DENALI PARK, AK - - I can usually find an abandoned copy The Anchorage Daily News nearly every day, left by bored tourists looking for USA Today, The New York Times or the Wall Street Journal. The ADN, which is the state's main newspaper, tries to be a bit of everything to everyone. The paper includes a small feature five days a week entitled Alaska Digest. It's the first thing I go to. The feature highlights community profiles of all communities in Alaska like the item below which I condensed. FYI: If you have a population over 50 you are 'big time.'
SHAKTOOLIK: 2006 population 214; located on the west shore of Norton Sound, 125 miles east of Nome. A Malemiut Eskimo village with a fishing and subsistence lifestyle. Development of a fish processing facility has been a village priority. Reindeer herding also provides income and meat.
Translation: The place is in the middle of nowhere (although there are similar small places like it relatively close by so "nowhere" does have a few "somewheres") with no roads and is basically accessible only by plane and (probably) not by any vessel big enough to bring lots of supplies. There are no Wal-Marts, McDonalds or anything else in the 125 miles to Nome and not a heck of a lot of things in Nome either. Subsistence means living off the land, growing your own, baking your own and hunting to stock up for the winter.
However, Wal-Mart, Fred Meyer (a classy version of WM), and other stores through-out Alaska offer "bush mail" which is sort of like what some of us used to do when we ordered things from the Sears-Roebuck catalog. Only here we're also talking food and just about anything else...and delivered by bush plane with a brave pilot, no tower control and a bumpy gravel air strip probably too short and bordered by trees a bit too close.
Check out the profile of communities like Flat, Atka, Naknek, Gulkana and Mekoryuk, a small Cup'ik Eskimo village on Nunivak Island in the Bering Sea which maintains reindeer and musk ox herds, at: www.commerce.state.ak.us/dca/commdb/CF_CIS.htm
SUMMER 2017: Back on the road again. SUMMER 2016: No travel. In health recovery mode. SUMMER 2015: Out West and house sitting SUMMER 2014: Out West SUMMER 2013: Back to Glacier NP; SUMMER 2012: Glacier NP; SUMMER 2011: Yellowstone and Glacier NP doubleheader; SUMMER 2010: Working on the Grand Canyon's North Rim; SUMMER 2009: June vacation in Nova Scotia; SUMMER 2008: Hiking in Yosemite National Park; SUMMER 2007: Alaska's Denali National Park; SUMMER 2006 :Gold Fever! in Skagway, AK
Sunday, July 29, 2007
Saturday, July 28, 2007
More photos
THIS is the Eldridge Glacier partially in cloud cover and underlined by some of the ever-present fireweed alongside the GPH.
Thursday, July 26, 2007
ATTENTION
DUE TO being somewhat computer-challenged the blogs below are in the wrong order. So, to make sense of them please read the second blog down first. This will explain the pictures in the blog below this posting.
In memorium
Denali '07
THIS year 1,202 individuals with a dream attempted to scale the mountain. Of those, 573 made the summit. Some ran into trouble as Park rangers were involved in 20 rescues. Some paid tyhe ultimate price for their dreams as five individuals - - three male, two female - - died attempting the climb on Denali or the mountains of the Alaska Range surrounding Denali. Their names will be added the Mt. McKinley Climbers Memorial, a quiet place in the town's cemetery.
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Big Game hunting
Newspapers, #1
DENALI PARK, AK - - As a news 'junkie' I like reading the daily newspaper....or two or three. At the library back home in Ormond Beach I had an even larger selection. My partner, LH, is now former news junkie in withdrawl whose only real interest in 'fish wrappers' is the crossword puzzle.
IN Skagway last year, if you wanted to read today's paper you only had to wait until about 8pm that night when the papers arrived from Juneau on the mail plane. So you read yesterday's news in today's paper as they were printing tomorrow's paper with today's news in it...or something like that.
DENALI has been a pleasant surprise ain that we can get the Anchorage Daily News at 6am on the day it is printed. Since we have trains running between Anchorage and Fairbanks and the other way around I (wrongly) assumed that the paper was dropped off (or more likely tossed off) a train as it slowed to pass through the Denali Park Train Station.
