ALASKA
2007
The
complete travelogue of our trip
North
to Alaska in July 2007
A
few years ago, we started talking about going back to visit Alaska before Spencer
graduated from high school and went off to college. We lived there from 1989-1996, and Spencer
was born there in 1990. There are lots
of good memories from those years in the "49th State". We hope you enjoy the pictures and stories of
our drive from Illinois to Alaska and back - a round trip of some 9,500
miles. Here we go!

Our
trusty old van. 1996 Chevy Lumina APV
with 129,000 miles.
All
cleaned up, new tires, new oil and anti-freeze.

Packing
up. My goal was to keep the view out
of the rear window unobstructed.
DAY
1: Sunday July 1st
Mascoutah,
Illinois to Omaha, Nebraska
Today
462 miles : Trip total 462 miles

Spencer's
driving the first leg of the trip. Here
we go!!!!

25
miles from home. Guess where?

Look
closely. It's night, but you can see the
space shuttle Endeavor getting a ride home to Florida on the back of a NASA
747. They were stopped overnight at
Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska, where we lived from 1996-1999.
Day
2: Monday July 2nd
Omaha,
Nebraska to Murdo, South Dakota
Today
411 miles : Trip total 873 miles

The
second-most popular tourist destination in South Dakota, the Corn Palace in
Mitchell. Each year, it is decorated
with ears of corn in varying colors to create very imaginative murals.

Inside
the Corn Palace. Lots of
"corny" vendors.

Some
of the corn murals on the wall at the Corn Palace.

Close-up
of a corn mural.
I
guess there's not a lot to do in South Dakota.

OK,
we're done with the Corn Palace and heading west through South Dakota. It's mostly loooonnng stretches of straight
road with occasional cool scenes like this lake.
Day
3: Tuesday July 3rd
Murdo,
South Dakota to Sheridan, Wyoming
Today
442 miles : Trip total 1,315 miles

Did
I mention LONG stretches of boredom?
This is much of
South
Dakota's interstate scenery.

Did
I mention LONG stretches of road? Oh,
yes, I did. Here's more.
Are
we there yet? Only 3,000 miles to go!

We
got out to stretch our legs and enjoy the spectacular view of…. Prairie.
We
did comb our hair first, but there is a constant 30 MPH wind.

Ellsworth
Air Force Base, South Dakota.
We
stopped to look at the museum. Great!!

One
of the museum displays is this nuclear (or, as George W. Bush says,
"NU-CU-LAR)
missile launch command from an underground
missile silo.

Approaching
Mt. Rushmore - our first view as we ascend toward the monument.

Uh,
oh! A half mile to go, and the traffic
is parked in both lanes.
Moving
verrrry slowly!
When
we finally got to within 2 cars of the parking lot entrance, it closed. Full!
We
drove past the lot about a mile, parked along the road, and walked back.

Family
picture at Mt. Rushmore.

Close-up
of the 4 Presidents.

After
Mt. Rushmore, it was west to Sheridan, Wyoming for the night.
At
least the scenery was improving.
Day
4: Wednesday July 4th
Sheridan,
Wyoming to Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
Today
355 miles: Trip total 1,670 miles

Westbound
from Sheridan, Wyoming.
Interesting
2-lane as it approaches the first of the Rocky Mts.
Suddenly,
we were climbing toward the sky on a twisty stretch of road.

Near
the top of the first climb, we looked back
on
where we took the previous picture.

Yellowstone
National Park.
All
rivers west of this point flow into the Pacific.
All
rivers east flow into the Atlantic.

Waiting
for Old Faithful. (She's brewing in the background)

Thar'
she blows! Old Faithful.

The
North Canyon of Yellowstone.
Nicknamed
the "Grand Canyon of Yellowstone".

Yellowstone
- Lower Falls

On
the way back to the room, we passed this huge herd of bison.

This
guy wanted a little time to himself and was
wandering
up the road away from the herd.

Some
of the thermal springs in Yellowstone.

