Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Denali Finale

I couldn't think of a better spot for lunch.

First of all, thanks to Mom for this note’s title.

Welcome to my last blog entry. I have thoroughly enjoyed documenting my summer experience and sharing it with you, and hope that my ramblings and photos may spark an interest in some of you to make a trip to Alaska, our country’s last wild frontier. To quote Johnny Horton, “North, to Alaska, North, the rush is on.”

It’s been quite wet here recently—it rained every day for about three weeks. And no, I’m not kidding. Word around the office is that this has been the coldest, wettest summer in this area’s recorded history. Though the weather really only affected me negatively in two ways: first, my garden didn’t grow nearly as well as I had predicted (my fence ended up being a superfluous decoration, as no rabbit would have bothered with the jump into the raised bed on account of my measly greens), and secondly, the myriad berries of the Mat-Su Valley did not appear in their usual numbers—whereas normally a host of berries (raspberries, blueberries, cloudberries, watermelon berries, and more) can be found in quantity here in the park, the pickings were slim this year, though currants and highbush cranberries still made a good showing.

I was able to harvest a few nice radishes, but that was the extent of my bounty.

For the past two weeks we’ve been working on the East Red Shirt Trail, which will give Red Shirt Lake property owners a winter route to their cabins. The trail, which begins just off the parkway and ends five miles later at the lake, was started on last year by Chris and his crew, so most of the large obstacles had been removed already. We went through clearing alders and other brush, widening corners and marking wet areas for further improvements. In these swampy areas we’ll use either pit run gravel (basically rock-filled dirt, easily obtainable around here) sandwiched in a special geo-textile cloth, or install GeoGrid, mats of black plastic one inch square grid which is laid down on wet areas of trail and then covered with a thin layer of native material. Helping to float the GeoGrid in some areas will be corduroy, a trail building term for sections of wood logs placed lengthwise across the trail. Our last two days on the trail were spent cutting down dead black spruce and bucking it into 8 foot sections for this purpose. Though as a conservationist I usually have a few qualms about cutting down live trees, felling dead ones is very fun, and removing standing dead trees will help the healthy birch and spruce by allowing them more sunlight and room to grow. And when you’re running the chainsaw and yelling “Timber!” in a red plaid shirt, there’s really nothing like it.


On Sunday July 27th, I hitched a ride with Chief Ranger John Wilber to Denali State Park. From the summer’s start I had planned on a backpacking trip there, and with time running out I decided on a date and planned my route along Kesugi Ridge, whose name in the Tanaina tongue means “The Ancient One”. The ridge runs Southwest to Northeast about 50 miles from the Alaska Range, with the Chulitna River separating the two. Offering spectacular views of “The High One” on clear days, Kesugi is rated as one of the top 10 hikes in the U.S.

Without access to all of my regular gear, I had to borrow a few things from the generous folks here at the station, including a bivy sack (an ultra-light one-man tent, essentially a waterproof sleeping bag), Thermarest (self-inflating sleeping pad), water purifier, hatchet, etc. But I assembled all the necessities and packed my food in a BRFC (Bear Resistant Food Container), which the park lends to hikers in Denali, and around 1pm on Sunday I started my journey at the Little Coal Creek Trailhead. The plan was for Wilber to pick me up the following Sunday at the Byers Creek Campground, giving me 8 days to travel 28 miles and allowing me a very leisurely week of hiking. Though I could have finished the trail easily within three days, I wanted a full week to photograph and simply enjoy being in the wilderness.

The clouds were beginning to break (which I took as a good omen, as I hadn’t seen sunshine for the previous two weeks), and ascending the first two miles (from 1400’ elevation to 3500’) offered spectacular views of the Chulitna River valley and its spruce forests. It was along this steep climb that I first spotted the blueberries (Vaccinium spp.) which became regular snacks for the rest of the week. I hiked about five miles before stopping by an alpine lake and making camp on the far shore among the rocks.

If you enlarge this image, you'll see my yellow bivy (the speck in the center of the photo) and my grey tarp (center, left hand side).

The next morning was extremely foggy, with visibility around 100ft, and after breaking camp I continued along the ridge. Though the first two miles Sunday were somewhat strenuous, once on top of the ridge the hiking is not difficult—the terrain is fairly flat with no brush to fight against, with the trail marked regularly by rock piles known as cairns.

Vegetation consists of moss, lichen, miniature spruce trees, crowberries (Empetrum nigrum) and a dwarf variety of blueberry which only grows a few inches off the ground, though in great numbers.

One of the many alpine lakes.

Late Monday afternoon I descended to the Ermine Hill Trail crossing and realized I had not been pacing myself as I should have: a day and a half into my weeklong adventure, I had already hiked 17.2 miles, almost two thirds of my proposed route. While I pondered my speedy traversal, a friendly ground squirrel approached, sniffing my boots and playing on my backpack.

