• Backstory
  • Glossary of Alaskan Terms

indeepalaska

indeepalaska

Category Archives: Travel

Three days to Thanksgiving

16 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by Barbara in Travel

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Alaska off-grid living, Alaska snowmachine, Alaska winter travel, Denali Highway

By the Tuesday before Thanksgiving, we still hadn’t told Gary’s sister Karen whether we would come. An email from her daughter, Kristen, saying “please please please” promised cheesecake and “maybe” a lemon meringue pie. Our desire to go had been sincere, but now we could taste it.

But our failure to confirm didn’t stem from ambivalence, forgetfulness, laziness, lack of courtesy, or even—my personal favorite—lack of wind power. It was just too cold. Nights dropped to 36 degrees below zero, then 38 below; if temperatures didn’t rise during the day, the wind did.

On the "highway" going to town

So, without a break in the weather, Thanksgiving travel was a non-starter. Literally. We were pretty sure my car wouldn’t start, and dead certain when even the snowmachine balked.

“This is not good,” Gary said. Ella hates swearing, so Gary has developed a gift for understatement.

My car is parked in town, thirty miles away and more than an hour’s travel by snowmachine. It’s not a trip we’d voluntarily make in those temperatures; it’s dangerous in extreme cold to be sitting still, let alone on a machine that creates its own wind chill. But without a snowmachine, we’re truly stranded. In an emergency, we would have to email friends to call one of the local bush pilots, or go out to the road hoping to flag down a passing musher.

The day warmed, the snowmachine started, and we found new energy to prepare for the trip. Our cabin and everything in it would freeze once we left, so we had to deal with anything that wouldn’t survive and ready things to return the cabin to its toasty state quickly when we got back.

On Monday we’d taken care of everything that wasn’t time-sensitive. Some things were basic: changing the bed, gathering six weeks of laundry, tidying, making shopping lists, packing. Gary built a wooden box for Ella to ride in behind the passenger seat. On Tuesday we did the things we’d wish we hadn’t if we did end up staying home: we put away tools, skis, snowshoes, and anything that might walk away (snowmachiners sometimes explore the area) or disappear under a snowfall. Gary began packing the sled with the space heater and battery charger for my car, gas containers to be filled, and coolers to fill with groceries for the return trip. He split birch wood into kindling to start a very hot fire very quickly when we got back. We gathered sleeping bags, fire starter, flashlights, and extra warm clothes in case we broke down on the road.

I focused on food. We had two enormous bags of carrots, several pounds of sweet potatoes, purple potatoes Gary and Karen had cultivated in their mother’s garden during the summer, a couple of onions, a bag of garlic, and a flat of apples, none of which take well to freezing. I must have spent an hour grating carrots, missing my Cuisinart for the first time. When I couldn’t stand grating anymore, I mixed the grated carrots with crushed pineapple and raisins for a salad to take as our contribution to Thanksgiving dinner. The rest of the carrots I blanched in stew-sized chunks, so they would still be sufficiently carrot-like for cooking when we got back. I blanched the purple potatoes, too, and Gary baked the sweet potatoes atop the wood stove in the Dutch oven. The salad and the rest of the perishables he wrapped in a sleeping bag and set in a cooler to make the round trip.

I emptied the water filter for fear its ceramic elements might otherwise crack if they froze. Ella packed her food and dishes—well, someone did, anyway. When we went to bed late Tuesday night, the temperature was eighteen below. Not bad. We were almost ready to go.

Wednesday morning we woke early. Now it was twenty-eight below, pretty close to some unspoken cut-off point. We ate quickly and downed our coffee. We gathered bowls and buckets and pans, pouring in only a couple of inches of water in each; that way the ice wouldn’t warp the containers and it would thaw quickly when we got back. Gary finished packing the sled and carefully tied it all down while I finished dressing.

Arriving at Diane's, where my car is parked

I wore two pairs of long underwear, three pairs of socks, mukluks with two insoles—tufts of hair Ella had been shedding sandwiched between them—a pair of wind-resistant pants, and down over-pants. Then came a wool camisole, a silk turtleneck, a cashmere turtleneck, a Swedish wool zip turtleneck with a long shirttail (sweatertail?) and thumbholes—great for eliminating the gap between mittens and sleeves—and a wool plaid shirt. I waited until I was outside to don the giant hooded synthetic down parka—sold to us with the understanding that it would be uncomfortable in temperatures above zero—a neoprene ski mask, goggles, and a wool hat. I topped all this with a windproof, canvas, knee-length hooded anorak with a thick coyote ruff. Only then could I cover my cashmere-lined leather gloves with bulky wool knit mittens, which went inside gigantic over-mittens.

