whittier looked like. It was beautiful! Thin waterfalls cascaded down plush, spongy-looking mountains. 


Passing another ferry in Prince William Sound

There were so many areas to explore on the ferry, I didn’t know where to go first. The upper decks on the front and back, the reading room, an indoor seating area? Plus, there were bathrooms with flush toilets, and a vending machine! I finally settled on the back upper deck, reading and lounging in the sun. I had a view of the fjords, waterfalls, glaciers, and small remote islands we passed, and even spotted a pod of orca whales! I treated myself to two bags of Cheetos from the vending machine. Compared to roughing it in our old dusty, dirty, truck, this felt like a luxury cruise. 


We arrived in Valdez and were immediately greeted with a concert. Owen thought it was for us, but it was actually part of Gold Rush Days, a festival to celebrate the mining history of Valdez. Despite the rain, the outdoor concert was packed. It essentially did not stop raining the next three days we were in town, and I had a little more trouble adjusting to it than the Gold Rush Days partiers. The lows were plentiful: our tent was soaking wet, there was not a single available dog-friendly hotel room in town, and every person camped near us sounded like they had COVID. The highs were rare but extra joyous. In fact, one of my favorite moments on our entire trip happened in Valdez. We took a scenic drive down a dirt road outside of town, as we do when it’s raining. The rough road wound through misty mountains, and we blasted music, drank road sodas, and picked berries. We even sprayed an expired can of bear spray to see what would happen. It was easy, spontaneous, fun. And I realized I hadn’t let myself do that recently. I’d been so preoccupied with staying clean, staying organized, and staying dry that I’d forgotten to enjoy myself. 


Entering Valdez... and the rain

Mineral Creek Canyon

As we left Valdez the forecast predicted rain every day for the next week. This was troubling because we were about to embark on the most remote backpacking trip of our lives, in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park. But first, we had to get there…


-------


To Be Continued