The weather in Soldotna was no better, so we spent Thursday in the Fred Meyer parking lot. We use their parking lots like we use the WalMart "resorts." This Fred Meyer even has a dump station and fresh water for their RV guests. Friday we visited the Soldotna and Kenai Visitor Centers. The two towns are near each other and both have interesting visitor centers. The one in Soldotna is on the bank of the Kenai River. They have a walkway along the river, and we were able to watch both men women fishing for salmon. A few of them were successful while we were there. However, the most successful was a woman. At the Kenai visitor center we watched a documentary on Alaska. The picture is an infamous Kenai River snag. It contains about 2,500 lost lures. Someone was successful in removing it from the river. The picture was taken through glass, so there is some glare. We spent Friday night at Captian Cook State Park.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Soldotna, Thursday & Friday
The weather in Soldotna was no better, so we spent Thursday in the Fred Meyer parking lot. We use their parking lots like we use the WalMart "resorts." This Fred Meyer even has a dump station and fresh water for their RV guests. Friday we visited the Soldotna and Kenai Visitor Centers. The two towns are near each other and both have interesting visitor centers. The one in Soldotna is on the bank of the Kenai River. They have a walkway along the river, and we were able to watch both men women fishing for salmon. A few of them were successful while we were there. However, the most successful was a woman. At the Kenai visitor center we watched a documentary on Alaska. The picture is an infamous Kenai River snag. It contains about 2,500 lost lures. Someone was successful in removing it from the river. The picture was taken through glass, so there is some glare. We spent Friday night at Captian Cook State Park.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Alaska SeaLife Center, Seward
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Anchorage to Seward
We left Anchorage about noon to travel the 125 miles to Seward. A few miles south of Anchorage is the Alaska Wildlife Sanctuary. They rescue orphaned animals. Some they can release, like the four baby moose. They were single births and were all six to eight weeks old. We got to see them bottle fed. The bears cannot be released, due to their becoming habituated to humans and would not have enough fear of man. They would then be very dangerous. The three brown/grizzly bears were a lot of fun to watch. One was playing in the water with the leg bone of a moose. Often highway kill is taken to the refuge for the animals to eat.
Monday, July 27, 2009
Rainy day in Anchorage
Since it was raining today, we didn't move the motorhome the early part of the day but spent our time updating the blog. In the afternoon we drove to the Wild Berry Park and Theater. Soon after we arrived, we found an attendant "walking" this reindeer the way we would walk a dog on a leash. She said that her name was Hungry and certainly demonstrated her name as she ate the shrubbery. According to the girl, Hungry is real tame and a very special pet. The feature film we saw was "Alaska: The Land Beyond."
alaska,
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Earthquake Park & Lake Hood
Two years ago we saw a large bull moose in Earthquake Park, so we went back moose hunting. We had about given up seeing one, when a man told Carol that there was one just down the road. We were elated to see a mother with a calf. While we were watching, the mother crossed the road; and shortly thereafter the calf followed her. Some of our pictures are better of each of them separately, but this is our best of both of them together. Earthquake Park is a memorial to the 1964 earthquake that devastated Anchorage. Some streets dropped as much as 15 feet.
The airport is nearby. One section, Lake Hood, is devoted to seaplanes. The above movie is actually a sequence of still pictures that John took as a seaplane took off. Lake Hood is the world's busiest seaplane base with as many as 800 takeoffs and landings per day during the summer. There are 781 seaplanes based here. Alaska has several times more private aircraft than any other state.
Saturday, July 25, 2009
Thursday, Friday and Sabbath
Not much to report for these days. We did the laundry in Wasilla and then drove south to the O'Malley Seventh-day Adventist Church and office of the Alaska Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, which are next to each other in Anchorage. The conference office has excellent WiFi, and they have allowed us to use it. This is helping us get caught up on our blog. We dry-camped in their parking lot for the last 3 nights and plan to stay until Tuesday. Sabbath we attended church and stayed for the fellowship dinner. Since it was raining in the afternoon, we just stayed put.