You may be wondering how I could move or breathe.

I couldn’t.

Ella and I walked to the road while Gary warmed up the snowmachine. I thought he would stop to lock the gate, so I took off my hood and goggles; since I couldn’t do anything with my mittens on, they came off, too. However, as it happened, Gary had no intention of taking time to lock the gate; he had the same problems with movement and overheating—it’s as much a matter of safety as comfort to avoid getting wet with sweat in that weather—and was none too happy about waiting while I struggled to get my mittens and goggles back on.

I faced backward on the snowmachine for two reasons: to reduce the wind in my face, and to watch and comfort Ella, who is happy to run alongside and then catch a ride in our arms when she tires, but did not want to ride in a box. I stuffed my overly mittened hands into the box next to Ella’s warmth, peering at the passing landscape from beneath my fogged-up goggles. Gary reached back and gave me a reassuring pat on the leg.

After several miles he pulled to the side and stopped. I tried to turn toward him, but only a few of my layers turned with me, so I couldn’t see him. All those hats and hoods create a pretty convincing preview of what my hearing will be like if I live long enough, so when I heard Gary’s voice I assumed he was saying, “A musher’s headed this way,” or “I have to pee.”

But he wasn’t. Frustrated, he shouted, “Look!” and pointed.

I managed to turn enough to see a gorgeous bull caribou in his winter-white cape.

“What did you think I was stopping for?” Gary said, more quietly now that he had my attention.

“No idea,” I said. Even more than a few words seemed difficult with all the layers.

The next time we stopped, I worked harder to get both myself and my clothes to face forward. Good thing, too: Gary wanted to show me a gorgeous view of the Mountain. Here, “the Mountain” refers to Mt. McKinley─Denali. It’s the same as San Franciscans saying “the City” when speaking of their town. It would have taken too long for us to dismount and get back on, so I handed Gary my camera.

If I have your address, you will probably get our holiday card with the photo Gary took that day.

View of Denali on our way to town

Less than ten miles later we reached my car. The battery was dead. Even the heater─the one we had brought to heat the engine─wouldn’t start until we thawed it in our friend Diane’s home. I hoped what I saw dripping as Gary carried the heater back to the car was melting ice, but when Diane stepped back inside from feeding her goats, she found me sniffing her floor.

“Uh, we dripped fuel oil on your floor,” I said awkwardly. Confession seemed like the only option.

“That’s OK. Are you kidding? It’s not the first time,” Diane reassured me cheerfully.

Then she pointed out the outhouse, seemingly apropos of nothing. I looked out the window and realized she would have had a perfect view of me peeing out front when we first arrived.

“Oh, great, thanks!” I answered weakly, deciding against confession this time.

A couple of hours work got the battery charged. Gary had transferred everything from the sled to the car, and we were ready to go again, except now the Subaru’s back gate didn’t want to shut tight, leaving us with the interior lights on. Dark was closing in, and we had several hours of driving on snowy roads ahead of us. We unscrewed the bulbs we could reach and drove on. After a while we pulled over, and by then the tailgate was more cooperative.  Soon we were able to get a radio station to come in. A reporter stated that 42 million Americans were traveling over the holiday weekend, most by car. We saw about 42 of them in the first couple of hours of driving.

When we finally pulled in to Karen’s drive it was well after the dinner hour, but we found a warm welcome, pizza, a microwave, and a shower. It wasn’t Thanksgiving yet, but we were very thankful.

Sunrise: 10:32 a.m.
Sunset:  3:09 p.m.
Weather: High 17, Low 7, snow and wind.

Note: In the hustle of the return trip, I lost my camera and the photos for this posting.  When I come up with similar ones, I’ll add them.

Snowed In?