Mammoth
Hot Springs in Yellowstone.
These
have been mostly inactive since about 1998.
Beautiful
colors, though.
We
enjoyed a nice evening at the Grant Village Lodge.
No
TV, no internet, no phone. Ahhh, peace
and quiet.
Day
5: Thursday July 5
Yellowstone,
Wyoming to Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana
Today
403 miles: Trip total 2,073

Montana,
northbound to Malmstom AFB.
Lots
of flat country, with occasional hills like this.
Kind
of uneventful after Yellowstone.
We
stayed at Malmstrom Air Force Base lodging Thursday night.
Very
nice 2-bedroom suite. Brought Papa Johns
pizza back to the room.
Day
6: Friday July 6
Malmstrom
AFB, Montana to Edmonton, Alberta (Canada)
Today
530 miles: Trip total 2,603 miles

After
leaving Malmstrom AFB, it was north on the interstate about 150 miles to the
border of Canada. It was a pretty
uneventful crossing, but the line moved slowly.
It took about an hour to get through the line of 15 cars.

Canada! We're on our way to Alaska.
Alberta
is mostly flat farming country. Lots of
grain fields.

What
did I tell you?
Alberta looks like this much of the way to
Edmonton.

We
rolled into Edmonton after dinner, so the hotel pickings were slim.
The
Travel Lodge was nice and reasonably priced, but the lady told me the only room
left was a "Theme Room" with bears.
I thought Spencer would get a laugh out of this. He did.
I
promised to email this picture to all of his friends at school.

Edmonton
Mall - the world's largest indoor mall.

Edmonton
Mall - indoor wave pool/ swimming pool

Edmonton
Mall - indoor ice rink
Day
7: Saturday July 7th
Edmonton,
Alberta to Fort Nelson, British Columbia
Today
653 miles: Trip total 3,256 miles
We
were up early and on the road by 6:00am.
We decided to drive for an hour before stopping for breakfast at
McDonalds in Whitecourt. Then, it was on
to Dawson Creek, the start of the ALCAN (Alaska/Canada Highway).

The
Visitors Center at Dawson Creek.

Nearby
is the official start of the ALCAN.
Mile"0".

We're
finally on the ALCAN. The first hundred
miles is pretty tame.
This
is where the countryside transitions from farmland to forest.

About
50 miles up the ALCAN, we run into the first gravel section.
Most
of the highway was well paved.

Continuing
on to Fort Nelson. It's looking more
remote.

About
150 miles up the ALCAN.
Civilization
is rapidly disappearing in our rearview mirror.
We
made it to Fort Nelson and stayed at Woodlands Inn, a very nice (new)
hotel. We also got our first reminder of
how expensive everything is on the ALCAN.
Gas was $5.00 per gallon, and a medium pizza was $25.00. Ouch!
Day
8: Sunday July 8th
Fort
Nelson, British Columbia to Teslin Lake, Yukon
Today
475 miles: Trip total 3,731 miles
I
awoke this morning with terrible nausea and headache. Could it be the greasy pizza from last
night? I didn't want to slow down our
progress, so I decided to get out the pillows and sleep in the 2nd row seat
while Beth and Spencer drove. I rested
for about 2 hours, then awoke when I heard the excitement - wildlife all over
the road!

Spencer
getting a "thru the windshield" picture of
wildlife
on the highway.

They
are not too concerned about our van.
Can't
they see Beth is driving???

Just
up the road, Mama and baby out for a stroll.

"Hey,
take my picture! Cheeeeese!"

Nice
view at a pullout along the McDonald River.

Another
pullout with a nice view of the Stone Mt. Area.

Spencer
trying to tell the stone sheep the sign
says they should be over here.

Around
the Toad River and Muncho Lake area.
By
now, I was feeling better and gave
Beth
and Spencer a break from driving.

Liard
Hot Springs area is noted for its bison herds.
We
stopped as a herd passed in front of and behind us.

This
crazy lady behind us stood out in the path of the bison.
I
guess she wanted to socialize with them.
Cool until they get spooked.

Ah,
somebody's sleepy. I guess he drove
early this morning.

We
woke up Spencer for the "Welcome to Yukon" sign.
He's
smiling, but he's also asleep (note the closed eyes).

Ft
Nelson, Yukon. Legend has it that a
worker on the ALCAN back in the 1940s put up a sign from his hometown. Over the years, tens of thousands (yes!) of
signs have been added to what is now known as the Sign Post Forest.