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Travel from Fairbanks to Sarah's town, Wasilla
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Fairbanks, El Dorado Gold Mine & Georgeson Botanical Garden
This morning we went to the El Dorado Gold Mine. The small train traveled through the original gold fields that once were part of Alaska's richest mining district on record. Vonda and Dexter Clark demonstrated how to pan. Then they, and two helpers, dipped their pans in the sluice trough. The picture shows the combined gold they panned. Each tourist was given a cloth poke filled with pay dirt. We went to an area where they had long troughs filled with water and were able to pan our own gold. We had it weighed, and the total value was $34.
Later in the day we went to The Georgeson Botanical Garden. The wind was a nuisance, and we had difficulty getting nice pictures. About the time we were ready to snap a picture, the wind would blow and destroy the picture.
Monday, July 20, 2009
Moose Video taken on Chena Hot Springs Road
We drove out to Chena Hot Springs, a resort about 60 miles from Fairbanks. We understood there could be wildlife to view along the scenic route. We did not see anything on the way out. It started to rain just before we got there, and the pavement stopped at the gate to the resort. The parking lot was very muddy, so we just turned around and headed back to Fairbanks. On the way, we spotted these two moose in a pond. What we saw was worth the trip. We had seen moose before but never when they were feeding under water. Can you imagine eating with your head under water!
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Fairbanks
This morning we went to the Fairbanks visitor center to watch a video on the Brooks Mountain Range, in the far north of Alaska. It is between Fairbanks and the north-slope oil wells. We visited the Yukon Quest sled-dog race headquarters. The Yukon Quest is a two week dog-sled race in February. Mushers race over 1,000 miles through winter wilderness between Fairbanks, AK and Whitehorse, Yukon Territory. There were five-week-old husky puppies, eight total, piled up together. At the ice museum we saw some of the smaller ice carvings from the annual World Ice Art Championships. They also had a very special film in the evening of the aurora borealis. See ice art web site: http://www.icealaska.com/09/09sculptureindex.html
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Fairbanks
Friday, July 17, 2009
World Eskimo-Indian Olympics, July 15-17
,
These games are probably unlike anything you have seen before. We had wanted to attend them in 2007. John's cousin, JoNell, had recommended them. They had always been held in Fairbanks. However, in 2007 they were held in Anchorage. We missed seeing them because we failed to research WEIO so were not at the right place at the right time. We did see a 30-minute video in Fairbanks and knew we wanted to see the competition in person. Before we left home, we had WEIO in our schedule for this year. Above is the women's blanket toss. The natives do this to spot game over the horizon.
This girl is doing the kneel jump. The practicality of this event comes from the quickness and balance one has to have when out on moving ice during break up. Her parents sat in front of us. They told us she is a pre-med student. She won first place.
This activity is the two-foot high kick. The winner was able to kick the suspended ball at 96 inches with both feet at the same time and land on both feet at the same time. Years ago in the coastal whaling villages, the people of the town learned of a successful hunt when an approaching messenger would jump and kick both feet into the air while running.
This is the one-foot high kick. The contestant balances on one hand and one foot. He then springs up on one hand, kicks the suspended ball and comes down in control. He cannot let any part of his body touch the floor, except the hand and foot which touched the ball. This boy broke the record at 8 feet. He practiced at home touching the ceiling which was that height. This gave a message that help was needed because a whale had been taken or a caribou was nearby.
Other competitions included four-man carry, ear pull, knuckle hop, arm pull, greased pole walk, stick pull, fish cutting and seal skinning. They also had a native baby and Miss WEIO contests. Every evening natives from some of the remote villages demonstrated their native dances.
If you would like more information and see more videos, you can check out the WEIO website:
http://www.weio.org/mm_videos/index.php?VidCat=2008
These games are probably unlike anything you have seen before. We had wanted to attend them in 2007. John's cousin, JoNell, had recommended them. They had always been held in Fairbanks. However, in 2007 they were held in Anchorage. We missed seeing them because we failed to research WEIO so were not at the right place at the right time. We did see a 30-minute video in Fairbanks and knew we wanted to see the competition in person. Before we left home, we had WEIO in our schedule for this year. Above is the women's blanket toss. The natives do this to spot game over the horizon.
This girl is doing the kneel jump. The practicality of this event comes from the quickness and balance one has to have when out on moving ice during break up. Her parents sat in front of us. They told us she is a pre-med student. She won first place.
