You might remember a few days ago when we first boarded we discovered that one of the excursions I thought I had booked apparently was not booked and was now sold out. We had expressed our displeasure to the Excursion Director, Scott, who put us on the waiting list.
This morning we got up early anyway, just in case a spot opened up. Andy spoke to Scot first thing: Scot’s suggestion was to go down to the bus for the Fortress of the Bears excursion and see if anybody didn’t show up.
Which worked like a charm. It was not clear if there was actually somebody who didn’t show up, or they just figured out there were a couple of empty seats on the bus, but it didn’t matter – we were on the bus.
It was about a 20 minute drive along one of the few paved roads in Sitka to arrive at the Fortress of the Bear, a non-profit that takes in injured or orphaned bears and gives them a forever home. Alaska does not have a rehab-and-release program for bears; the cubs that are rescued by this organization would otherwise be euthanized.
The bears are kept in large enclosures where they have access to a pool to swim in and enrichment activities. They are trained to perform certain behaviors to help with health assessments: they open their mouths, raise their paws, and stand on command. Two younger bears (7 years old) are kept separate from the older bears (16 years old), because they are still teenagers and full of energy. The older bears would not appreciate this energy.
The bear on the left couldn’t make up his mind whether he was supposed to open his mouth or raise his foot.“Huge” doesn’t really adequately describe the size of these bears.The bear on the left reminds me of a dog waiting patiently and hopefully for foodThe white board where the bears’ weights are tracked
After about 45 minutes, we got back on the bus. We were dropped off in downtown Sitka in front of the library.
We went in search of a CVS-like store; the bus driver recommended a grocery store that was just a few blocks away. As we headed off in that direction, it started to rain. As it apparently does here most days.
We found the grocery store and found everything we were looking for. Since it was Sunday, most of the shops were closed until later in the afternoon, so we decided to go back to the ship.
SitkaThis tree was at the bus stop. It is a Dwarf Alberta spruce. Notice the tiny cones.Our ship
Once we were back on the ship, we went to lunch. The afternoon is open for us. As I type this, Andy is off on a long run.
Once I finish this, it’ll be cookie time! I’ll bring my knitting and sit in the lounge to look at the view.
Tomorrow: Another morning in Sitka. We have a raptor excursion.
Where We Visit A Tiny Town And See More Bald Eagles
After breakfast, we were off on an eagle adventure! And maybe bears! The tour bus was a modified school bus, awkward to climb up and awkward to sit in.
We drove up to Chilkoot Lake in a state park. Along the way, we saw anglers in the fast running river, hoping to catch a salmon. In the middle of the river was a weir, where a state official sat in a chair to count the number of salmon going through the barrier.
At one point a bear wandered onto the weir and then wandered off again – but we were not able to catch a photo before he wandered back into the brush.
Anglers in their waders braving the rapid currentI don’t remember exactly where this was taken, but I liked the totem poleLutak lake
There was an eagle on a tree on the other side of the lake. This is a photo without the benefit of a zoom scope
This is the same bird taking the photo with my iphone through a zoom scope:
Why do eagles always look so “get off my lawn!” angry?Elderberry bush, apparently beloved by the local bears
Then we were on our way back towards town to visit the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve, that takes care of injured eagles and other birds that can’t live in the wild.
This is Bella. She’s missing a part of her right wing, so she can’t fly.This is a not great photo of Ashoka, a Western Siberian Eagle Owl
Many of the enclosures were empty, which might be a good thing?
There was another interior room with an exhibit of all the kinds of wildlife in the area, including moose.
This is about as good a moose photo as we’re going to get.
When we got back to the ship, after lunch we decided we’d go into town via the shuttle. The shuttle driver decided to deviate from the schedule and just drive us directly to the Sheldon Museum, because she wasn’t scheduled to leave for another 30 minutes and we were the only people standing at the shuttle stop.
We felt obligated to visit the Sheldon Haines Museum, since we share the last name, though in no way related. This is the third famous Sheldon family that we’ve come across during our Alaskan adventure. Here is some info on this particular Sheldon family.
The museum was a couple of rooms containing Alaskan native artifacts similar to all the other museums we’ve seen so far.