One
of the many aisles of city signs.

Looking
for places we've been. Many are from
Europe.

Finally,
we made it to Teslin Lake and stayed at the Dawson Peaks Resort.
Well,
it may not be a fancy resort, but it was nice and quiet.
We
slept like babies.
Day
9 : Monday July 9th
Teslin
Lake, Yukon to Tok, Alaska
Today
503 miles: Total miles 4,234

The
Teslin River Bridge is the 3rd-longest span on the ALCAN.
Spencer
got to drive the one open lane with a 100-foot drop just inches to the left.
We
made it!

One
of the many motorcyclists we saw on the ALCAN.
I
originally thought I'd like to ride it, but it's all paved now.
Not
quite the adventure for a bike that it once was.

Caution
- Elk next 20 kilometers (about 12 miles)
We
did not see any coming or going to Alaska.

Haines
Junction, Yukon. Be sure to turn right.

Heading
north from Haines Junction toward Kluane Lake.

Approaching
Kluane Lake and Sheep Mountain.
This
is the largest lake in the Yukon (154 square miles)

Waiting
for construction at Kluane Lake. The
next 100 miles had a lot of
waiting
for pilot cars to usher us through construction zones.

Watching
them tear away the side of the mountain to widen the road.

Finally! Time to go.
Follow the truck.

Rough
road. I hope none of those big rocks overhead
fall.
You
can see why they want to widen the road.

Heading
north past Kluane Lake and approaching the Alaska border.
A
new bridge being built alongside the old one.

Not
too far to Alaska now.

More
gravel roads.

The
joy of following campers on a dusty road.

Finally! After 8-1/2 days and 4,100 miles of driving.

This
3-foot-high thingamabob marks the US/Canada border.
Canada
is to the left, and Alaska is to the right, just over the line.

Looking
down the clearing that marks the border between Alaska and Canada.
No
fence. Just a million-gazillion
mosquitoes guarding the homeland.

A
few miles later, we reached U.S. Customs.

Well,
they let us back in the U.S., so we continued on 100 miles to Tok, Alaska,
where we stayed at Young's Motel. Really
nice place, and a great restaurant next door.

Dad
hard at work trying to update the web page in the hotel room that night.
Slow
connections were the norm.

Here's
the perfect ride to Alaska. Rugged, good
power, easy on gas.
I
guess the bike wouldn't be bad either.
Day
10: Tuesday July 10th
Tok,
Alaska to Anchorage, Alaska
Today
330 miles: Trip total 4,564 miles

The
final leg of the trip! Starting out from
Tok, it was very overcast.
We
saw our first steady rain of the trip.
Clouds obscured the high mountains.

We
saw our first moose of the trip about 30 minutes out of Tok.

Spencer
chasing me away from his creative photography session.

Lining
up the shot.

Nice. Fireweed is a very common flower (weed?) in
Alaska.
It
is one of the first plants to grow after a forest fire.
We'll
see more of this on our return trip through Dawson City, Yukon.

About
114 miles to go to Anchorage. This is a
very pretty view of Lion Head
dome, the oddly shaped rock just ahead and
slightly to the right.
I
got a better picture on our way home, which you will see later.

Matanuska
Glacier, about 100 miles from Anchorage.
18,000
years ago, this glacier extended to Palmer, about 60 miles downstream.

Garcia's
Mexican Cantina, in Eagle River, Alaska.
Spencer
remembered the school bus on the wall and wanted to come here.
Great
food!

Back
on familiar ground.

This
is the church on base where Spencer was baptized in 1990.

Our
old home. We actually lived here just
the last year
after
they started renovating our first home just down the street.

Spencer
is checking out the "giant sledding hill". We used to come here a lot when he was
young. He said it doesn't look as big as
he remembered.
Days
11 - 16
Anchorage
and surrounding areas.
800
more miles of driving - Trip total 5,364 miles

Family
picture by the base totem pole.

After
10 days in the van, we needed to walk.
We headed downtown to the Tony Knowles Coastal Trail, a series of
bike/walking paths that criss-cross the city.

Spencer
used to ride his bike on these trails, and remembered
the
tunnels with their echoes.