These critters were just about my only company all week, as I didn’t see another hiker on the trail the entire trip. I decided to camp a little ways down the Ermine Hill Trail, by a lake once again.

My camp was in the clear area on the far shore of this lake.

After cooking rice on my fire, I watched as a beaver came out of his lodge and began patrolling the shore in front of my camp, slapping his tail every so often and asserting that this was his territory, not mine. I also spotted an Arctic Loon on the lake, along with a nice big pile of bear scat about 100 yards behind my camp.

Tuesday I awoke to glorious sunshine, and once out of my bivy sack I rushed to where I thought I could view the mountain and Yes!, there it was: Denali, the highest point in the United States, rising magnificently towards the heavens in a sparkling white show of grandeur.

Unfortunately, when Denali was fully visible I was in one of the few low sections of the trail.
Magnificent, nonetheless.

The surrounding peaks were dwarfed by the behemoth and I stood transfixed for several minutes before I hurried back to pack up and head again to the ridge. The sun stayed out as I traveled through a section of the trail where eroded boulders stood like guarding giants on either side,

and then the trail went steeply down into a valley of birch and spruce before rising again and coming to Skinny Lake, where I saw a mother black bear and two cubs racing up a precarious rock slope. Here I threw down my pack and similarly raced up an adjacent rocky hill, where to the northwest the range was bathed in a beautiful afternoon light (though the tip of Denali was now covered), and opposite was the green Susitna River Valley, with what I think was the Talkeetnas in the far distance.

I couldn’t leave that spot, and after hauling up my gear I searched for firewood (hard to find as you begin to move above the tree line), built a fire and fell asleep a happy man.

My camp, just southeast of the Alaska Range.

The next two days were misty with low visibility, but even the foggy haze couldn’t conceal the beauty of Kesugi; passing by alpine lakes and huge, strange boulders, with the ground covered in a soft carpet of vegetation and spread with frequent hillocks, I felt as if I was walking through the Shire (a Lord of the Rings reference, for those who aren’t Tolkien fans). I even surprised two families of Willow Ptarmigan (Lagopus lagopus), causing a general havoc as the parents and their five or six chicks hastily scattered in an airborne flash of brown and white. Thursday afternoon I came to the Byers Lake exit trail, where I had planned on hiking out at the beginning of my trip. But my walking stick got the better of me and I decided to continue past Byers on the Troublesome Creek Trail, which comes down off the ridge and ends at the Upper Troublesome Creek Trailhead, adding another eight miles to my trek.

During the flood three years ago about 3.5 miles of this trail was washed out, as much of the lower portion goes right alongside Troublesome Creek, and lacking proper funding the park hasn’t been able to fix it yet. Though they advise hikers to not take this route, Ranger Wilber had told me that with a good map and compass, it was doable. Possessing these two items, I decided to have a go at it. Camping at Ten Mile Hill Thursday night, I set out Friday morning in a gusty wind (which had blown my tarp loose at 4am that morning) and began the descent to the creek. Because of the park’s cautioning few hikers have been on this trail during the past three years, leaving it overgrown and hard to follow in spots, but beautiful nonetheless. The last two-thirds of the trail follows the creek’s bank, and while hiking alongside the crystal clear water I saw a few salmon making their way upstream (I believe they were silvers) and on the trail bear scat was very common—common enough to be a little unnerving. There are a lot of black and brown bears around the creek (hence the name) fishing for salmon, and on the sandy shores at the creek bends I saw many large brown bear tracks. But I just sang and talked to myself to notify the beasts that a visitor was in their midst, and luckily didn’t have any nasty encounters. Camping on the shore of Troublesome that night, next to a hot driftwood fire I watched as the sun sank, throwing color after color into the clouds until he tired and laid down for the night. I followed suit.

Camping on Troublesome.

I had decided to hike out on Saturday as opposed to Sunday as planned, because I wanted to try something I’d never done before: after years of hearing of wandering hitchhikers making their way across the country, and knowing that my parents had done their share of it back in the day, the urge became unbearable to try my thumb at this rich tradition.

I hiked out of the Upper Troublesome Trailhead at noon on Saturday and began to walk south on the Parks Highway, turning and flashing a big smile at every car going that direction. I was lucky in that the Parks is the only highway north of Nancy Lake, so I had a very good chance of finding an automobile going where I was headed. I stopped right in front of a campground parking lot in order to give my yet-to-be-seen savior a good place to get off the road, and after about 30 minutes a green truck turned into the lot and drove toward me, after which Nancy from Anchorage and I had an extremely pleasant ride to the Ranger Station.

Hiking in on Sunday and leaving Saturday gave me a long time to think and be alone—not talking to another human being for a week is an experience that is new to me, and quite a rare one, I would think.


Smart hornets.