This activity is the two-foot high kick. The winner was able to kick the suspended ball at 96 inches with both feet at the same time and land on both feet at the same time. Years ago in the coastal whaling villages, the people of the town learned of a successful hunt when an approaching messenger would jump and kick both feet into the air while running.
This is the one-foot high kick. The contestant balances on one hand and one foot. He then springs up on one hand, kicks the suspended ball and comes down in control. He cannot let any part of his body touch the floor, except the hand and foot which touched the ball. This boy broke the record at 8 feet. He practiced at home touching the ceiling which was that height. This gave a message that help was needed because a whale had been taken or a caribou was nearby.
Other competitions included four-man carry, ear pull, knuckle hop, arm pull, greased pole walk, stick pull, fish cutting and seal skinning. They also had a native baby and Miss WEIO contests. Every evening natives from some of the remote villages demonstrated their native dances.
If you would like more information and see more videos, you can check out the WEIO website:
http://www.weio.org/mm_videos/index.php?VidCat=2008
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
July 10 to July 14, Denali National Park
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Alaska Zoo in Anchorage
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Tuesday and Wednesday
Tuesday was not a sightseeing day. We drove down to Anchorage and went to Costco to replenish some of our groceries and also ate at Golden Corral. During our vacation we have not eaten out much; but we have bought Subways occasionally, when we are in a hurry and they are available--not often on the Alaska Highway. We are dry camping at the Adventist Church parking lot where we stayed for a week back in 2007.
Wednesday we stayed put all day in the parking lot. Carol was not feeling her usual self and wanted to rest. We had planned to visit the zoo which is just down the street about a mile, so that is on the schedule for Thursday. The WiFi here is excellent--one of the best we have had. Since the Alaska Conference is next to the church parking lot and they have an open-guest network, they have given us permission to use it.
Wednesday we stayed put all day in the parking lot. Carol was not feeling her usual self and wanted to rest. We had planned to visit the zoo which is just down the street about a mile, so that is on the schedule for Thursday. The WiFi here is excellent--one of the best we have had. Since the Alaska Conference is next to the church parking lot and they have an open-guest network, they have given us permission to use it.
Monday, July 6, 2009
We moved about five miles to Big Bear RV Park in Wasilla. The previous RV park charged $2 for WiFi, which John refused to pay, because of the principal of the thing. Their nightly charge was more than enough to cover it. We had heard some parks had WiFi charges; but in over 40,000 miles of travel in the past 26 months, this was the first time we encountered it. We had stayed at the Big Bear in 2007. Their rates are lower, WiFi is free, the restrooms and laundry are nicer. The manager of the Homestead Park we left was not very nice when John told him we were leaving because of the WiFi charge. The only thing Homestead has going for it is the location in a pretty grove of trees. Big Bear is out in the open. After getting checked into the park, we drove to Independence Mine. This is an abandoned gold mine that the state has taken over as a state park. There are a number of buildings in pretty good condition; however, most of the mine and some buildings have collapsed. The last 13 miles of the trip was up a pretty stream with a lot of rough water and flowers along the roadside. There was a beaver dam and lodge. Both can be seen in the picture. The evidence indicated it was an active site. The beavers must have been taking a nap or doing indoor housekeeping.
Sunday, July 5, 2009
We drove from Valdez to Palmer and passed some potentially-pretty scenes. However, there are a number of forest fires in Alaska right now; and the pictures are hazy. We have to drive some of the same roads when we leave Alaska and trust the fires are out by then. They have been started by lightning strikes. The fires are allowed to burn unless personal property is in danger. We hope the rain forecast for next week will put most of them out. Carol took the picture of the river to show you what glacier water looks like. It makes the water look milky.
Saturday, July 4, 2009
Friday, July 3, 2009
Thursday, July 2, 2009
This was a stay-put day. We needed to do the laundry and spend some time on our blog. The WiFi in the Sea Otter Campground was better than some we have had. We are camped next to the Port of Valdez. John is quite certain he saw some sea otters, but was not close enough to get pictures. We saw a harbor seal many times but figure it was the same one in different locations because we never saw more than one at a time. Since there is not much in the line of pictures for today, we are posting some of the beautiful wild flowers we have seen along the many roadways.
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
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