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Owner Greg Fensterman,
author of Hiking Alaska’s
Wrangell-St. Elias National
Park
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Past winter

Summer’s Coming… eventually

Monday, April 26th, 2010

No doubt where you are it’s time to get the garden in and you’ve already had your first backyard barbeque. Well summer comes a bit slower to the north and up here folks are getting in some spring skiing before the big melt.

Here’s short clip I took just last week off the north slope of a ridge above Eagle River. A young couple was taking advantage of the great snow conditions for an easy ski down.

One of the things I love about Alaska is that you can get to a place like this in less than an hour from town. The trail head is a 10 minutes drive and then to get to where this is shot takes about an hour of hiking depending on conditions.

Yeah life is grand.

IMG_0990And just when you think it can’t possible snow again this season… it does. Just a few days ago we got a big snow fall. Went up into the hills for my evening hike and found that there was 4 inches of fresh white stuff on the ground. Whoa.

There were places where the snow was only a few inches deep, but there were also spots where someone (sans snowshoes) had postholed thigh deep!

But don’t worry, if you’re heading to Alaska for a summer trip it will all be gone by the time you get here. No really, it will :-)

Winter Road Trip to McCarthy

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

road_signI was getting a case of the mid-winter doldrums and decided it was time to get out of town for a bit. So I loaded up the pick-up truck with supplies and lit out for the territories.

I had been watching the weather forecast for the Copper River valley and it looked like it wasn’t going to get too cold. No -40 nonsense at any rate. Still, when you do remote travel to places like McCarthy in the dead of winter you have to prepare with a full set of survival gear and clothing. If you break down halfway up the McCarthy road you better be prepared to spend the night out in forty below temps, no matter what the forecast.

The last bit to McCarthy is 60 miles of unpaved road and while it does get plowed in the winter it’s done on a pretty irregular basis. So I took along a full set of chains for all 4 wheels.

road_glacier_01Mostly what you have to worry about on the road in winter are the glaciers. Not real glaciers, it’s just what we call them. The ground freezes and forces water up to the surface where it flows and freezes. It can create thick sheets of ice across the road up to 100 yards long. But what you really have to watch for are the spots were the ice is soft or there are sections of open water.

As you can see, there was one nasty spot around mile 35. It was touch and go and for a moment I really thought I wouldn’t get out of it. But I floored it and my chains clawed their way up and out the other side. Whew. Didn’t really want to sit and wait for someone to pull me out, or camp out.

Got to McCarthy and to my friend’s cabin just as light was fading fast. The road to her drive had been plowed but not the drive and there was no place to pull off the road. So a bit of furious shoveling was required to clear a pull-out in the foot and a half deep snow. It was pretty much getting dark by the time I pulled up to the front door with my gear sled piled with stuff.

d_cabin_01Put the key in the door… and it wouldn’t turn. I thought maybe it was frozen, but no, it was just the wrong key. Oh great. I was standing there in the wash of my headlamp in the snow with temps around zero and it’s now dark. I was not going to give up easily however and scouted around the cabin for a window that I might be able to open.

Amazingly the kitchen window was not latched and after pulling back the screening I was able to crawl through and onto the kitchen table. It was a pretty inelegant maneuver but at least I was inside.

Within minutes I had the wood stove roaring. The generator out back fired up without too much complaint so then had lights with heat on the way. Things were looking up.

I spent the next 5 days hauling firewood, doing some reading, a bit of snowshoeing and even some work online though with a very slow connection. The place is just magical when it’s covered in white.

icefall_winter_01It was a very relaxing time. There were not very many people around the area and I only  saw a few while I was there. On the last day it was around 15 below and I had to fire up the generator and plug in the engine heater before it would start. So it was a great winter road trip and a good time in McCarthy. I’ll probably get out there for again before spring.

Alaskan Winter Day Hike

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

scott_eklutna_ridgeOkay it was nothing grand but we just had to take the morning off and get up on some mountains. One of the great things about Alaska is that even in the Anchorage (or in my case Eagle River) area, you are never more than minutes away from trailheads and great hiking opportunities.

Backcountry guide Scott and I took off after breakfast to the Peter’s Creek trailhead which is about a 20 minute drive north of Eagle River. One of the things I like about this one is that the trail doesn’t mess around but pretty much just goes up pretty steeply from the get go, so it’s a good workout. We hadn’t had any fresh snow for a while so the trail was pretty well packed down. I was happy to have some traction aids on my boots for part of it.

Once up on the plateau the trail peters out pretty much. The winds up there fill in any boot tracks about as fast as you can make them. No worries though as there is no need for a trail at that point – it’s all wide open tundra up there. It wasn’t too windy when we got there however and the temps were quite mild at around 18 degrees F.

We hiked down the ridge then up and over a high point where we snapped a few pics. Then it was back down into the valley. We tried to do some glissading on the way down but for the most part the snow was just too soft, so we had to hoof it.