Communing with Nature and being at her mercy give one a sense of returning to that time before apartments, AC, cars and airplanes, when a lone trapper would travel around the country with his home on his back and all of the wilderness his backyard. Solo hiking allows you to learn a lot about yourself and offers an exciting adventure in the vein of past explorers, but my week alone also established in me a greater appreciation for companionship. Humans are social animals, and though occasional respite from the rest of the community is refreshing and, for me, necessary, friendship and camaraderie should not be underestimated as vital aspects of our existence.

The Last Lonely Eagle
(Also a great song by New Riders of the Purple Sage)

The Monday after my return I participated in what was for me, another “first” to add to my list accomplished in Alaska: I helped skin a black bear. A Nancy Lake property owner had shot the 1-2 year old bear after it repeatedly came onto his porch and even charged his wife. (If done in defense of life or property, a bear can be shot legally, but the hide, head and paws must be given to the Department of Fish and Game.) A call was put in to Fish and Game, who, being busy with other bear issues, called Keith at the station, who then asked if anyone was available to assist with the skinning of the bear. Nick, another employee here, is quite adept at this practice and invited me to come along to help. After the short trip to the house and brief instructions from Nick, the two of us began the process. I’ll spare you the details, but with Nick’s expertise we finished within an hour. I’ve cleaned many a fish, but this was the first mammal I had ever skinned--it was an extremely interesting, though slightly unsettling experience.

This would be a good time to talk about hunting and fishing here in Alaska. Whereas back home I feel these two pursuits are deemed more a sport than an important means of procuring food, the general approach up here seems to be one of subsistence. Catching salmon throughout the year isn’t just for the fun fight, but rather to store, can and smoke the fish for the winter. And most hunters try desperately for their one moose a season, as a 1500lb bull can provide meat for a whole year. Many people in Alaska only need the grocery store for produce and perishables, with all of their meat provided by their own hands. And though I’ve never been a hunter, with that ancient mindset which guided our forefathers I could see myself shooting a moose or a caribou for the meat, whereas I could not hunt purely for sport.

The night after my bear experience a group of volunteers hosted a potluck dinner in honor of Jacob and me, as both of us are flying off before the official Volunteer Picnic takes place. Held at the South Rolly Campground, we had a delicious dinner around the campfire (I brought potato salad, recipe courtesy of Mom, which I have to say was quite popular) and reminisced about the great summer we all had.

Friday night Eric, Mariah, Jacob and I went over to Chris and Jess’s house for dinner and a little target practice. Informed that Eric, Mariah and Jacob had never shot a gun before, Chris asked if they would like to. So we all got to try our aim with a .22 pistol, a Smith and Wesson .45 and a Ruger Redhawk .44. They all got a kick out of it (excuse the pun), and afterwards we had a delicious supper of fish tacos with homemade mango salsa, cabbage and Halibut, caught by Chris, of course.

Saturday I drove Jacob to the Anchorage airport and bid him farewell, a trip which reinforced in my mind the fact that I only had three days left before I would make the same trip again. After our goodbyes, Eric and Mariah (who had come to see Jacob off, as well) and I made the short drive to Flat Top Mountain, a popular three mile hike just outside of the city. From the plateau on top we could see all of Anchorage and far out into the Cook Inlet, a truly spectacular vista.

Tonight, my last night here in this great state, was shared with friends around the campfire, the crystal clear sky above offering one last look at Denali, and as we moved into the wee hours of the morning the famed Northern Lights made a tentative appearance, one of their first showings of the fall. I couldn’t have asked for a better send off.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Christmas in July

The lethal Monkshood, or Wolfsbane (Aconitum delphinifolium)

Sunday (July 6th)

Yesterday Jacob and I were invited to accompany Chris for a float down Willow Creek. Chris’s friend Laun is a guide who takes customers on his raft to various waterways in Southcentral Alaska for fishing and/or sightseeing. Luckily, Laun was generous enough to allow two poor trail boys experience this for free, whereas usual customers pay upwards of $150pp.

After getting the OK to get off work after lunch (we had stored up some extra hours), Jacob, Chris and I headed off to Laun’s place to help him load up the raft and gear, and then we proceeded to Pioneer Lodge, where we would be ending our trip, to drop off Chris’s truck. A short ride later we put in at the Shirley Town Bridge and began our journey downriver. I was carrying a fly rod I had found at the station; though it was only my second time fly fishing, with the expert advice of Laun and Chris I caught on quickly and pulled in a small rainbow about an hour in. Due to warmer temperatures that week, snowmelt from the Talkeetnas had made its way down into Willow, resulting in deeper and faster water than usual. Along the six-hour trip we went through some small rapids, which were nonetheless exciting for a whitewater novice like me. But for the most part it was a gentle, winding float on a gorgeous day, with dwarf fireweed blooming on the banks and the river stones happily presenting their beautiful array of hues through the cold, clear water.