Sheldon Haines MuseumSheldon Haines Museum from the outside
We next walked literally across the street to the Hammer Museum. This m
I liked the decorative glass hammers.
We finished both museums in under an hour, so we were able to catch the 3:00 shuttle back to the ship, just as it started to rain.
Back on the ship, we ended the day with dinner and watching the evening’s entertainment on the room TV.
Where We Spend Our First Full Day On Board Cruising Through Glacier Bay National Park
The morning started off rather gloomy.
View from our veranda at about 8:00 a.m.
But we could just about make out Steller Sea Lions on the rocks around us as we approached Marble Knob
But the fog quickly improved, thank goodness.
Around 9:00 a.m., we picked up two passengers: a park ranger for Glacier National Park and a Tlingit native interpreter. The term “interpreter” didn’t have much if anything to do with translating languages as interpreting Tlingit native culture for our edification. Both delivered excellent presentations as we sailed along through Glacier Bay.
Bear alert!
We also were looking for mountain goat, which is extremely difficult to spot. They look like white dots with feet on the mountains. There’s a lot of white dots on the mountains, and most of them do not have feet.
I lucked out and captured a fuzzy photo of this mountain goat (in the circle), as opposed to all the rock around it.
We arrived at the Margerie glacier around 2:00 p.m. Plied with hot chocolate, assorted flavors of alcohol, as well as assorted kinds of brownies, we spent quite a bit of time watching the glacier, waiting for to calve. We did hear the booms and crashes of calving a couple of times, but I didn’t capture that in a photo or video.
It’s truly impossible to capture the magnificence of this glacier.
This view shows the river of ice flowing down the mountain.
Eventually it was time to turn around and sail back through and on to Haines. We passed by a couple of other glaciers along the way.
The Reid Glacier
Otters were spotted floating on an ice raft. They quickly jumped into the water as the boat sailed by.
Some time during dinner, the park ranger and Tlingit native interpreter were sent back to land via a ship’s tender.
After dinner we had a quiet evening in our room, listening to the port talk and the evening’s entertainment via the ship’s TV channel.
Where We Officially End Our Land Excursion With A Flight To Juneau
And A Couple/Few Issues Crop Up
The morning was spent being transported to the airport and getting ourselves on the flight to Juneau. One of the many confusing issues – we had no information regarding the flight. We finally found out it was a commercial Alaska Air flight. Our boarding passes were already printed off, but no one asked if we had TSA pre-check. To have that added meant standing in the endless customer service line.
Fortunately, we were able to go through the priority line due to my mobility issues, and the TSA agent let us go through the screening without taking out our electronics (the major advantage of TSA pre-check).
Our group took up most of the back of the plane. Of course, our seats were pre-assigned; I ended up with a window seat, a highly unusual situation (I’m always on the aisle for easy bathroom access).
But, this gave me the opportunity to take photos of the scenery.
The landing approach to Juneau
After we landed and picked up our luggage, we were met by American Cruise Line staff to help load the luggage onto the luggage truck.
The bus taking us to the hotel looked like a prison bus – a modified school bus that was painted black, including awkward steps to climb up. I was used to the fantastic kneeling but we had been utilizing for the past week.
We arrived at the Hotel Baranof right around lunch time. We needed to check in first, though.
I get to the check in desk, and the hotel clerk looks up our reservation, does some paperwork and brings it back for me to sign. As with all our hotel reservations nowadays, I asked if the room was an accessible room. The hotel clerk looks at me and says, “We don’t have one available right now. They are all taken”. I look back at her and say, “We requested an ADA room”. She replies, “Yes, we received the request, but we don’t have any rooms available”.
I reply, “Well, if it’s not ADA compliant, I may not be able to use the bed, because it will be too high.” She didn’t think the beds in the hotel are particularly high. So we decide that I should look at the room.
In the first room we look at, the top of the bed is at my waist. I restated that it is physically impossible for me to climb into this bed. I asked her if there a low step stool for me to use to help me climb into the bed. She makes some phone calls to discover that nowhere in this giant hotel is there a step stool I can borrow for the night.
We decide to look at a second room. Same problem.
She looks at me.
I look at her.