06 Sunday Nov 2011

Posted by Barbara in Travel

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Alaska Wildlife Trooper, Alaska winter travel, Denali Highway, off-grid living in Alaska

Snowy road into town

The Alaska state trooper’s white SUV turned in at our gate. That sealed it: we had to get out, now. We were prepared. I had my heaviest parka, the one that’s uncomfortable in temperatures above zero, in a compression sack, which kept it to a manageable size. A small laundry bag held my warmest hat, mittens, liners and over-mittens, down over-pants, and ski mask. My Subaru was parked outside the gate just across the bridge, facing the road for a quick departure. In its rooftop carrier were sleeping bags, granola bars and other emergency supplies. Gary had put chains on the tires of his truck days earlier. We had hoped for more time, but time had run out.

They put up the warning sign well before the snows came

The light snow that had started falling that morning with the first rays of the sun grew steadier as we packed, more insistent. The trooper’s visit had made it clear: if we didn’t leave now, we might not get another chance.

I didn't have time to unload the sled before it got blanketed in snow

I’d thought we were alone and was surprised to look up from loading the red cargo sled with scrap lumber to see the SUV blocking our drive. I didn’t think to rein in Ella, and she ran to the driver’s door, ready to greet a new friend.

The trooper looked like the law, straight, dark, and serious. He ignored Ella and approached, introducing himself as the local wildlife officer.

“I heard someone was living here. Is it true you’ll be staying the winter?” asked Jim.

“That’s the plan.” I smiled uncertainly and glanced around for Gary.

Ella brought her purple ball and looked meaningfully from Jim to the ball and back.

“I’m your nearest neighbor,” Jim said.

If he was based in town, that put him thirty miles away.

Gary came away from stacking lumber in the nearby shed to join us.

“Is there anyone staying at Gracious House?” Gary asked, not bothering to introduce himself.

“No, he’s looking to sell. They’re gone. Your nearest neighbor out that way is Alpine.”

The folks at Alpine were the ones who fixed my flat tire on the final leg of my move here. That’s sixty miles away.

“What’s the snow looking like out your way?” Gary asked.

“About like this,” said Jim. “Same amount on the ground, too.”

Jim kicked the ball for Ella as he turned back to his car.

“I come through here most every day,” he called. “The road to the east will close tonight, and down my way we have maybe another week, but I’ll be out on the snow machine. I’ll stop in to check on you.”

Jim’s SUV was still pulling out as Gary and I finalized our plans.

“Get ready to go,” he said. “I’ll load the snow machine onto my truck in case we don’t make it.”

It was getting close to 4 p.m. and we hadn’t eaten lunch, but there was no time for that. We had to get my car into town, where we could park it for the winter. Soon—that very night, perhaps—we might not be able to make it out at all except by snow machine. I headed for the house, got my purse, keys, and the two bags of warm clothes, and raced Ella out the gate. I started my car and began clearing it of snow and ice while it warmed up. Only a few minutes after the trooper left, Gary and I locked the gate behind us and drove off, me in the Subaru first, him behind me in the truck.

This was my first time driving in any accumulation of snow. My new, studded tires held me steady as I led the way. I was tense and focused; Ella sensed this and made herself small in the back seat. I’d almost forgotten she was with me until she sat up, at attention, when we stopped for a small herd of caribou crossing the road. I counted ten bulls, cows, and calves. Before I could reach for my camera, they were gone. Just as well—I had forgotten to grab it in the rush.

I drove for more than an hour, keeping watch for Gary’s headlights in my rearview mirror, slowing when I lost sight of them and careful to downshift instead of using my brakes on the snow and ice.

Gary turned off when he reached our friend Diane’s house. Diane and her daughter had kindly offered us a place to park, with access to their electricity by way of a very long extension cord. This winter, when we do need my car, it will take us an hour or two to snow machine in and another hour or so to warm the car, hooking up the battery warmer as well as using our gas-powered portable heater, if we need it, to get the engine warm enough to turn over.

Ella and I watched Gary turn as we drove on. We had hoped to make the trip when the post office was open, in case we had any packages, but at least I could pick up and drop off mail. I stopped at the Tesoro for gas. After filling my tank and a red, six-gallon container, I stopped in to pay and buy a couple of candy bars. I’m always afraid I’ll drive off without paying—it’s hard to get used to pumping before paying!

The Tesoro is even nicer on the inside!

When I stepped into the dirty restroom, though, I heard the voices of Gary and all the others here who prefer their outhouses to indoor plumbing. Lilly can’t even pay for her own liposuction, one scribble decried. Other graffiti was more predictable. I was starting to understand.