Along the trip we regularly saw large King Salmon swimming upstream in groups of three and four, the last leg of their epic journey nearly complete. Though the fish were too near the end of their life cycle to be any good to eat, they still could put up a fight worthy of their noble title. Towards the end of our float, the temptation became too great and we caved in: Laun pulled out his larger fly rod, attached a 30# leader and cast for one of these monsters. Immediately hooking one (the bend where we had stopped was swarming with red titans), to my surprise he called me over and told me to take the rod. Knowing that I hadn’t pulled in a King yet, he decided I couldn’t leave Alaska without fighting one. And you can be sure, fighting a 40lb King Salmon on a fly rod on an Alaskan river is a memory I will certainly not be forgetting. After ten minutes of fierce battle, I became a little too anxious and horsed the fish a bit too much—the leader snapped and my worthy opponent swam free. Hey, give me a break, it was my first time.

Monday (July 7th)

With the four of us having Mondays off, this morning Jacob, Erik, Mariah and I left to hike Matanuska Peak in Palmer. Only in Alaska would you be able to drive to a city, as opposed to away from one, in order to do a little mountain climbing.

A brief respite with Jacob and Erik

The day wasn’t that good for any long distance sightseeing, as Matanuska and nearby peaks were under cloud cover, but walking through the alpine meadows in the fog, surrounded by grand black slopes draped in mist gave a very movie-like feel to the day.

Climbing Matanuska

And with the light rain a nice regulatory measure against our perspiration, the weather was comfortable throughout…for the most part. Climbing the steepest section of the trail, at a constant grade of 45-50 degrees, I noticed that the soft mist present throughout the trek had changed its texture slightly, its presence now quite distinguishable as it hit my hands. It was snowing. Yes, today, July 7th, I stood in a light snow shower on the slopes of Matanuska Peak. And to think I can’t even get a white Christmas at home.

We decided that skiing down the gully would be the fastest method of descent.

Tuesday (July 15th)

This past weekend I traveled the canoe loop, heading out Saturday night and coming back yesterday afternoon. The first night was spent on an island in the middle of Milo Lake, which I’ve named Loon Island, in honor of the pair of birds that nest on its northern shore. After cooking breakfast and breaking camp Sunday morning, I traveled around the loop up to James Lake, fishing along the way. (I caught some nice ones, and discovered another good pike hole in the process.)

A White Water Lily (Nymphaea odorata)

Having checked the PUC reservations before I left, I knew the James Lake cabin was open that night and pulled into the dock there in the late afternoon. An open slot at this cabin is incredibly hard to come by; it’s our nicest PUC, the lone cabin on the shore of a secluded lake in the middle of the park, and it’s normally booked solid throughout the summer.

The James Lake Cabin was featured on the cover of Cabela's Magazine a few years back.

Paddling back after gathering firewood at an abandoned beaver lodge (which I have discovered is one of the best place to procure good, dry fuel—just make sure it’s abandoned), I spotted a mother black bear with a cub on the opposite shore of the bay, about 200 feet away. As I slowly paddled closer, she heard me and came to the edge of the shore, staring me down for a bit before running off into the woods with her cub close behind.

I enjoyed a good dinner by the fire, followed by some roasted marshmallows left by a previous renter (judging by the taste, a very previous renter). After a brief harmonica session, it was off to bed. The next morning I continued along the loop and pulled out around 3pm, but not before stopping at Chicken Lake for a brief, refreshing swim (I assure you, it was very brief).

Monday (July 21st)

Today I took the truck up Hatcher Pass Road to do some hiking, hoping that the weather would break long enough for me to get some shots along this beautiful drive.

I could definitely live here.

Though I didn’t get any great light, the rain held off long enough for me to get a few frames, so hopefully you can get a slight feel for the Talkeetna Mountains area.

One of the many lakes in the area. Note the beaver lodge.




Arctic Lupin (Lupinus arcticus)




At the apex of the route is Independence Mine, an old gold mine that is now a State Historical Park, complete with informational kiosks and guided tours. I took a brief self-guided tour and then headed up the newly completed Gold Cord Lake Trail, a short trek up to a beautiful alpine lake. Due to rain and my beginner’s ignorance I left the camera in the truck, not anticipating any startling photographic opportunities, but as I hiked the last bit of the trail and came upon the deep, glacial blue lake encircled by steep, mist-shrouded slopes, I instantly regretted that decision. But as I gazed in wonder at the stern mysticism of the scene, with fog rolling over the edge of the lake into a seemingly endless grey nothingness, and the sharp craggy rocks jutting out of the mountainsides, softened here and there by a splash of Pink Plume Bistort (Polygonum bistorta ssp. plumosum) or the small white bells of Moss Heather (Cassiope stelleriana), I realized that there are some things one just has to view for oneself. Exploring off-trail, I climbed the slopes around the lake and gained a whole new vantage point. Perched on top of a boulder, probably 150 feet above the lake, I saw as a stiff wind blew over the top of the water, disturbing its surface and creating twirling, dancing formations as it raced across the smooth canvas, pushing, turning and merging intricate rippling patterns above the lake’s aquamarine depths. Nature is an artist with no equal.