Finally, I say (and this is a direct quote):
“What do you expect me to do? Sleep on the floor? I cannot climb onto this bed.” {Note: sleeping on the floor has its own logistical issues. Sleeping in the lobby on a couch is starting to look attractive.}
This seems to trigger some kind of brain activity, and we go look at a third room. The bed is a couple of inches lower, and I have chance at being able to climb into it. We check in, and Andy schleps our luggage to this room. It is very small. There is no A/C (it is Juneau, after all), but it still manages to be warm and stuffy. The window is open about 5 inches. The window glass is filthy. Not good vibes.
Now it’s time for our final dinner with the whole land excursion group at Juneau’s finest restaturant.
Except – the reservation was made for the private room on the upper level, a full flight stairs above. There is no elevator, because this building was grandfathered in due to its historic value and its age. So Andy and I end up eating downstairs, alone, and not with our new friends from the last 8 days.
I express my extreme displeasure to Andrew, who kept saying, “Our goal is to provide you with the best restaurant in Juneau.” Which is lovely, except several people are in wheelchairs and walkers! Why was the upper room booked when they knew there would be people who struggle with a full flight of stairs?!? They could have booked the entire lower floor, if it was so important.
The food was indeed, fantastic. I’ll give it that. And some people did come down to visit us.
This was the desert. The white fluffy stuff was cotton candy, and the tree was pure dark chocolate. OMG. So good.
The flourless chocolate torte cake and its presentation
Then we had to say good-bye to Andrew. His job was over; the next day he was flying back to Anchorage.
The fun didn’t end there, though. Turns out it was extremely difficult for me to climb into this bed. I was flopping around like seal on land. We had nothing we could use as as step up – the suitcases were all too soft, squishy and unstable. Once I managed to clamber up, it took way too much work for me to arrange myself to get comfortable. Something about the sheets made me feel like I was slipping around and off the bed.
To add to this, the smoke alarm started to beep. Of course it did. Fortunately, the front desk sent someone up quickly to change the battery.
It was super stuffy in the room – there was zero air circulation. Andy opened the drapes and the window after he went to bed, which dropped the temperature considerably. There was several hours of actual darkness, but the sun came back up around 4:30, AND outside there was street cleaning trucks and garbage trucks. The noise was beyond belief. So I closed the window and the drapes.
I was able to dose off around 5:00 a.m. We were getting up at 7:00.
At 6:00 a.m. something else started beeping. It was not the smoke alarm. It was not Andy’s watch. It was certainly not my watch, because all my watch does is tell time. It was neither of our phones. We wandered around this tiny room trying to figure out where the beeping was coming from. Finally, I picked up the little alarm clock on the night stand by my side of the bed. It didn’t sound like the beeping was coming from this clock, but when I pushed down on the alarm button, the beeping stopped. Someone had set the clock for 6:00 am. and had not turned off the setting.
I think if I put all the bits and pieces together I had maybe 3 hours of sleep.
Never mind. We had to take our showers and cram all our stuff back into the suitcases, shlep them downstairs, check out and have breakfast before we boarded the buses. By the time we did all that, there was not much food left of breakfast.
{Note: before we left the room for the last time, Andy checked everywhere to make sure we didn’t leave anything behind and found: a fan. That we could have used during the night to ease the stuffiness.}
Finally, finally, we’re able to board the bus.
We are split into 3 groups to smooth out the flow of people checking in onboard.
First we went to the Alaska State Museum with exhibits on the native peoples and the history of Alaska since its purchase from Russia in 1867.
This boat was actually in the children’s sectionThe US flag in 1867The first Alaska state flag – the design submitted by a young boyFrog hat
After the museum, we boarded the bus and drove over to the Brotherhood Bridge to view the Mendenhall Glacier.
At long last it was time to board the ship! Everything was seamless. Our room is huge (larger than the room at the Baranof) and this is our view from our veranda:
We go to lunch, then finally get to completely unpack. Woohoo!
Then we go to the lounge to talk to the excursion director, Scott, to ask some questions about one of the excursions. We end up talking to Ben, the cruise director. He goes through our reservations one by one and discovers some discrepancies. One he is able to fix immediately (for some reason, there is an excursion where I am signed up, but Andy is not), but there is another excursion (Fortress of the Bears) that neither one of us has a reservation, even though I know I made one. The cruise website never sent me an email showing all the excursions we booked, so other than a screen shot I took of what I was reserving before I paid it, we had nothing to show.
