Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Fishing for Sockeye on the Russian and Kenai Rivers

Fishing for Sockeye (Red Salmon) in the Russian River on the Kenai Peninsula

Kevin and John fishing


Russian Falls - There were salmon jumping up the falls

Fishing


Hooray! My first sockeye.


We saw a grizzly bear the 2nd time we went.


Chilling on a cliff near Russian Falls


John took this picture on the way back from the Russian River at the intersection of the Seward Highway and the Sterling Highway


Fished the confluence of the Kenai and Russian River on my third trip and caught two more.
Fished the confluence again on my fourth trip and caught the limit of 3 sockekye. This is the biggest one. It is about 8 lbs. and took me 15 minutes to reel in.

Salmon fillets! There is a few weeks worth of salmon in the freezer.

Whittier

Trip to Whittier, Alaska - About 50 miles from Anchorage

The Turnagain Arm - About 5 minutes from Anchorage

Tunnel to Whittier - The longest highway tunnel in North America. It was originally a railroad tunnel but has recently been converted to a one lane road/railroad tunnel. Traffic leaves from each side once every hour.

The tunnel is a couple miles long. You drive on railroad tracks.


Portage Glacier

An old ship near Whittier

Whittier, AK
An iceberg that broke off of Portage Glacier


John and the iceberg


Kevin and the iceberg

Tony Knowles Coastal Trail Bike Ride

Tony Knowles Coastal Trail


We rented bikes on Caitlin's last day and rode on the Tony Knowles Coastal trail from downtown Anchorage along the coast.

A cliff overlooking the bay.
Anchorage from a distance
Low tide on the bay

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Caines Head Backpacking Trip



Backpacking trip to Caines Head State Recreation Area and Resurrection Bay State Park




Description of area from the Alaska Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation: Caines Head State Recreation Area, the scenic site of an abandoned World War II fort, can be reached by boat or foot from Seward. The massive headland rises 650 feet above Resurrection Bay, against a back drop of rolling alpine meadows and sharp peaks, giving way to a sweeping view of the North Pacific Ocean.



We had to start on the trail 90 minutes before low tide in order to get to the park before the water came up. We hiked through the woods for about a mile and then about 4 miles on the beach to North Beach in Caines Head State Recreation area.

Walking up a stream through the woods prior to getting to the beach. It rained the entire hike so some of the pictures are a bit blurry.

Creeks and trails are interchangeable.

The view before we started hiking on the beach

Earlier this year, a flood washed out the bridge over a large creek. There were large trees scattered in the water that we may have been able to cross over but it looked too dangerous and the water was flowing fast and cold.

Everything was covered in moss because we were in a rainforest. Seward (about 8 miles away) averages 60 inches of rain a year.

Another view of the creek that destroyed the bridge. We had to walk to its delta by Resurrection Bay to cross. We ended up crossing in thigh-deep cold flowing water. It was the only way across...

Justin trying to find a path past the destroyed bridge... Caitlin and her tarp

Heading back off the bridge to find another way
Still trying to find a way across the creek... Walking towards the delta. This would all be under water at high tide.

John on the beach

View from the beach

Still trying to find a way across

Lots of signs of avalanches and slides

The beach that we hiked on after we finally crossed the creek

View during our hike
Old picnic shelter at north beach. A sign on it said "Rotten: Use at your own risk." We were soaked and it had obviously been standing for a while so we used it for shelter. We attached a tarp to the shelter and tied it up to trees so that it would hang over our fire pit.

Drying our things next to the fire. Getting the fire going was difficult because everything was so wet.

View from our campsite on North Beach. The pilings are from an old WWII pier. The Good Friday Earthquake and tsunami of 1964 didn't destroy the pier, but it lowered the ground level 5 feet. Waves ended up destroying it. There was a sign on the trailhead that said to seek high ground in the event of an earthquake because of the tsunami hazard. Justin caught a good sized pink salmon and I (Kevin) caught a pretty small pink salmon from the beach.

The view from our campsite

View from our campsite
We ended up taking a watertaxi back because we didn't want to cross the creek again. We hiked about 3 miles to Fort McGilvray, an old WWII fort. It was completely underground and had several chambers and rooms that we were able to explore with flashlights and headlamps. The fort stood about 600 feet above the bay and you could see for miles down Resurrection Bay to the Pacific Ocean. We wish we could've gotten more pictures, but the rain hindered a lot of our efforts. The only time we got wet was on the hike there. It stopped raining while we hung out on the beach and hiked to the fort. Didn't take this picture but here is the view from the fort...

We stopped stealing internet and got a super-fast router and internet connection so I'll try to update more often. Will add more pictures from the trip up soon...

Monday, May 28, 2007

The Trip - Part 1

Sorry it has taken so long to update. Uploading the pictures takes a while. Will upload a lot more soon. Will also upload maps with the route that we took. Here are a few pictures... A lot more details to come...

ALBERTA

Calgary from a distance - We stayed at the Westin downtown

Our campsite near the town of Banff, Alberta - We camped about 2 miles from the town - There were a lot of people around because it was Victoria Day weekend.

Banff National Park
A caribou in Banff
Icefields Parkway

After staying near the town of Banff, we drove into the park to the Icefields Parkway. John and Caitlin at our campsite on the Icefields Parkway in Banff National Park at 6500 feet. We camped next to Mosquito Creek but it was too cold for mosquitoes. We woke up to falling snow.
Icefields Parkway

An igloo next to our campsite at Mosquito Creek

Icefields Parkway

A lake on the Icefields Parkway

A waterfall that we found by trudging through the woods with the GPS

Our campsite at Mosquito Creek

Icefields Parkway

Icefields Parkway

BRITISH COLUMBIA

After camping in Banff National Park, we drove to Vancouver, British Columbia. We stayed at the downtown Ramada.

From Vancouver, we took a road called "Sea to Sky." It took us from the Pacific Ocean through several mountainous inlets up to the Rocky Mountains. We passed Whistler, the site of the 2010 Winter Olympics.

We took some remote roads through western British Columbia. They were dirt for much of the time and most of the bridges were only one lane. In one day, we saw 12 bears from the truck.

View from our campsite at Dease Lake, BC

Packing up after staying at Fraser Lake, British Columbia

A caribou in western BC

First sign for the Alaska Highway

ALASKA

Eastern Alaska

Alaska