A 20-inch rainbow trout caught and released on __________ Lake.
(Sorry, I can’t disclose the location—that’s highly classified information.)






Sunday, July 6, 2008

The Kings Are In

A topside view of the toxic Indian Hellebore (Veratrum viride)

Thursday (July 3rd)

This blog note won’t be split up into separate daily entries—due to a busy schedule and a wandering mind, I haven’t gotten around to writing before tonight. So this is coming to you in a lump sum.

Two Wednesdays ago, June 18th, while parked by the Susitna River for lunch, the Nancy Lake Trail Crew witnessed a spectacular sight: as I was preparing to take the first tasty bite of my peanut butter and raisin sandwich (thank you, volunteer wages), Jacob pointed to the opposite shore and I saw a mother moose walking with her calf along the water. Though moose are a common sighting here, I still get excited when I spot one of these massive cervines. So imagine my awe when the pair entered the water and began to swim across the Su! With her calf trailing behind, the cow braved the fast current and swam the width of the river, about 250 feet, beaching right in front of our truck and leaving us with baited breath. The calf, maybe one week old, stood shakily as its mother scouted her surroundings. Sensing no threat, she took her young one and began to check out the vegetation about 15 feet to the left of the truck, then sauntered in front of us and went off into the woods of Willow Creek. It was an unforgettable experience.

The following Tuesday morning, June 24th, Chris, Jacob and I set out for a brief canoe trip. Our mission was to repair the portage between the Little Susitna River and Skeetna Lake, which rests at the southern boundary of the park. We hooked up the canoe trailer, loaded our gear into the truck and traveled the long dirt road to Lynx Lake Creek, where we put in for a long paddle to Butterfly Lake, where we would be staying.

On the way to work

Passing through Lynx, Candlestick, beautiful Buckley and other waters, we worked on the portages along the way and didn’t arrive at the Butterfly cabin until around 5pm. Glad to rest our arms for the night, we unloaded the canoe and walked up to our temporary abode, whereupon we beheld an unnerving sight: the entryway lay open, the hasp lock which usually secured it hanging stripped from its rightful place on the side of the door. Easing our way cautiously inside, bear spray at the ready, we found no intruders but quite a mess: white rice splayed across the entire floor. But the culinary coating proved itself useful in determining the culprit of this heinous crime.

Cleaning up, we found rice in the chairs and even in the downstairs bed; our friend must have made himself comfortable. What drew the bear in can’t be ascertained beyond a doubt, but our theory is that the pilot light of the propane stove heated up some old grease or food remnants on the stovetop, and with a sense of smell seven times greater than that of a bloodhound, the black bear headed for the delicious aroma and didn’t let anything stop him. The propane should have been off during the vacancy of the cabin (thereby extinguishing the pilot light), and the tank valve was turned to the closed position, but some debris preventing the shutoff valve of the tank from closing completely kept gas flowing through the line and the light burning. (Don’t worry, we fixed it.)

After a refreshing night’s sleep, we headed out to Skeetna Lake, where we tidied up the small group of campsites there and proceeded to the Little Su portage.

My morning commute

The portage crosses many low, wet areas, so Parks has built small boardwalks (found along most portages here) to ease the traveler’s traversal. Over the years, the boards split, the nails come out and the supports drop, giving the trail crew a constant supply of work.

Constructing a spruce log bridge

The day was spent repairing the walks and clearing the trail of downed trees and overhanging limbs, all accomplished with one hand, while the other kept a close beat around our heads, swatting the hordes of biting flies.

Returning that night, Chris and I swapped harmonica licks around the campfire (with Jacob a forgiving audience), and the next morning we headed out, making sure to drop our lines in Lynx Lake, where I caught a nice pike for dinner. A splendid trip.

This past weekend I joined the masses and headed to Willow Creek to fish for King (Chinook) Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha). After purchasing my 3-day King fishing license, I headed to the Susitna River Friday night to await the stroke of 12, when fishing would open, with the river closing to fishing at midnight the following Monday. (To ensure enough of the fish make it upriver to spawn, Fish & Game enforces strict limits on when, where and how one can fish for Kings.) With wild yells and the simultaneous casting of over a hundred rods, the battle began.

