Showing posts with label Anchorage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anchorage. Show all posts

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Alaska: Anchorage


Sunday, August 19, 2012

We woke up for breakfast with the other couples staying at the City Garden B&B in Anchorage on the southwest edge of Delaney Park, near downtown. The lodging is in Jerry’s house, but his neighbor Vic, a former judge all over the state of Alaska comes over to prepare breakfast for us. We had a great discussion with Vic and couples from the Midwest and Ontario Canada ranging from Scandinavian furniture design to politics. I would totally recommend to anyone to stay here. The only part I regret is not staying there longer.
After packed up and checked out of B&B and made our way to the Farmers Market.
Even though we weren’t that hungry to decided to go eat at F Street Station before heading to the airport. Apparently their eggs benedict are only made Sunday mornings and are to die for.
We still had some time to kill so we drove through Kincaid Park, hoping for one last wildlife sighting, the one animal we hadn’t seen but really really wanted to. I rolled down the window calling ‘moose….moose….’ but to no avail.
We catch a 3pm flight home to Seattle. Home on the north side of Seattle and Lake Washington. 
Green Lake.
 
Downtown Seattle. 
Mt Rainier.   

So happy to be home! Can't wait to sleep in my own bed!
To sum up our Alaskan vacation: 9 days, Juneau, Denali, Talkeetna, Anchorage, Seward, 4 nights in a tent in bear country, 5 glaciers, 2 black bears, 5 grizzlies including mama & her spring cubs, handful of caribou, hundreds of harbor seals on icebergs & countless beluga whales. All in all, we’d go back to visit in a heartbeat! Thank you Dave Howard, Alexis and Beth for your hospitality in Juneau and the best seafood meal of the trip: fresh caught Halibut, jumbo shrimp, and Alaskan king crab!
Even Chance had a great time on vacation at a country house dog cabin ‘All My Pet Friends’. She even came back with cute pictures of her time too! 




This is best quote after grabbing dinner on the way home from the airport:
Joe: “It’s so dark out here”
Jackie: “that’s because we’d be going to sleep when it became dark in Alaska”
Joe: “Oh yeah…”
How quickly we adjust and adapt to our surroundings.

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Alaska: Anchorage Flattop Mountain


Saturday, August 18, 2012

This morning we had breakfast at The Smoke Shack in an old train car. 

The marina was just as beautiful in the morning light. 
After breakfast we drove back up Seward Highway to Anchorage. The Kenai Peninsula is beautiful. 



We debated going to Alaska Wildlife to view rescued wildlife, but decided no but got to see another caribou on our way out.

This part of Seward Highway is through the Chugach National Forest along Turnagain Arm. 


Once we got to Anchorage, we drove up to hike Flattop Mountain.
We already started at a high elevation overlooking the Cook Inlet and Anchorage. 


Still snow on the north side of the mountainside. 
A little higher overlook.

I don’t know how many stairs we climbed up, but Joe had his fill of this hike. The remainder was no longer stairs, but virtually rock climbing. The hike has a 1292 foot elevation gain over 1.5 miles one way.

The view at the 3550 foot peak of Flattop Mountain, overlooking Anchorage. 
The view at the 3500 foot peak of Flattop Mountain, looking toward the Chugach National Forest. 

The view at the 3500 foot peak of Flattop Mountain, overlooking Turnagain Arm. 

Me at the peak of Flattop Mountain with Cook Inlet and Turnagain Arm beyond. 
Panorama. 



The wind from this point almost blew me over. That was my clue that it was time to make the more dangerous climb down. 
Halfway down to where Joe was waiting for me. 
This was the climb. 
Proud that I conquered the 1292ft elevation gain of a 1.5mi hike to the top of Flattop Mountain 3550ft peak overlooking Anchorage. 

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Alaska: Talkeetna, Anchorage & Turnagain Arm



Thursday, August 16, 2012

We went back to the Talkeetna Roadhouse for breakfast. I had a blueberry pancake the size of a manhole cover. 

We had arranged to take a once-in-a-lifetime Denali flightseeing tour with K2 Aviation out of Talkeetna. The weather this morning was not as spectacular as the last 2 days. We went to the office at the Talkeetna State Airport. The pilots had just taken a flight to find out the current conditions. They reported back that cloud cover was keeping them from getting up to the height of the glaciers. The summit would likely not be visible on our planned time flight. They couldn’t guarantee they’d even be able to land on a glacier. We took them up on their offer to refund the flight. If we were going to spend all that money on the flight, we wanted to see all that we could see.
We drove down to Anchorage and went back to REI today to get more stakes for the tent and get me a sleeping bag liner which will add about 20 degrees more of warmth.

We drove to the Ship Canal to see the fisherman trying to catch the salmon going to spawn. 

We then went to the Tony Knowles Coastal Trail. 




After that we drove down Seward Highway to Turnagain Arm to watch the bore tide from Beluga Point.
We arrived a little early according to the tide table. There were beautiful blue skies over the Cook Inlet near Anchorage, but overcast further down into Turnagain Arm. It was really windy here and cold. 



We decided to drive a few more miles further down Seward Highway to the next bore tide viewpoint called Bird Point. This one was within a park so we would have to pay to park here. We climbed up the steps to the shelter to see what we could see. There were a few people waiting under the shelter.

We decided we liked Beluga Point better so we drove back up there. The parking spaces had cleared out. Joe rechecked the tide table. It had already come! Did we already miss this large tidal wave? Maybe it past Bird Point while we were climbing back to the car. We started to drive back south hoping we’d see it from the car and could pull over. We ran back up to Bird Point lookout. As we arrived a group of older couples pointed out the small consistent wave across the inlet. We didn’t miss it after all!

A bore tide is a tidal phenomenon in which the leading edge of the incoming tide forms a wave of water that travels up a river or narrow bay against the direction of the river or bay’s current.

Pictures don’t really do it justice. It just looks like a wave. I’m sorry you’re just going to have to go see it for yourself. It wasn’t as big of a wave as I was expecting or as fast moving. The high winds out of the mountains by Portage may have lowered its altitude.




We drove up to the Double Musty Inn in Girdwood for dinner. We got there just after 5pm and debated driving around the ski resort town for a bit, but decided to go ahead and go in. We are sure glad we did. There was a line out the door. They don’t take reservations. Within minutes every table in the huge place we taken. We had a nice spot in a solarium. I took everyone’s recommendations to try their French peppercorn filet and it was amazing!

After dinner we drove up to check out Alyeskan Ski Resort. 

It was getting late and more overcast so we decided to head to our campsite for the night, Williwaw Campground near Portage.
As we were driving down Seward Highway along Turnagain Arm, I looked out the window of the car and saw beluga whales surfacing about 20 yards off shore! Joe probably thought I was completely crazy saying I saw whales, but we turned into the next parking viewpoint area, almost a mile south of where I saw them. We watched for a long awhile, somehow convincing another couple that we had seen whales and we weren’t just stopping to photograph the beautiful view of the sun beams piercing the sky. 
They are there somewhere. We saw their blow hole spray from back at the car so we walked on the shoulder closer to where they were. I don’t know how long we waited but they must be able to hold their breath for a LONG time.



A train rode by as we walked back to the car. 

The sky was just so pretty tonight as we reached the eastern end of Turnagain Arm. 
We reached our campsite at Williwaw Campground in the Chugach National Forest, once again in bear country.  We passed by 2 glaciers on the upper mountains above the campground. It was rather cold and pouring rain at this point. We setup the tent as fast as possible. We played cards in the tent for a few hours before going to bed.