Turns out, this particular excursion was a “pay later” – we had no choice but to wait to pay for it once on board the ship. So we never had a paid reservation. Scott said he thinks that when the time was changed for the excursion, it kicked us out for some unknown reason. Now it is sold out and we are on a waiting list. I find myself once again expressing extreme displeasure that has no resolution.
We’re finding our experience with American Cruise Line to be a bit quirky here and there. Granted, we’re used to how Viking operates, but not sending a confirmation email listing all the excursions we reserved is just odd.
The good news: the bed is the correct height, the room is comfortable, and the food is very good.
Where We Spent Some Time Viewing Critters That Couldn’t Wander Far
And Our Last Official Night Of The Pre-Cruise Excursion With Our Tour Guide And Bus Driver
In the morning, we packed up one more time for our official last day of our pre-cruise excursion. Before we left Seward, we walked across the street to the Alaska Sealife Center.
Here are some photos of the exhibits we saw, including one that wasn’t an exhibit at all.
This guy was just looking around for something to eatDon’t know what this species isA horned puffin on the left and an common murre on the right (no, it’s not a penguin)A tufted puffin (I did not take this photo – someone else in our group did)Alaska king crabA rock fish living up to its nameMy favorites – the jellies
Back on the bus, we headed to our last stop before heading to Anchorage at the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center, where injured or orphaned animals are taken in and provided lifelong care in a habitat as close to a natural one as possible. It’s a 1/4 mile circuit.
These photos are not in any kind of correct sequence.
Black bearWolfMooseMusk oxElkRaindeer/Caribou
Continuing on our way, we made a pit stop at a store with a chocolate waterfall that we were not allowed to sample, for some reason.
Chocolate waterfall
At dinner, we said our farewells to Jade (tour guide) and Jill (bus driver), both absolutely superb! They both made this past week extra special with their professionalism, endless enthusiasm, and endless (and I do mean endless) patience.
Our tour guide, Jade, on the left, and our bus driver, Jill, on the right.
Actual tears were shed and hugs were shared.
Tomorrow: The land excursion is officially over with the flight to Juneau.
Where We Went On A 6 Hour Tour On A Tiny Ship That Tossed
And Saw A LOT Of Wildlife
We started another long day with a drive to Seward from Anchorage for our excursion in Kenai Fjords National Park.
We saw beautiful scenery along the way.
When we arrived in Seward, we boarded the excursion boat that would take us out into Kenai Fjords
As we left the dock, the captain did warn us that there might be some choppy going for a good part of the 6 hours we’d be out and about.
Our first wildlife
And the captain didn’t lie. On the way out into the fjords, we did bounce a bit.
The view from the bow
Right off the port bow, we spotted an orca. We were able to watch for about 10 minutes before we had to get under way
Orca!
Floating by us was a mama otter and her pup. This is the instant they both looked at the boat t the same time,
Who are you and what do you want?
We started seeing chunks of ice in the water as we drew closer to the Aialik Glacier. The crew scooped up some of the ice to include it in some adult beverages.
Aialik GlacierGlacier-ita – a mojito made with glacier ice
We saw lots of harbor seals lounging around on ice rafts.
Harbor seals doing nothing
I was doing extremely well with the bouncing boat, until the puffins. I had missed out on seeing puffins a couple of years ago on our British Isles Explorer cruise, so I was determined to see them now. The issue was – this required standing on the outside deck and training my phone camera on a small area in the cliffs ahead, while the boat was seriously bouncing.
Good news! I got some excellent photos!
Horned puffins on the left. The bird in the circle is a parakeet auklet – a rare siting in this area
The bad news is that my stomach thought this was a really, really, really bad idea. I managed to get back inside and sit down. Where I stayed for the rest of the trip staring at the horizon or a mountain, or anything large that didn’t move.
Meanwhile, more wildlife presented itself.
Humpbacks bubble feedingSteller Sea Lions
I made it safely back to land without a major mishap, though maybe just a little wobbly. Walking back to the bus, we saw a harbor seal in the, well, harbor.