Combat fishing begins

King fishing is in a class of its own: with most fishing you are trying to entice your prey to strike a lure they perceive as a meal, requiring the fisherman to retrieve his line in various ways mimicking natural bait, whether jigging, retrieving steadily, twitching, etc. Though I admit any success in fishing always involves a significant amount of luck, correct retrievals (along with the correct lure, location, and other factors) have great effect on one’s cast-to-catch ratio and make angling an interesting challenge (though worm and bobber fishing is fun, too). However, I have to say that fishing for King Salmon has to be the most monotonous fishing I’ve ever done. Because the salmon during their spawning run are not interested in eating, any strike on your hook comes from simply lucking out and casting your line near enough to a fish to trigger an instinct bite out of annoyance. The method as I’ve learned it is as follows:

  1. Walk up and down the shore of the river, keeping a sharp eye out for any empty spaces larger than five feet. None? Try four feet. No luck? Then finally settle on a good looking spot about three feet wide.
  2. DON’T LEAVE THAT SPOT! I don’t care what kind of emergency arises, it’s not worth the risk of losing your precious square of shoreline.
  3. Cast out at about the 1 o’clock position, reel in a few turns, and follow your line with your pole as it drifts downriver, setting your hook with a big sweep at any semblance of a bite.
  4. If you hear “Fish on!,” “Fish comin’ down!,” “Fish comin’ up!” or any other hint that someone has hooked a salmon, quickly reel in your line, lest you become tangled with the line which has a fish on one end and a perspiring, yelling and highly volatile human on the other. If this sad situation does occur, then you will certainly be subject to a violent bombardment of derogatory slurs and rude accusations, forcing you to call upon that inner reserve of pride to stop yourself from leaving the beach an ashamed and inept fisherman.
  5. Around the 11 o’clock position, reel in your line. But be prepared: I’ve calculated that about one in every four casts results in a tangling of your line with some other fellow’s. Proper etiquette requires the angler closest to the intersection of the two lines to undo them—beware, they can be nasty.
  6. Repeat steps 3-5 as many times as you can handle. (I figured I averaged one cast per minute, and I fished for 22 hours during the weekend, so that’s 1,320 casts with a heavy rod and reel. You’ve heard of tennis elbow? I had a bad case of salmon wrist.)

You’ll notice a blatantly absent piece of information in these instructions: how to bring in a King once you have him on your hook. Alas, during the span of three days and 22 hours of fishing, I failed to catch one of these marine behemoths (the average caught that weekend was about 30 pounds; world record is 97 lbs 4 oz, caught on the Kenai River here in AK). I did hook one on Saturday, but after a brief struggle I had to follow my quickly (and proudly) announced “Fish on!” with a much quieter mumbling of “Fish off.” Oh well, the silvers should be coming in soon.

(While fishing Monday afternoon I learned I had been the subject of much discussion on the shores of the Susitna that weekend—it seems someone spotted me arriving in the State truck, but instead of assuming I was a government worker sneaking off to fish, a conjecture I feared might be made (don’t worry, I fished on my days off), I was labeled as an undercover agent for the Alaska Department of Fish & Game. No wonder I got those evil looks and a slightly wider fishing berth.)

A female Northern Pintail (Anas acuta) with her chicks on the Susitna River

On Wednesday we headed up to the recently opened Hatcher Pass Road (it’s only accessible for two months due to snow) to deliver some items to the trail crew stationed at the State Rec Area there.

You can see why this road is closed for ten months

Jacob snapped this photo when we stopped at Summit Lake on the way up
The tiny beige line in the middle of the right half of the photo is Hatcher Pass Rd

This road through the mountains offers spectacular, sweeping views, but I can’t give due photographic justice to this magnificent area without returning when I have more time to shoot, so you’ll have to take my word for now.

This morning the trail crew had an exciting encounter with a young black bear, probably two years old. After delivering firewood to the South Rolly Campground, we were riding on the Nancy Lake Parkway when we spotted the bear near Bald Lake, munching on dandelions by the asphalt. We slowed to take some pictures, but this bear proved even more curious than we were. (Play the video below to see what I mean. And yes, my window was open.)


Monday, June 16, 2008

Flora and Fauna

A note: If you click on the pictures in my posts, you can view a larger version of the shot. So to get a better look at those moose there, put your index finger to work.


A cow and her calf

I took a hike on the Jano Pond Loop yesterday (6/15), and many of the flora and fauna pictures in this post were shot during that expedition.

Thursday (5/29)

Yesterday Jacob and I rode into Anchorage to pick up the Butterfly Lake volunteer hosts, Eric and Mariah. This was our first big excursion in a state vehicle, so of course we received the “don’t break ANY laws, go below the speed limit, etc.” talk from Vic. We performed remarkably. Eric and Mariah may end up being the Red Shirt Lake hosts if Tom does not return, as Red Shirt is much busier than Butterfly and is more of a priority.

Today we hiked down to Butterfly Lake with Chris to do a trail inspection. Butterfly Lake has been a hotbed of controversy recently: homeowners on the lake are split over allowing ATV access in the area. ATVs are often used by the older property owners who cannot make the trek down to the lake shore, but the use of these heavy vehicles over the wet ground (Nancy Lake is in a swampy valley) leaves deep muddy ruts in the trail which are a hindrance to those hiking in by foot. And as one who yesterday hiked this trail by foot, I can tell you I understand the hiker-owners’ concern—hiking the three miles to the lake, one regularly comes across patches of impassable trail, where you must teeter along the higher sides of the path to avoid losing a shoe in the mud.

