Day 343: Fishing and Baseball

Last night Trish finished making the wall hangings for the Junior Ranger badges and patches the kids have earned at the National Parks, Monuments, Historic Sites, and Wildlife Preserves we’ve visited:

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The local chamber of commerce visitor center allows kids to check out fishing gear, so M checked out a pole and I fished with my own pole:

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Most of the other folks fishing here took it quite a bit more seriously than we did:

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The Red Salmon run hasn’t hit full swing yet, and neither of us caught anything, but we still had a nice time on this beautiful day on the river:

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Speaking of full swing, we next drove North ten miles to Kenai where we surprised the kids with attending a baseball game, a family first!  It was the Kenai Peninsula Oilers versus the Anchorage Bucs.  These teams are made up of college baseball players from all over the US who come to play in the Alaska League for the summer:

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M had a fantastic time and even managed to chase down and keep a foul ball! The rest of us had a good time too:

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M built a lego pedestal for his caught ball:

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Tonight we are overnighting at the Walmart of Kenai.  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

Day 341: The Tire Toss

This morning we left Anchorage and drove along the Turnagain Arm.  The views were stunning:

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We arrived at Portage Lake and took in the view from the parking lot of the visitor center:

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The kids got to work on their Junior Ranger workbooks:

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The visitor center had a solarium from which the lake could be viewed:

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Having completed their workbooks, we stepped outside to view icebergs that had calved off of Portage Glacier on the far side of the the lake and floated down to this end:

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This area has several hanging glaciers:

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A tourist ferry (lower left) is dwarfed by the massive glacier in the background:

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Another hanging glacier:

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We stopped at a viewing area for salmon swimming upstream to spawn, but we’re a few weeks early, so there was nothing to see:

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Continuing South around the South side of Turnagain Arm, we passed a dead forest of trees whose roots were drowned by salt water when this area dropped 10 feet during the great Alaska earthquake:

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Amazing roadside views:

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After exiting the Seward Highway and getting onto the Sterling Highway, we drove for a few miles below I heard a small explosion sound.  Pulling over, we discovered that our wheel had sheared off the lug nuts and rolled away:

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A wheel can’t be lost at 55MPH without doing some body damage on its way out:

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While I called around to find a replacement hub, Trish went back up the road a ways and eventually found our lost wheel:

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The tire had been cut by the frame of the RV when it departed, and the lug holes were no longer round, so I drove the truck the hour or so to Soldotna to buy a new hub and wheel and tire:

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Returning to the RV a few hours later, I mounted the new hub on the axle spindle, and mounted the new wheel to the hub:

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The wheel wasn’t spinning very well, but at least we were rolling!  We drove up the road a couple miles to the first turnout we found to overnight there.  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

Day 340: Stymied by a Moose

This morning, we left Wasilla and headed South into Anchorage where we quite accidentally stumbled onto the Alaska Jewish Museum.  The museum is currently running an exhibit about Operation Magic Carpet.  Turns out the airline that facilitated the evacuation was Alaska Airlines:

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After lunch, we headed to the Anchorage Public Lands Information Center.  The kids completed the Junior Ranger program there, and we watched a fascinating video program about the Great Alaska Earthquake:

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We also wandered into a weekly arts and crafts bazaar:

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Before dinner, we took the kids to a paved bike and hike path in Anchorage.  All was going well until we ran into a moose in the middle of the trail:

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After waiting 10 minutes or so for it to leave, it just stood and stared at us.  When a seven foot tall moose refuses to move, it’s time to go the other way, so we went back to the car.  Only in Alaska!

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Tonight we’re overnighting at the Chabad of Anchorage.  See the trip map for driving details and our current location.

Day 334: Visiting the Arctic Ocean

As planned, we left the RV at Marion Campground in Coldfoot at 7:30AM and drove North towards Deadhorse.  The Brooks Range rises up between us and the Arctic Ocean:

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The road quickly turned to gravel, as it would be for nearly the entire drive.  It’s a lonely road:

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We had to wait for road construction at the turnoff for Galbraith Lake.  Notice the mosquito netting on the flagger’s head.  Like in Coldfoot, the mosquitos here in the boggy tundra are insanely plentiful.  The flagger easily had 100 mosquitos crawling all over his head net.

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Looking back after crossing the Brooks Range:

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The last 100 miles to the Arctic Ocean are soggy tundra with no plants taller than a foot or so:

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At last we reached Deadhorse after six hours of driving.  It’s a town like no other, with a handful of permanent residents and thousands of oil workers working a two weeks on, two weeks off schedule:

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There are no parks and no schools. The “roads” are all gravel, and buildings, cobbled together from shipping container-sized sections brought in on trucks, are built on stilts to avoid melting the permafrost which would cause the buildings to collapse:

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There’s no refining at Deadhorse.  The oil flows 800 miles to Valdez, where it’s refined and brought back using tanker trucks.  That explains the price; diesel was $4.15 in Fairbanks, $5.10 in Coldfoot, and $5.65 in Deadhorse:

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Perhaps because of the cold, the payment half of the pump is inside a building, and each pump is behind a roll-up steel door:

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We boarded the tour shuttle bus that would take us North from Deadhorse into the restricted security zone on Prudhoe Bay and on to the shores of the Arctic Ocean.  We had to sign up 24 hours in advance to allow time for background checks, and had to present ID to board the bus:

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Schlumberger, manufacturer of fine oil well head pressure valves:

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Like the Alyeska Pipeline, this building has foundation cooling towers to keep the permafrost from melting:

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Out on the tundra, we spotted a lone caribou:

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Still in town, we passed stockpiles of vehicles and machinery to support the oil fields.  4% of US oil is produced here at the largest oil field in North America:

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The yellow “rail” supports extension cords that hang down.  Drivers plug in their cars to keep the oil pan and battery warm so that the vehicles can be started during the winter when temperatures can plunge below –60 degrees.  The coldest wind chill recorded in Deadhorse was –102 degrees:

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Oil drilling pipe sections:

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A movable oil derrick:

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In the distance, well heads live in the square boxes.  The water, oil and natural gas slurry drawn from 9,000 feet below the surface is routed to the large building:

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The oil derrick is a giant vehicle with 12 foot-high wheels, covered by the tarps at the lower corners of the derrick.  The pilothouse and front swivel wheels can be seen on the right:

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There are dozens of plants scattered over the tundra:

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Here a well head is being serviced:

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The whole area is bleak and the air is filled with dust from the roads:

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We saw quite a bit of wildlife:

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The loons were out swimming:

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At last we reached the coast of the Artic Ocean.  The ice had only broken up a few weeks ago, so the water was still 32 degrees, and the wind blowing in off the ocean was about that cold too.  As a result it was pretty foggy:

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I can’t count how many times I’ve looked at the map and wondered what it would be like standing at 70 degrees latitude, looking North where only 1,200 miles distant lays the North Pole.  I’m very excited to be here!

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Yes, it’s really cold:

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The freeze thaw cycle of the surface soil causes polygonal mounts to form in a pattern similar to the shell of a turtle:

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Office space on tank tracks:

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So many pipes, about 2,000 miles worth in Deadhorse alone:

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The investment in equipment and vehicles is staggering:

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After our tour wrapped up, we started back South towards Coldfoot a little bit after 6pm.  Glad we filled up here:

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Across the tundra, a herd of caribou are the backdrop for a herd of musk oxen:

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The pipeline keeps us company on our return drive:

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So much for our clean truck.  This is the only restroom between Deadhorse and Coldfoot:

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The tundra provides a lush foreground for the Brooks Range:

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Ground water can’t soak down more than a foot or so due to the permafrost below, so the tundra is spongy and wet, despite the fact that the North Slope is technically a desert, receiving less than 5 inches of precipitation a year:

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We approached the Brooks Range:

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Fast-moving trucks like these threw rocks into our windshield, causing two chips in the glass that will need fixing:

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Leading up to the pass over the Brooks Range:

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Looking back towards the pass after crossing it:

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We arrived back at the RV shortly before midnight.  We are above the arctic circle, so the sun is still up and probably won’t go down for another couple of weeks.

We did it!  We visited the top of North America, at a latitude well North of Iceland and at about the midpoint of Greenland.  See the trip map for driving details and our current location.

Day 333: I Walk the (Pipe) Line

Leaving Lowe’s this morning, we drove North out of Fairbanks.  We soon reached a roadside exhibit where the Alyeska Pipeline comes up next to the road.  We are at the red “you are here” text, and we intend to reach Prudhoe Bay tomorrow:

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There’s quite a bit of technology that goes into making the pipeline work.  The support posts are filled with ammonia which acts to transfer heat from the ground to the heat-radiating fins on the supports.  This stops the permafrost from melting, which would result in the pipeline sagging towards the ground and rupturing:

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Hard to believe this 4-foot diameter ribbon of stainless steel extends another 500 miles North to the Arctic Ocean:

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A modern pig was also on display, working its way through a cutaway length of pipe.  The pigs clean the pipe walls as well as stabilize the flow of oil.  Some of them have instruments for measuring pipe wall integrity:

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We drove North on the Elliott Highway for about 70 miles until we reached the turnoff to the Dalton Highway:

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The Dalton starts out as a pretty poor dirt road, then transitions to poor pavement.  Of the 180ish miles on the Dalton today, about 120 miles will be paved.

We crossed the Yukon River:

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We passed under the pipeline and arrived at a BLM information hut:

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The visitor area had a nice view of the river:

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We continued North, having to drive pretty slowly as the pavement kept transitioning to gravel and back.  The pipeline paralleled the road:

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Eventually, we crossed through 66.55’ North Latitude, where the sun doesn’t set on the summer solstice and doesn’t rise on the winter solstice. At our Northernmost destination, Prudhoe Bay, the sun doesn’t set for 75 days from May to August and likewise doesn’t rise for 75 days in the winter!

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We continued another 60 miles North to Coldfoot, population 10.  All the slowing for rough patches reduced our fuel economy to 7.8MPG, and the gas station at Yukon Crossing was out of fuel, so the truck was plenty thirsty by the time we reached Coldfoot:

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We’re overnighting at Marion Campground, 4 miles North of Coldfoot.  We’re doing this so we can leave the RV here tomorrow and drive just the truck the 250 mostly-gravel miles to Prudhoe Bay.  It will be a 500 mile day over the most remote and unforgiving “highway” in Alaska.

The mosquitoes here are unbelievable!  I broke out the mosquito head net we brought with us.  After 30 seconds standing outside, I literally look like a bee keeper in a bad situation.  I’m not kidding, it’s that bad!

Check out the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.