SO I cornered the newspaper lady at 5:30am as she dropped off the papers one morning and learned that: (1) The papers are picked up in Anchorage at 9:30pm fresh off the press. "We get the first ones off, load up the car (a Honda Fit) and take off," she related. (2) Talk about a paper route! The papers are delivered to stores and newspaper vending boxes along a 250-mile (one way) drive which ends in Hinton, 11 miles past Denali. That's 500-miles round trip.
THE next morning I saw the same car, but driven by a man...her husband. "One day on, one day off," he explained. "You drive two days in a row and you get a bit stressed and very tired." How is the drive that early in the morning I asked. "I wish we could do it in a pickup truck or a good SUV because that would be more space, more convenient and more comfortable. The problem," he continued, "is that anything comfortable and functional burns up too much gas." What he didn't say right then is that driving something bigger is safer. "You have to stay alert all the time because of the animals," he noted. "I had a close call with a moose last year which dinged the driver-side headlight, the fender and knocked off the mirror. At least it didn't make the car into a convertible...hitting a moose can do that."
IN Skagway last year, if you wanted to read today's paper you only had to wait until about 8pm that night when the papers arrived from Juneau on the mail plane. So you read yesterday's news in today's paper as they were printing tomorrow's paper with today's news in it...or something like that.
DENALI has been a pleasant surprise ain that we can get the Anchorage Daily News at 6am on the day it is printed. Since we have trains running between Anchorage and Fairbanks and the other way around I (wrongly) assumed that the paper was dropped off (or more likely tossed off) a train as it slowed to pass through the Denali Park Train Station.
SO I cornered the newspaper lady at 5:30am as she dropped off the papers one morning and learned that: (1) The papers are picked up in Anchorage at 9:30pm fresh off the press. "We get the first ones off, load up the car (a Honda Fit) and take off," she related. (2) Talk about a paper route! The papers are delivered to stores and newspaper vending boxes along a 250-mile (one way) drive which ends in Hinton, 11 miles past Denali. That's 500-miles round trip.
THE next morning I saw the same car, but driven by a man...her husband. "One day on, one day off," he explained. "You drive two days in a row and you get a bit stressed and very tired." How is the drive that early in the morning I asked. "I wish we could do it in a pickup truck or a good SUV because that would be more space, more convenient and more comfortable. The problem," he continued, "is that anything comfortable and functional burns up too much gas." What he didn't say right then is that driving something bigger is safer. "You have to stay alert all the time because of the animals," he noted. "I had a close call with a moose last year which dinged the driver-side headlight, the fender and knocked off the mirror. At least it didn't make the car into a convertible...hitting a moose can do that."
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
On the trail, again
Things started off smoothly and we had our own bus for the lucky 11. 4 miles later we picked up our guide, Alex. He is now a full time ranger in the park both summer and winter. I asked how he dealt with the long hours of darkness in the winter. His reply: "I sleep a lot."
Although his home is in Ohio, he says his heart is in Alaska.
About five miles from our Sable Mountain trailhead destination we came to a stop. A "honey truck" was right in the middle of the road blocking the way. Blocking might be the wrong word because the driver of the truck had planted the driver-side front wheel up to the axle. He wasn't going anywhere...and the tour and VTS busses were jamming up behind him. Not only was he in deep s**t, his truck was full to the brim of the same stuff.
Help finally arrived to pull him out, but that was nearly 90 minutes later and we were long gone...with Plan B in effect. This meant we walked half a mile further out the road and then about 2.5-miles up a creek bed with some running water to a green spot called the lower summit of Cathedral Mountain.
It was about 50-degrees; there was rain sprinkles off and on; the clouds hung low and everybody had a great time.
TOP PIC: Alex explains options on the trail up.
BELOW: Lunchtime at 4,750' overlooking the Teklanika River

Going through previous pics I pulled out this one of the wolf I recently saw. The park service estimates that as of April, 2007, there were 83 wolves in 16 packs roaming the park. More wolves appeared to be traveling alone during track observations and sightings in early spring of '07; probably because of a high population of snowshoe hares.....sort of 'fast food' on the run.
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Wednesday, July 04, 2007
And on the Fourth of July
Using trail guide LH as perspective, you can follow the trail down until it appears to go out of sight....this is the spot marked as the top for those less adventurous. And the trail continues on behind us. At this point we spotted two camera shy marmots and a couple of squirrels.
Santa Zone
WE also found out that Santa shares a taste for good BBQ and (apparently) frequents the main reason we go to Fairbanks - - Big Daddy's
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