Harbor seal doing harbor seal things
After the wildlife cruise, we went back to the hotel for a few minutes before going to dinner at a restaurant just across the street. It had been a very long day, and we were all pooped.
Where We Saw Denali In All Its Glory Not Once, But Several Times
Spent A Few Hours On A Scenic Train Ride
And Finally Arrived In Anchorage
Denali
I’m trying an experiment with this post – deliberately adding a cover photo. I’ll see if it works.To
We knew today was going to be a busy, busy day.
It started off with our helicopter excursion that we had postponed from Friday afternoon, because we thought it was going to rain. It didn’t rain Friday afternoon, but it also was not raining on Saturday morning. A good omen.
We were picked up by the helicopter excursion company and driven over to the launch site. We had to sit through a 15 minute safety video and then be fitted with glacier boots. To say that the glacier boots felt odd is an understatement.
The next issue was climbing into the helicopter. There was one giant step up onto the step on the landing skid. Then there was the even bigger gap into the machine itself. With help from one of the other passengers (Mike) and Andy, it was a ONE-TWO-THREE UP!! maneuver and I was in. The additional challenge was that we were doing a “hot turn” – we were boarding the helicopter while it was still running. The wind from the spinning blades literally sucked the air from my lungs as I was helped on board – I was still gasping for air for another few minutes.
Stunning scenery along the way for about 25 minutes:
A glacier. There’s a lot of them around here.
We landed next to a large pool of glacier water.
Glacial pool
Andy and our other two passengers walked down to the pool’s edge. It was a bit too step for me, so I just toddled around on the glacier near the helicopter.
These are frozen air bubbles in the ice. Those are my feet.Here’s Andy drinking the cold, pure glacial water.This is for perspective – the relative size of 3 teensy people next to the glacial poolThis is me with the helicopter
After about 20 minutes, it was time to head back. This time, because the engine was off, it was easier to tell Mike and Andy exactly what to do and when. A few more tries and I’ll have this down to a science!
On the way back were more spectacular views:
This is the beginning of a glacial river
But the most spectacular of all, was this –
Denali – view of 100% of the mountain (including the parts usually hidden from view on the ground) and 100% clear skies
It’s said that 30% of visitors get to see some piece of Denali – this view is in the 10% range. Our pilot was being a bit of a pain – we were all asking him to confirm it was Denali, because it didn’t really look like any photo I’ve seen. Finally, I asked: WHAT IS THAT GIAN WHITE MOUNTAIN. And he finally replied, “Well, some people call it Mt McKinley”.
Bucket list item checked! We can go home now!
Once we landed back where we started and returned our glacier boots, we were driven into “the canyon” – downtown Denali – where we met up with the rest of the group.
Our guide, Jade, herded us all to the coach that took us to the train depot for the Wilderness Express. We spent the next 5 1/2 hours driving through scenic Alaska until we arrived in Talkeetna.
The Wilderness ExpressThe domed car
And then Denali popped up again, and the rest of our group joined the “30% club”.
Hurricane Creek on the left and Denali on the right
During lunch, the train crew talked about a mixed drink called “The Grizzley” – kalua, vodka, chocolate syrup, whipped cream, and a couple of other things I’m not remembering. It was tasty,
We did not spend any time at all in Talkeetna – we went from the train immediately to the bus. We drove another hour or so until the dinner stop, and then back on the bus for another hour or so until we finally arrived in Anchorage.
What a long day. The next three nights we will be hopping back and forth between Anchorage and Seward.
View from our window in Anchorage at 10:00 p.m.
Tomorrow (Day 6): Seward and Kenai Fjords National Park
Where We Get Up At O’Dark Thirty (Only It Isn’t Dark)
And Play “I Spy With My Little Eye” With Grizzly Bears and Caribou.
And A Random Squirrel
We were up at 4:30 a.m. in order to have breakfast at 5:00 a.m. and be ready to board the Denali tour bus at 6:00 a.m.
Our lodge at 5:30 a.m. Not exactly dark.
We boarded the modified school bus that serves as the tour buses in Denali park. Private cars are not allowed in the park, except for specific circumstances.
It was all so, so beautiful!
A braided glacial river
We did luck out early with spotting wildlife – our driver, Jason, spotted Dall sheep. I know I saw the little white dots that were moving around on the mountainside.