Then
and now - Looking out over the water at Sleeping Lady from Anchorage.
The
first picture was taken about 1991, and the second picture in 2007.
Sleeping
Lady is a low mountain (just over my left shoulder) that legend says is a
sleeping princess waiting for her warrior to come home.

Later,
we stopped at Subway and took a picnic lunch up to Flattop overlook above
Anchorage. The city is visible to the
left, and Sleeping Lady mountain is visible behind that.

Next
stop - the Anchorage Zoo. We came here
so often that we bought yearly passes when we lived here. Spencer always loved to come see the animals.

Musk
ox. You can buy clothing made from its
wool.
It's supposed to be very warm.

One
of the grizzly bears at the zoo.

Beth
showing the size of a dahlia(?)

On
Wednesday night, we decided to camp in the Fam Camp on Elmendorf AFB. We picked a nice, quiet remote spot at the
edge of the woods.

We
saw this sign posted at the campground.
Spencer
said, "Yeah, right!"

The
next morning, we found out the sign was right!
Spencer's
tent had claw marks on the top.
His
reply - "I didn't hear a thing."

Close-up
of the claw marks on Spencer's tent.
By
the way, Beth said we would be sleeping in rooms from now on.

Even
the Huskies drive SUVs in Anchorage.

One
day, we headed north to Talkeetna and the Denali Park area.
This
sign just outside Anchorage tells how many moose
have been killed on the highway this
year. (261 so far)

Talkeetna,
a tiny town of about 100 located about 100 miles north of Anchorage.
This
is the popular starting point for climbers heading for Denali (Mt McKinley).

Spencer
getting kissed by a Talkeetna moose.

Busy
downtown Talkeetna. This is the entire
town.

Later,
we drove up to a nice overlook by Denali.
However,
clouds obscured the highest peaks.

Denali
(to the left, behind the dark ridges) was only partially visible.
To
give an idea of scale, the first mountains are still about 20-25 miles away.

Family
picture at the overlook.

After
all of the exploring, we were hungry!
We
had to stop at Lucky Wishbone, a favorite chicken place of ours.
Great
malts!

What's
for dinner?

We
stayed 3 different nights at lodging on Fort Richardson, the Army base that is
connected to Elmendorf AFB. It's about
1/3 the cost of a hotel downtown. And, it's safe.

On
Friday, we headed south 125 miles to Seward.
Along the way, we stopped
at
Crow Creek Gold Mine to try our hand at gold panning.

Spencer's
getting his refresher course in panning technique.

One
of the many old buildings on the Crow Creek Gold Mine site.

This
looks like a good (gold) spot.

Hmmm.
She made it look easy at the check-in.

A
cool old truck at the mine. It's seen a
lot of rough winters.

We
found a section of the original Iditarod Trail.
It
first started in Seward and ran north through Anchorage to Nome.
Now,
they start in Anchorage for all of the media attention.

Going
south along Turnagain Arm from Anchorage, the weather was gloomy.

The
weather cleared for just a few moments as we entered the Kenai Peninsula.

Spencer
setting up for an eagle picture near Seward.

Bald
eagle (Spencer took this picture)

A
young bald eagle. They are all brown
when young, then start
changing to part-white around the 3rd and 4th
years.

We
rode out to Exit Glacier, a 15-mile ride from Seward. It is part of the Harding Ice Field, which
covers a large area of the Kenai Peninsula.
This map shows an area about 100 miles wide by 50 miles high. You can see the ice field covers a great deal
of that. See those rocks on the
right-hand section of the ice field?
Those are the tips of 6,000-foot mountains peeking through the ice
field. The arrow points to where Exit
Glacier spills over the top of one mountain and flows down into the valley.

The
road from Seward to Exit Glacier is very scenic.

A
sneak preview of the glacier from about 3 miles out.

The
Exit Glacier Visitor's center.
The glacier covered this area as recently as
the 1800s.

We
ignored the bear sign at the campground, but we won't ignore this sign.

We
climbed up to a scenic spot close to the glacier.
We
are still about 300 yards away from it.

Here
is the lower section of the glacier.
For
perspective, remember it's about 100 yards away from Spencer.

Spencer
lining up that great photo.

