Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Our First Glacier

We had to leave Girdwood and head to Seward, but we stopped at Portage for a rest stop. The Begich-Boggs visitor's center alone was captivating.
 We split up, and Dad went with Randy and Mary to view a glacier from a rest stop, while we wanted a more up-close experience.  We visited Byron's glacier, or at least the ice field below.




 Lastly, we visited the sled dogs at Mitch Seavey's kennel. We were pulled on a wheeled sled by a team of 14 championship sled dogs. And we got to cuddle puppies. Ellie has decided that she is going to be a musher in Alaska.










Last day in Girdwood

The day started with another early walk. The path, it calls.
I stopped by the beaver dam again but so far we have not seen any animals, not even a beaver.
Girdwood is part of the northernmost rainforest, and it is just so lush and rich, so different from the scrubby palms and kudzu of Jacksonville.

This place seems pretty typical of Girdwood, maybe of Alaska.  Laundry + pot.


The other thing I realized is that the book Jamberry is based on an actual bear's diet, and the woods around Girdwood demonstrate it:  Oneberry, Twoberry, pick me a blueberry...


Monday, July 1, 2019

Girdwood

We started with another Carriage House delicious breakfast and talked about the hippies in Girdwood.  We have seen many in campers parked on layy-bys and parking lots, but one today was building a wooden chair out of Game of Thrones!

After breakfast, we all piled in the cars and went to the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center where we saw musk oxen (reintroduced from Greenland), wood bison (currently being introduced, and larger than plains bison), elk, caribou, black and brown bears, Sitka deer, porcupines, moose, wolves, foxes, coyotes, and a few other animals.





We went next to the Alyeska Resort and took the tram to the restaurants at the top and enjoyed the views. It ended with a snowball fight and rock-sledding.


This is where snow melt becomes a stream.


Finally, we took a hike on part of the Iditarod Trail
 Tracks. We saw evidence of bear and a fox and ungulates in the mud.  In addition to what we thought were bear tracks, we also saw flipped over rocks.


More tracking by the masters.

Somehow this ladder is part of the Iditarod?

Beaver dam

Another beaver dam.




The Gathering




We arrived in Alaska at 4:15am from China via LA. It was my longest birthday, 36 hours, and stretching across 2 continents. We all slept more than expected in the 18 hours of flight time, so arrived ready for adventure. On the way to our hotel, we stopped to take in the fact that we are in ALASKA!

Homeward Bound

We are down to the last 10 hour stretch. After a less comfortable night in our first Super 8, we woke up and shot straight out to Mammoth Cave. Our 9am historical tour took us through the natural entrance,  a huge cavern with cold air rushing out. We walked 2 hours through enormous caverns and tight passages,  down 300 feet and back up a soaring tower. It was wonderful,  the last national park as awesome as the first.  It has been a wonderful adventure.
I have been thinking a lot about adventure.  I remember from my master's thesis that adventure is related to the idea of chance or fortune. I looked it up,  and it also seems to be related to daring,  and the risk of loss. An adventure,  therefore, is not all fun, but necessarily includes fear, frustration, and loss. An adventure  is opening yourself up to chance. I like the spontaneity,  and the constant novelty. But we had to learn to tolerate the frustrations of constant time on the learning curves. I find that to be  very refreshing in my  overly structured life. I am reading books by Patrick  Leigh Fermor about his travels at 18 when he walked from the Hook of Holland to Constantinople just before WWII. His travels were an adventure for sure, as he never could be sure what the next day would bring. It wasn't always pleasure. We also had 6 of the 9 Little House on the Prairie recorded books with us. Pa was an adventurer, but often his restlessness put the family at risk. Yet he seemed to glory in figuring his way out of disaster. Reading those two sets of stories while traveling put my own trip into perspective. We tend to get very upset when something goes wrong, though if course our problems are really quite small, especially now, when a little extra cost or some lost time is a big deal only if we make it so. I feel like that is part of what travels teach us, if we are really traveling, as opposed to being tourists. The learning we had to do about camping, about packing the car, about making advance reservations or waiting until we arrived to figure out accommodation,  about coking out and travel games, all are really small adjustments, but we are used to our habits and to our comfortable,  predictable lives. We don't have a lot of adventure, really,  either the pleasure of exploration, or the frustration of constant adjusting  to new circumstances.   We also learned a lot about ourselves as a family, and we also had to adjust as we changed from 5 to 4. We had a lot of jokes, and kept falling into patterns of behaviors, like going to bed at dusk when camping, or each falling into a particular job. Ellie specialized in tent poles. Phil organized the car. I took charge of dishes and keeping  Ellie clean. Jeremiah played pied piper and kept all the kids busy with football or Frisbee or jackpot. I think that this long adventure has been refreshing for sure, and good for us as a family. It also gave us a new appreciation for the beauty and variety of our own country. I think we will be better at camping, and I hope we will do it more. We did a lot of hiking, and again, I hope that will be something we find more opportunities  for.