Before starting the main hike down to Butterfly, we went down a nearby winter trail to inspect its condition. The trail ends at a large beaver dam, an amazing feat of beastly engineering. The eight foot high wall of sediment and wood is concave in shape and 20 feet long, creating a short waterfall and holding the retained water as well as the Hoover. While inspecting the construction, I noticed a moose and her calf crossing the water about 200 feet away--she looked agitated and in a hurry to get across the creek. Chris wondered if a bear was chasing her—moose calves are frequent, easy meals for bears in this area, and with hunting not allowed within state parks, bears are beginning to overpopulate and moose numbers are dwindling. (Actually, hunting with firearms is not allowed within the park, but a bow and arrow can be used during the appropriate season. But hunting bear with a bow and arrow is certainly only for those very, very, very sure of their aim. Needless to say, not many do it.)

A Greater Yellowlegs (Tringa melanoleuca) rests atop a spruce

Returning to task, we began our hike to Butterfly and were fortunate enough to come upon a male spruce grouse performing its springtime mating ritual. Though we startled the female up into the limbs of a spruce tree, her partner continued his dance. Resembling a chicken in shape, the grouse’s feathers are gray with white tips, and a red comb graces the top of each eye. But for this performance, he had his tail feathers fanned out and lifted up, and was strutting his stuff for all he was worth. Walking back and forth across the trail and pecking fiercely at the ground, his outer ring of tail feathers, black with brown tips, snapped from left to right in regular intervals around the inner ring of gray feathers with white tips. He continued his fandango for several minutes until we had to move on, whereupon he reluctantly retreated into the vegetation.

Saturday (5/31)

These past two days have been spent enrolled in a sustainable trails class, taught by the non-profit group Alaska Trails. A sustainable trail is one which “conforms to its terrain and environment, is capable of handling its intended use without serious degradation and requires minimal maintenance.” The idea is to build trails that don’t scar the landscape, but rather take the hiker/biker/rider safely through undeveloped areas while retaining the “wild” feeling of being out in nature. These routes incorporate advanced construction guidelines that allow for adequate water drainage and minimize erosion, making the trail easy to maintain and enjoyable for the user.

A Red-Necked Grebe (Podiceps grisegena) on Alman Lake

Friday night we headed down to Palmer for the “classroom” segment of the course, where we went over what exactly sustainable trails were and how they were planned, built and maintained. (The beginners group that I was in also went outside and learned how to use a clinometer, a simple hand-held device for measuring the grade of a slope. ) One of the teachers was Mike Shields, a pioneer of the sustainable trails movement who has been constructing trails around the country for fifty years and is a well known figure in parks nationwide.

Early this morning the twenty classmates met up at Crevasse Moraine for a day of hands-on training. We split into our two groups, beginners and those more advanced, and the beginners headed off to do hard manual labor while the experts did what experts do: plan where the trail goes and tell the beginners how to use their hard, manual labor to best create the route. I picked up my McCloud and Jacob his Pulaski, and we followed our instructor Mark down a hiking/biking loop built by volunteers a few years before, with Mark pointing out important sustainable features of the trail along the way: full bench construction, an outsloping tread, properly constructed grade reversals, etc. (If you’d like to know what all that means, let me know.) Coming to a stretch of unfinished trail, we got to swing our tools and put into practice what we’d been learning, and it turned out pretty well.

Wednesday (6/4)

Not many people are paid to recreate. Sports stars, perhaps, but posts where recreation is a mandatory aspect of gainful employment are hard to find. And though technically I’m not working this summer but rather volunteering, Chris is paid to do what he does. And today was spent paddling the park’s canoe trail loop, a seven mile route traversing 13 different lakes, with short portages in between. Though rain clouds threatened to advance toward the last leg of our trip, they retreated without conflict, and we enjoyed a beautiful day on the water. Coming from Ardaw Lake, we saw a Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis) from the shore of Jackknife Lake, and on almost every lake we found a pair of loons—there is usually only one pair per lake, and to hear the loons calling to each other from lake to lake is a sound not easily forgotten. On James Lake Chris and I cast out our lures (yes, we brought our poles—with three people in a canoe, the middle person is in perfect position to throw in a hopeful line while being paddled around), and lo and behold, I caught my first fish. A good sized Northern Pike (Esox lucius) was courteous enough to strike my yellow and orange-skirted spinnerbait, and I thanked him profusely before letting him swim free.

Pulling up to the portage between Little Noluck Lake And Milo Pond, we heard what sounded like tent stakes being hammered into the ground. But approaching the campsite there was no sign of a tent, and we soon discovered the culprit: a porcupine was gnawing away at the wooden latrine. For some reason these spiny critters are common privy pests in the park; no one knows what makes latrine wood so appealing to them. If you’ve never seen a porcupine, they are quite fearsome looking, but are essentially harmless if you don’t get too close (they cannot shoot their quills, nor are the spines poisonous, contrary to common myth).