Spencer
and I climbed up to within 100 yards of the glacier.
It's
about 150 feet thick at this point.

Spencer
photographing some of the runoff,
which is melted water from the glacier.

Back
at Seward harbor for supper, we passed a fishing boat unloading the day's
catch.
Those
halibut hanging up by the sign weigh about 100 pounds each.

Then
and now - Seward harbor, about 1993 and 2007

The
historic starting point of the Iditarod,
before they moved it to Anchorage.

Our
lodging at the Army Rec Camp. Great view
of Mt Marathon.

Coming
back from Seward, we stopped at Portage Lake.
Portage
Glacier used to be visible in the background as late as the mid 1990's,
but now has receded around the corner of the
valley.

Spencer
kayaking in the Arctic Ocean. (Portage
museum)

Then
and now - By Portage Visitors Center :
About 1993 and 2007

Middle
Glacier, on the road to Portage Lake.

Another
bear sign at Middle Glacier.

Back
in Anchorage, we visited one of our old favorite hangouts, the Library!

The
lobby of the Anchorage Library is decorated with native designs.

We
also visited the wildlife museum on Elmendorf AFB.
This
is next door to the band hall. Beth and
Spencer used to wait
in here when they picked me up returning from
band trips.

Spencer
asked, "Are you the bear that tore my tent roof?"

One
of many warning signs along the remote parts of Elmendorf.
This
used to be a training area.

Lake
Hood is the largest float plane facility in the USA.
Hundreds of floatplanes land and take off each
day in the summer.

Anchorage
Visitors Center. Flowers are very
popular in Anchorage.

Some
of the hanging flower pots along Anchorage streets.

One
afternoon, we went out to the Eagle River Visitors Center to walk around and
see the museum. We also met a friend we
had been stationed with in Nebraska and Germany (Kathy Homan) and her son
Jessie.

A
view from the walkway at the Eagle River Visitors Center.
There
is a 25+ mile cross country race each summer that goes through the mountain
area in the background. It's called the
Crow Pass Run. Lots of bears, cold-river
crossings, briars, etc.

This
is the pool at Fort Richardson, where Spencer learned to swim as a
toddler. We started taking him there
when he was still in diapers, and by the time he was 5, he was jumping off the
high dive and swimming to the side of the pool.
Day
17: Tuesday July 17th
Anchorage,
Alaska to Tok, Alaska
Today
325 miles: Trip total 5,589 miles
We
left Anchorage early Tuesday morning so we could split the drive to Dawson City
into 2 reasonable days rather than 1 LONG day.
That would allow us to spend more time on the "Top of the World Highway"
the next day, too.

We
headed for home on a beautiful day! Here
is the Matanuska Glacier at mile 100.
It's a little clearer view than when we drove
in.

Here's
the view of Lion Head at mile 114. Much
clearer.

A
common scene on the Alaska Highway - a caravan of RVs going 45mph.
Try
passing that on a curvy road!

Heading
westbound near Glenallen, Alaska, on the way to Tok.

Groovy
VW van at the hotel in Tok.
Day
18: Wednesday July 18th
Tok,
Alaska to Dawson City, Yukon
Today
190 miles : Trip total 5,779

Shortly
after leaving Tok, we headed east on the Taylor Highway, which later connects
with the "Top of the World Highway" and continues to Dawson City,
Yukon. Gold country!!

Starting
out on the Taylor Highway. Nice road for
awhile.

Rainbow
on the Taylor Highway.
It's
ironic that many prospectors came here back in 1849 looking
for
a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, and never found it.

Spencer
taking photos at an area burned by a large
forest fire about 10 years ago.

Continuing
east. Very remote countryside.
We're
glad the van didn't break down here.

Here's
a hillside where the fireweed is growing after a forest fire.

Approaching
the metropolis of Chicken, Alaska.

Here's
a sneak preview of Chicken, AK, from a mile away.

Downtown
Chicken, Alaska. You have your shopping,
drinking, and eating.
What
else is there?

The
busy shoppers.

Oh
yes, I guess there is one more thing everyone needs.

And,
the only gas pump for 75 miles in either direction.

This
beautiful grass is quite common along the roads.
Anyone
help me with what it's called?