There’s a couple of teeny white dots in the middle of this photo. They could be Dall Sheep or they could be rocks. Your guess is as good as mine.
And then we saw caribou. I had better luck with this.
And eventually we hit the jackpot and saw a mama bear and her two yearling cubs!
Eventually it was time to turn around and come back. Here are some photos that other people in our group were able to snap:
A Willow Ptarmigan, the Alaska State birdAn Arctic Ground Squirrel, which can lower it’s core body temp to 27F during hibernation
I snapped this one myself:
Arctic fox – it was walking away from us with its kill in its mouth
Endless beautiful vistas
We were only missing a moose, but that was not meant to be. We considered this a successful Denali Day!
We were back at the hotel before noon, and then off to lunch.
This afternoon is at leisure. The next two days are a bit crazy. We have a helicopter excursion tomorrow morning, followed by a scenic train ride (to Talkaneetka? From Talkaneetka? Not sure. But then we are on to Anchorage.
Tomorrow: Not planes, trains, and automobiles, but copters, trains, and buses.
Where We Take Our Time Getting To Denali National Park, But Finally Actually Do Get There
And As Is Tradition – A Bathroom Situation
Our local guide, Jade, has mentioned several times that there are only two seasons in Alaska: Winter and Construction.
With that in mind, we left a little earlier than the day before to allow for random construction traffic. And indeed, we were stuck in construction traffic a couple of times.
The scenery was very dramatic along the way:
A patch of fireweed
We had one stop before arriving in Denali – in Nenana, AK.
If you are new to my blog, there is always at least one incident during any given adventure when the bathroom break becomes an issue. And so….
It was only going to be for 10 minutes and then we’d have our promised bathroom break, but it turned out to be a whole presentation on the Nenana Ice Classic. Mind you, we had been on the road for a good couple of hours up until this point.
The Nenana Ice Classic is apparently something that Alaskans do in late winter to entertain themselves. This event has been an annual event for 100 years. Each year people from all over Alaska buy (basically) raffle tickets for a pool to guess when the ice will break completely and the river flows freely in the spring. Proceeds from this event go to assorted charities for the disadvantaged in Alaska.
Everything about this event is “old school” – printed raffle tickets, manual tracking of all the purchased tickets, manual notification to the winner, etc. – including using a 30 year old computer system.
The “tripod” is that black and white structure on the left.
The “tripod” (which is not a tripod, because it has 5 legs, but whatever) is secured into the river ice sometime in March. The tripod is connected (via rope? wire? string?) to two clocks (the primary and the backup).
The Primary Clock
As the ice thaws and the tripod begins drift, it tugs on the string. When the tripod pulls so hard on the string that the string breaks – the clock stops documenting the exact time the river is flowing freely. The winner is determined as to who had the closest time (on either side). The earliest recorded date was April 19 and the latest was May 30. The most common dates were the middle two weeks of May.
We bought two tickets for $3.00 each. I picked 05/05/2026 at 5:00 a.m.
Now it was well past the promised 10 minutes. There was an exodus towards the old train depo for the bathrooms. By the time I got there, the line for the ladie’s room was very long. Since each bathroom was single occupancy, and the men had long since cycled through their turn, at some point the women took over the men’s room to speed things up.
We continued on to lunch, and then on to Denali National Park.
More views from along the way. It just doesn’t get old.Our motley crew. Our local guide, Jade, is on the far left with the lollipop. Our American Cruise Line rep (Andrew) is the last person on the right in the very back row
We stopped at the visitor center (I still call them ranger stations), where we got our national park passports stamped, and we watched two movies. The first one was just music showing pretty scenes of the park. What a good nap.
The second one was about the National Park dog teams – that was much more interesting. We managed to stay awake for the whole thing.
We were dropped off at our room at the Denali Bluffs lodge, just long enough to drop off stuff and get back on the bus to go to dinner, which was at a dinner theater called The Alaska Cabin Nite Dinner Theater. It was a lot of fun!
Tomorrow: Our 5 1/2 hour drive through Denali National Park.
Where We Start To Notice The Pattern Of Grizzlies On Display And We Get To See The “Sheldon Car”
Part 2 of Day 2
Yesterday’s lunch was literally nothing to write home about, but after lunch we wandered along the street and stumbled across the “2nd Street Gallery”: a mini mall with interesting shops and self-announced “musher museum”.