Thursday (6/12)

It’s extremely hard for me to believe that in two days, I will have been in Alaska for a month. The pace at which the summer is flying by both amazes and saddens me—I will not be ready to leave in two months.

On June 5th I celebrated my 20th birthday with friends around a campfire; we roasted marshmallows as I listened to them remember their 20th, and I understood that the strange feeling nagging at my cerebrum—caused by the realization that I was no longer a teenager—was common to all their recounts, as well. I’m sure you recall that same unnerving twist in your stomach, too. My youth is behind me—good times for sure, but I’m ready to see how I fare with young adulthood.

On the eve of my matriculation into the ranks of antiquity, I seeded the raised bed (made from scrap materials found around the station) which I had prepared some days earlier, planting carrots, lettuce and radishes. All the varieties are specially suited for Alaska’s cool, short summers, and though it’s my first personal garden, I have high hopes for a bountiful harvest. The soil here is sandy and full of pebbles left by the retreat of a glacier thousands of years ago, so fairly extensive preparation was required before those precious seeds touched the dirt. My mix was native soil/fire pit soil/moose poop. All large rocks were removed from the native soil, which made up the first 8 inches of my 20 inch high bed. Lovely black, nitrogen rich “burn soil” (taken from an area where scrap wood was previously burned) and finely ground moose pellets were mixed in with the native soil to make up the remaining 9 inches (I left 3 inches between the top of the bed frame and the topsoil). Though still rocky, the radishes seem to like it and lettuce seedlings are sprouting, as well. I’ll keep you updated on the carrots (needing extra moist, warm soil, the carrots are covered with clear plastic until seedlings start to emerge). Though I haven’t had any problems with pesky critters yet, one hungry hare could destroy my tiny crop in its entirety, so preventative measures had to be taken.

On a culinary note, Sunday night I fried up a batch of homemade Southern corn bread over the fire, and used the remaining oil to try my spatula at dandelion fritters. To make these tasty appetizers, pluck the blooming dandelion heads from the tops of your favorite backyard weeds (genus Taraxacum), rinse them and coat them in corn meal mixed with a little salt. (Note: only use plants where herbicides are NOT used.) Fry them up and enjoy the crunchy hors de oeuvres along with a wild greens salad—Sunday I used young dandelion leaves, fireweed (Epilobium angustifolium) shoots and a few clover (genus Trifolium) leaves, but dandelion leaves are delicious on their own. (Use clover in moderation—if eaten in excess it can cause digestive upset.) If you’re entertaining for others or enjoy garnishing for yourself, the bright yellow dandelion petals look (and taste) great either mixed in or atop the salad. Dandelions are a superb source of calcium, iron and vitamins A, B and C. The red fireweed shoots have a taste similar to asparagus; I had steamed fireweed tonight with butter, salt and pepper—scrumptious.

The park sells firewood to campers at $5 a bundle, and anyone who ties the already split wood gets $1 for every bundled bundle. So Jacob and I have been shooting for an hour of bundling a day, and with my exclusive 7-Bundle System (I’ve got a patent pending on this), we can do about 50bph (bundles per hour). That works out to $25/hr each—a very welcome wage to a volunteer.

About the mosquitoes: I was warned they are bad in Alaska, and they are—I was bitten nine times while writing that last sentence, and I’m sitting inside wearing pants and a long sleeve shirt. (OK, I’m exaggerating, but they are quite prolific.) The only place I’ve been before that resembles this state mosquito-wise is Portsmouth Island on the Outer Banks of NC (remember that, Mom?) But I’ll happily put up with these whiny gnats in replace of ticks any day. There are no ticks here, and actually no snakes either. (Though I’m not particularly averse to snakes, it’s nice to not worry so much about watching your step while traipsing through the woods.)

Tuesday I paddled out on Bald Lake in the one-man canoe, hoping for some pike or trout. Alas, no luck with the pole, but when a pair of loons dropped by it made up for my dinner-catching deficiency.

The elusive Loon

Last night I picked two quarts of dandelion petals and began the process of making dandelion wine: pouring boiling water over the petals and steeping the mixture for two days, after which sugar and yeast will be added to the again-boiled and strained concoction and the fermentation process will begin. Zephyr Spirits 2008 Dandelion Wine should be ready just in time for my 21st birthday—let’s hope it was a good year.


The flora here are beginning to bloom as we slowly make our way into summer


Spreading Shield Fern (Dryopteris dilatata)


Dwarf Dogwood (Cornus canadensis), often used as a ground cover here in AK


Alpine Forget Me Not (Myosotis alpestris), Alaska State Flower


Labrador Tea (Rhododendron tomentosum), from which the native tea Ledum is made.
It's quite good


Shooting Star (Dodecatheon frigidum)


Bog Rosemary (Andromeda polifolia)