The
Chicken, Alaska, Post Office. Really!!

Leaving
Chicken, the road narrows, and there are steep
drop-offs
with no guardrails. That made Beth
happy! (Not!)

An
old gold dredge along the river.
(Jack Wade Dredge – reportedly removed right
after we went through)

Rough
road, tough van. (So far)

Spencer
taking a picture of the Taylor Highway as it stretches out to the horizon.
Look
closely at the mountain just ahead and to the right.

Approaching
the town of Boundary, Alaska (population 2).
It's
the last stop before the Canada border.

Old
cabin at Boundary.

Beth
thought these might be license plates that rattled off cars on the bumpy road.
She
then asked me to check our plates to make sure they were still attached.
Notice
the German plates.

This
gas pump at Boundary probably hasn't pumped gas since
Eisenhower was President.

Before
we crossed into the Yukon, we turned around for a picture of the welcome sign
for those coming the other direction into Alaska. This is our last family picture taken in
Alaska.

Approaching
the customs station at Poker Creek.

Poker
Creek Customs, the most northerly land border port in the USA.

After
passing through Canadian customs, we were back in the Yukon.
Dawson
City - 105 Kilometers (65 miles)

From
here, the road is called "Top of the World Highway", because it is
mostly built along the high ridgelines of the mountains, and because it's so
far north on the globe. Lots of
spectacular views.

TOTWH
(Top of the World Highway) turns to gravel in Canada.
Some
sections are great, some are not. Also,
the Canadian government has figured out that it can save millions of dollars by
not installing guardrails on its roads, so be prepared for a long drop if you
overshoot a corner. (Remember, the road
is built along the TOP of the ridges.)

TOTWH. Winding off into the horizon.

Huh? Actually, this is for a left curve where the
hillside blocks the view of oncoming traffic.
If you hug the left lane (remember the steep drop-off just to your
right?), you will be headlight to headlight with any oncoming car. Not good.

Dawson
City, Yukon. Heart of the 1849 gold
stampede.
The
Yukon River (flowing from the right, dirty with glacial silt) merges with the
Klondike River (flowing toward you, with clean mountain water) merge and
continue flowing north (still known as just the Yukon River) in a loop around
the north of Fairbanks, AK, and westward to the Bering Sea, just south of Nome,
AK.

No
bridge can survive the freeze/thaw cycles of every winter on the Yukon,
so
all traffic must pass over on the ferry.

We
had supper at Sourdough Joes. Good fish
and chips (salmon and cod).

When
we came here back in 1994, Spencer threw rocks in the Yukon River for quite a
while.
Here
he is re-enacting his childhood.

The
Keno, a paddleboat that traveled the Yukon River
up and down to Whitehorse for years.

Standing
atop the "Dome", overlooking Dawson City and the Yukon River.
To
see the same photo taken about 13 years earlier, look below.

Family
picture taken at the Dome in Dawson City, taken about 1994.
Day
19: Thursday July 19th
Dawson
City, Yukon to Teslin Lake, Yukon
Today
460 miles: Trip total 6,239 miles

Heading
south from Dawson City, Yukon on the Klondike Highway.

Suddenly,
Beth shouted "Coyote!"
We
stopped, backed up 100 feet, and watched this beautiful animal
walk
around for about 5 minutes. Spencer took this great picture.

"5
Fingers", a notorious stretch of the Yukon River that stopped many a
prospector on their way to Dawson City.
Here, the river is divided into 5 channels (fingers) by four large
rocks. It took quite a bit of skill to
maneuver around these safely.

Conglomerate
Mountain, where lava and mud flows from 185 million years ago came over the top
of this mountain and solidified into sheets of rock.

As
you travel down the Klondike Loop, there is a section of about 100 miles where
a white layer appears just below the surface where the hillsides were cut out
for the road. This white ash was
deposited from a volcanic eruption about 1,250 years ago, and is either from
the White River area in the Yukon, or perhaps from a dormant volcano buried in
ice in the St. Elias Mountains of Alaska.
Scientists can't agree.

There
are various signs along the road that tell when the last forest fire
occurred. Apparently, fires are a
natural phenomenon, and serve to clean up the forests and start over.