As is tradition, we couldn’t resist buying some art from a local artist – possibly these items will become trivets, though we’ll just figure that out when we get home.
We took the lift up to the second floor for the Musher’s Museum – except the museum was up another 7 steps that I declined to climb.
Andy went up and saw a couple of interesting things:
If you can read the sign that describes what this is, you’ve got sharp eyesA shout out to my sister (Irene) 😀
On the way out, I felt obligated to take this photo:
Hopefully not the only moose we see. Be great to see one that’s alive.
Unfortunately, Andy didn’t have his music with him, or he could have shown off his skills.
Also in this mini-mall was a Romanian/Moldovan restaurant. Considering out lunch experience was less than stellar, we decided to come back later to have dinner there.
At 3:00, we joined some of the people on our tour in the lobby for a meet and greet with our local tour guide, Jade, and the American Cruise Line representative, Andrew. They handed out our packets with info for the coming days, and explained how things will work for the next week. The goal is to replicate the ship environment while on land – after today, all our meals would be taken care of (a question we had). Everything sounded promising!
Around 6:00, we walked back across the street for dinner at the Romanian/Moldovan restuarant. Andy ordered a traditional Moldovan dish called Mamaliga and I had a beef rib with potatoes, carrots and pickles. They were both excellent and made up for the lackluster lunch.
Day 3
Today was “Getting To Know Fairbanks” day. Our original concerns about being shown the local Home Depot and McDonald’s blessedly did not happen (though apparently Fairbanks’ Home Depot and McDonald’s are the most northern in the US).
First we went to the Museum of the North, which had excellent exhibits of Alaska’s history, going back to pre-historic times.
This is Otto, the second display of a brown/grizzly bear.
This is a mammoth and not a mastodon
This is a settee made of dall sheep horn, caribou antler, and fake leather. I’m not sure if this looks comfortable or not. I’d be concerned about being poked by an antler.
Upstairs was an art gallery. One piece was a highly entertaining outhouse.
No guarantee of privacy even with the door closed.
We also watched an interesting 30 minute video on the Aurora Borealis. Apparently the Aurora season doesn’t start until mid-August when there’s enough actual darkness to see it.
Our next stop was lunch. Jade (our local guide) kept saying that they were taking us to the best restaurants that Fairbanks had to offer in an attempt to duplicate the ship experience, but somehow I got the impression that maybe this restaurant might not live up to that standard.
Andy enjoyed his roast beef dip sandwich, but my garden salad with chicken was fairly tasteless. The chocolate mousse pie was fabulous, though.
Next up was a close up and personal visit with the Alaska pipeline. This originally didn’t sound particularly interesting, but it turned out to be more impressive than I thought it would.
Apparently this is the traditional pose, akin to holding up the Tower of Pisa:
This section of the pipeline is above ground to avoid melting the permafrost.
This flower is called a fireweed. It has all of a two week season in the Alaskan summer, and we lucked out to be able to see it.
One more stop before heading back to the hotel was an antique car museum. Once again, it was more interesting than we thought it would be. All but 3 of the cars in the museum actually run and are driven upon occasion. All of these cars are impressive – some of the cars from the 1930s are HUGE (e.g. the Packard). My favorite car, though, was the “Sheldon Car”.
We know for a fact that we can’t possibly be related. Though we wondered whether changed his last name to Sheldon from something unusual as is the case with Andy’s dad.
A car built by Robert (Bobby) Sheldon at the turn of the 20th Century – he had never seen a car and had no idea what he was doing.
This guy was a big deal in the Alaska car community.
There was one car that people were allowed to and encouraged to climb into:
This was our last stop for the day. Dinner was at a restaurant about 15 minutes from the hotel. We both had the halibut, which was very good.
On the way back to the hotel for the night, we received our final instructions for packing up and leaving our luggage outside our door by 7:30 tomorrow morning.
Theoretically, we’ll have wifi in our Denali lodging, but as is tradition with national parks, cell service will probably be close to existent.
Tomorrow, the real adventure begins! Who knows – maybe we’ll be lucky and catch a glimpse of Denali in all its glory!