I hurried out. The whole place left me so disgusted I drove back to the post office before letting Ella out. We drove back to Diane’s, and though the light was fading I couldn’t resist a hot cup of tea—standing as a way of reminding myself not to linger—before we started our return trip in Gary’s truck. We shared the candy bars and counted the caribou tracks as we drove into the darkness.

Now we’re home alone together, with only each other to talk to. Though the road is officially closed, there’s still some traffic: an occasional hunter, the dog mushers training for the Iditarod or other big races. And the Alaska state trooper: looks like the next time we see Jim, he’ll be on a snow machine.

Sunrise: 8:48 a.m.
Sunset:  4:31 p.m.

Weather: High 29, low 12, snowy, with about 18″ of snow on the ground. Skis and snowshoes are now in use!

What Color is Your Snowmachine?

25 Tuesday Oct 2011

Posted by Barbara in Travel

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Alaska snowmachine, Alaska snowmobile, Alaska winter travel, Ski-doo super-wide track

Gary and I made a final foray into Anchorage week before last. We had made what we thought would be our last trip the week prior—to get our snowmachine, skis for me, more flannel sheets, long underwear and socks, groceries, and anything else we might need in the coming months—but our snowmachine was held up at the port in Seattle, necessitating one last run to go get it.

It was just as well, too. The weather finally turned just cold enough for us to bring frozen foods back on our long drive. With highs around forty degrees, we could keep three large coolers’ worth of frozen food frozen and produce fresh in the truck bed. I grew up on canned goods like green beans, pears, and fruit cocktail (fighting with my siblings over the one-half maraschino cherry in the whole can) but had largely abandoned them in favor of the fresh produce available year-round in San Francisco. Here in our Alaskan pantry we have canned tomatoes, olives, corn, beets, pineapple; purees of pumpkin, butternut squash, and sweet potatoes; and even canned mushrooms. And, though days are shorter now, Alaska’s gardeners thoroughly exploited the long summer days. We stayed with Gary’s sister Karen and her family on the outskirts of Anchorage; they showered us with home-grown celery, carrots, tomatoes, eggplant, cucumbers, and peppers, and we bought apples, bananas, onions, and sweet potatoes. Everything made it home at more or less the right temperature. So the trip to Anchorage saved me from a winter of canned green beans.

Of course, what we’d really gone for was to get our snowmachine before we were snowed in─or out. Chuck, our salesman, promised us the snowmachine would be ready for us Friday morning, which meant we needed to leave on Thursday.

Closing up the cabin in cold weather is a big job. Before leaving we got a good fire going and brought in plenty of firewood and tinder for our return. I filtered lots of water so our ceramic filter could start drying Wednesday; we worried it might crack if it froze with water in it while we were gone. We ate the last of our onions and put the potatoes in a cooler with a sleeping bag wrapped around it for insulation, setting it not far from the wood stove. We did as much as we could ahead of time to allow for an early start, and were pleased to have made it to Karen’s in time to take a shower and read the paper before dinner.  We even had time to stop on the way to buy an eight-foot red sled for hauling lumber or camping gear with the snowmachine.

On Friday we got to Costco shortly after it opened and did the rest of our shopping before picking up the snowmachine. You can’t just leave something like that in your truck while you shop and expect it to be there when you get back, so once we had the snow machine one of us always stayed with the truck. Everything went off without a hitch—almost literally; we pointed out to Chuck he’d failed to install the promised hitch so we could pull the sled.  But by evening we had groceries, warm things, a snowmachine, and were back at Karen’s doing loads of laundry and watching movies with the family while Ella kept her eye on the family cat.

Snow began to fall as we made our way home Saturday, the truck bed packed full with the coolers tied down alongside the snowmachine.  We got home just as it was getting dark and woke to four inches of fluffy white on Sunday.

Gary took the snowmachine on its maiden run that morning to break trail on our driveway and around the cabin and outbuildings in order to pack the snow, making walking easier and setting a good base for skiing. But who wants to ski on the driveway? On Monday we went further afield to break some trail for real skiing.

Hunters and recreational ATV users have cut hundreds of “off-road” roads throughout the wilderness, exploiting what used to be a system of animal trails. We hate to see so many roads, but they do make for easy snow-machining. Gary drove and Ella ran alongside through snow untouched except for tracks of red fox, snowshoe hare, and caribou. Oh, and mice. Tracks of mice and voles are everywhere.