Of
course, where there has been a fire, there will be fireweed.

Whitehorse,
Yukon, the capital. Population 23,500.
This
is the S.S. Klondike "II", a copy of the original that sank in 1936.

Eastbound
out of Whitehorse and headed to Teslin Lake, where we have
a cottage reserved at Dawson Peaks for the night.

More
construction!!!!

Across
the narrow bridge.
Beth
did not like looking out her window and
seeing
a 100-foot drop to the river.

We're
back!

This
time, we stayed in one of the wonderful cottages by the lake.

Inside
the cottage. This time, we had cable
TV!
You
can see the lake through the window.

This
was hanging to the left of the window in the previous picture.
I
don't think there's ANY resemblance, do you???
Day
20: Friday July 20th
Teslin
Lake, Yukon to Fort Nelson, British Columbia
Today
476 miles: Trip total 6,715 miles
We
awoke to the sound of rain this morning.
Hard rain.
Oh
well, we've been pretty lucky up to now,
A
rainy, foggy start this morning. About a
half-hour into the trip, we noticed a pickup truck way down in the grass and
mud, about 30 feet below the road level and about 75 feet from the road. The elderly driver had apparently fallen
asleep at 5:30am and driven straight off the road and down the embankment. At least he picked a smooth place to exit the
road. He said he was not injured at all,
and had plenty of food and water. We
said we would send help from the next town.
That next town would be Watson Lake, nearly 150 miles away. We spotted a Canadian Mountie (not on a
horse, but in a new Ford Explorer) and gave him all of the details. The guy surely had a long wait for help.

Buffalo
on Road. We'll see.

Well,
I guess they were right.
This
big guy was making his way back to the herd.

Just
down the road was the herd. They were
spread out over a half mile.
I
would guess there were about 100-150.
Maybe more.

Pressing
on east toward Edmonton. The weather is
still lousy.

Another
bridge - slippery when wet!!!
Most
bridges up here use steel grates for a road surface.

I
walked out on the bridge, and this is the view down through the steel grated
road surface to the rocks a hundred feet below.
Not for those with vertigo!!
You
also do not want to crash a motorcycle on this at 50mph. Ouch!

Muncho
Lake, 7 miles long and 1 mile wide.

The
original road around Muncho Lake was high above on the cliffs.
Engineers
relocated the road by the lake for safety.

Muncho
Lake Provincial Park.

MacDonald
River Valley, just west of Summit Lake.

Lots
of sheep around these parts. The sign
says it all.

Stone
Mountain area. Steep grades, steep
drop-offs.
Stay
on the road.

"No
shooting or hunting area" - I'm safe.

Civilization. Sort of.
Fort Nelson, British Columbia.
We
stayed at the Woodland Inn again.
It
would be our last night on the Alaska Highway.
Day
21: Saturday July 21st
Fort
Nelson, British Columbia to Whitecourt, Alberta (Canada)
Today
549 miles : Trip total 7,264 miles
A
beautiful day. We left Whitecourt early,
after a great breakfast in the hotel, and headed east through Edmonton and on
to Saskatchewan.

We
stopped to take our picture with Bigfoot.

The
Kiskatinaw Bridge was on a section of the original ALCAN that is an easy detour
off the main highway. It's a trip back
in time, as it is the only original wooden structure still used.

The
sign by the bridge.

It
is also one of the few curved wooden-deck bridges built.

The
wooden deck has survived over 60 brutal winters.

When
we got to Dawson Creek, there was a museum
with
a display of the bridge construction.

This
sign was posted back in the 1940s as a warning for those applying for work.
Day
22: Sunday July 22nd
Whitecourt,
Alberta to Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan
Today
573 miles: Trip total 7,837 miles

One
of many grain elevators in Saskatchewan province.

Saskatchewan
was mostly prairies and grassland, not what I expected.
I
thought it would be rugged forests and mountains.

We
decided to start a multi-national bug collection on the front of the van.
This
is after a day of hard rain washed off many bugs back by Teslin Lake.

I
decided to change the air filter after we were done with the ALCAN and its
dusty roads. I had just replaced the
filter before we left on the trip. It
got this dirty just 3 weeks.
Nice bugs, too!!
Day
23: Monday July 23rd
Moose
Jaw, Saskatchewan to Camp Ripley, Minnesota
Today
700 miles: Trip total 8,537 miles

Estavan,
Saskatchewan is about 100 miles north of the Canada border with North
Dakota. It is the self-proclaimed
"Energy Capital of Canada", producing enough coal to export to other
countries. This old mining equipment is
on display at a local information center.

Just
south of town, this machine was stripping coal out of the ground
where there used to be farmland and
prairie.
BACK
IN THE USA!!!

We
crossed over into North Dakota about 100 miles northwest of Minot.
Beautiful
country!

More
of North Dakota, just north of Minot.

When
we found out there was no base lodging at either base in North Dakota (Minot or
Great Falls), we called ahead to Camp Ripley, Minnesota, about 100 miles
northwest of Minneapolis/St Paul. We
ended up with this beautifully furnished, 4-bedroom home for $41.00. Sweet!

Spencer
checking out the million-channel TV.
It
was a nice change after some of the rustic places we had stayed in.
Day
24: Tuesday July 24th
Camp
Ripley, Minnesota to Union Grove, Wisconsin
Today
461 miles : Trip total 8,998 miles
We
decided to head over to Beth's home in Wisconsin since the county fair was this
week. It would be a good chance to see a
lot of people in a short period of time.
The weather was great, and we were a couple of days ahead of
schedule. We arrived at her parents'
home late afternoon.
Day
25 - 29: Union Grove, Wisconsin
The
next day, Beth and Spencer drove over to the fair (about 10 miles away) in the
afternoon. About 3:00, Beth called me
and said the van suddenly would not go over 25mph. She was only a mile away, and made it
home. When I checked it out, it appeared
there was a serious transmission problem.
I limped it down the road a few miles to the local Chevrolet dealer, and
they confirmed by worst fears - the transmission was completely shot. The repair would be about $2,500.00 -
$3,000.00. The van is 11 years old and
has 139,000 miles on it, so we decided it just wasn't worth it. We have two other cars - one has 129,000
miles and the other "new" one has 98,000 miles. Do we need 3 old cars? No.
So, we sold it to a local mechanic who repaired it and later sold it to
a single mom who needed a car. Bad news,
though. A few weeks later, the van was
stolen when she drove up into Milwaukee.
This van sure had an exciting life!

“FOR
SALE” - Goodbye ol' blue. We'll miss ya'.
Looking
back, it was a real blessing the van did not break down up in the Yukon on a
desolate stretch of road. There were places
where it was 150 miles to the nearest "town" of maybe 500
people. That would not have been a good
situation.
We
rented a car over the weekend and drove down to Illinois to bring back one of
our other cars. We took half of the
stuff home in the rental car, then the rest when we returned home on Monday.
Day
30: Monday July 30th
Union
Grove, Wisconsin to Mascoutah, Illinois (HOME!!)
Today
350 miles : Trip total 9,348 miles
It
was GREAT to be home!! After living in
hotel rooms for a month, the house seems HUGE!
It has been very hot and dry here, so the yard and gardens were in bad
shape. We had to laugh - there was one
huge weed growing just outside our back door.
It was about 6 feet tall, and had a root so deep I had to dig it out
with a shovel. The neighbors had been
getting tomatoes from our garden (like we had asked them to), but we still had
a few almost ready to eat. Everything
was fine in the house, and soon we were back to our normal routines.

Gargantua,
the giant weed in our flower bed.

Our
poor, dry garden. Time to get back to
work.
Summary: Overall, a great trip!! The first few days, we wondered if we bit off
more than we could chew, but we took time to rest after long days of driving,
and tried not to overdo it. It wasn't
easy being copped up together in the van for 9,400 miles, but we still had a
good time, and have many great memories to carry with us. It was nice to see Alaska, but we did not
feel the huge rush of emotions we thought we might when we drove into
Anchorage. Many things have changed, and
life goes on. We are happy in Illinois,
and do not regret leaving Alaska. If had
stayed, we would have missed the opportunity to live in Germany for 3 years. No
matter where life takes you, things work out.
Hope
you enjoyed the travelogue and pictures.

Mike,
Beth, and Spencer