When we stopped after riding for ten or fifteen minutes, we looked down on the fog and up to the mountains, some sprinkled with snow, some covered. This will be beautiful skiing, I thought.

Our snowmachine is yellow! What color is yours?

We could only attend to the view when we stopped, though, because Gary was focused on trailblazing and I…well, I was having trouble paying attention. I had never ridden a snowmachine before. At the start of the ride I marveled to float past our icy creek, out the gate and down the road. When we turned onto the ATV trail leading into the woods, the snow didn’t fully cushion the bumps.  My ride went from nice to exciting.

Gary turned his head a bit and asked, “How are you doing back there?”

“Great!” I said. I was really having fun. Ella was having fun, too, racing alongside us with a smooth, elegant gait.

As we penetrated the forest, the trail steepened. The bumps were no longer reliably due to shrubs but often to snow-covered rock. I felt every muscle tense with each bump, as though riding a willful horse, and knew I would be sore in the morning.  I shifted my weight to avoid tipping. My breathing changed to what I imagine is taught in a Lamaze class.

“Whoa!” I screamed.

Gary stopped and turned his head.

“Sorry”, I said sheepishly. “I didn’t mean it.”

Closing my eyes helped, especially as Gary picked up speed to climb a ridge. But at a crucial point in the climb, I let out two more loud shrieks and he stopped again. Oops. Maybe a piece of leather to bite on would have helped me. Too late; the machine was stuck. I disembarked while Gary reversed out and could get going again.

To be clear, this is no racing machine. Its wide track makes it very stable, and we weren’t going fast, maybe ten or fifteen miles per hour, slower still when going over rocks or through snow-covered spruce branches. Gary insisted this was an easy ride. We made it back to the road without incident and rode toward our cabin. Ella and I were surprised when Gary slowed but went past our gate.

“Up!” he called to Ella.

Up she jumped, riding between his arms as he accelerated. Forty-five miles per hour seemed like a hundred to me, even on the road. About a half-mile from our turnoff, we stopped again. I could hardly pry my hands loose from gripping the passenger seat handles so long and hard in the cold.

Getting ready to go for the first time!

“You’re driving home,” Gary announced, climbing off.

And so I did. Gary held onto me, and Ella ran alongside.

“Drive on the loose snow,” Gary suggested.

It was smoother than on the trail we had just made.

“Don’t go into the ditch!” he said, more urgently this time.

Then I practiced shifting gears. The machine made an angry sound because I failed to come to a complete stop first, but machine, people and dog alike survived. I couldn’t bring myself to test the machine’s speed past twenty miles per hour, which seemed fast enough. We moved fast through the cold air, then slower, then fast again. Ella kept pace. It was exhilarating and less scary than I expected.

Tuesday we went out again, this time carrying our new red sled. We explored a little more and loaded up the sled with downed, dry wood. It was a wonderful ride. What had my problem been? This was great fun! By tomorrow, I thought, I’ll be begging to drive.

Special thanks to Erin for the title, “What Color is Your Snowmachine?”

Sunrise: 9:11 a.m.
Sunset:  6:09 p.m.

Today's weather photo, snow and wind at noon. Note the red sled filled with (snow-covered) lumber!

Weather: High 38, Low 22, cloudy, snowy and very windy!

most recent

  • Groundbreaking News!
  • The Adventure of a Lifetime
  • Spring Showers
  • The Death of Winter
  • Here Comes the Sundog (to Blue Moon Stead)

Categories

  • Adventure
  • Background
  • Daily Life
  • Food and Hospitality
  • Nature
  • Sights and Surprises
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized

Archives

  • August 2021
  • November 2015
  • March 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • June 2014
  • March 2014
  • November 2013
  • February 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • June 2011
Creative Commons License
indeep-alaska.com by Barbara Bailey is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

thanks

Thank you for your visit and your support. I hope you enjoy my adventures as much as (or more than) I do!

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 148 other subscribers

RSS subscribe by rss

  • Groundbreaking News! August 2, 2021
  • The Adventure of a Lifetime November 2, 2015
  • Spring Showers March 21, 2015
  • The Death of Winter December 22, 2014
  • Here Comes the Sundog (to Blue Moon Stead) November 2, 2014
In Deep (Alaska) logo

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • indeepalaska
    • Join 55 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • indeepalaska
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...