July 22 through July 30th 2006


When we landed at 10:30 p.m. it appeared to be about 6:30 p.m. according to the light outside. The sun was just starting to go down, only to rise again about 5 hours later. Juli and Scott welcomed us to their apartment with an air mattress, salmon dinner and a case of beer. That's what friends are for.



The first night's sleep was good except for the occasional wind interruption, at time's I thought the roof of the cabin would be blown off. The entire cabin would howl and shake.



The next two nights we're spent at the apartment in Anchorage. Lots of good food including pizza at the Moose's Tooth. Wednesday we started the day off with breakfast at home and then the boys headed out for a 10 mile bike ride (all uphill) while us girls went shopping for food for the next few days of camping. Then we met the boys at the top of the hill, swapped bikes and cars and we girls rode the bikes the 10 miles back down the hill. The trail was great and followed the bay-front. The boys were lucky enough to spot a moose on their ride.

Early Thursday morning we were awakened by a 3.4 earthquake with the epicenter being just 3 miles outside of Anchorage. After a bit more sleep, with breakfast in our bellies and some car swapping with Scott's cousin, we started the 200 mile drive south to Homer. The drive was beautiful.


Up and at em, the next morning we picked up the cabin and headed to our next camp ground where we would be spending our first and only night in actual tents. Camp was set up quickly so we could being our day's adventure. We formed a cheerleading squad in order to hang our food out of any bear's reach, Elias was squad captain.
On the boat ride over Dwayne had showed us a small artisans town, we thought we'd head our hike in that direction and perhaps make it there by lunch time. We couldn't have been more off. The trail started out great but after a few miles became very overgrown, particularly with stinging neddles and devil's club. Elias used his pocket knife like a machete to "clear" the path. We reached a few bays and decided that the town had to be "just the next bay over" we were still wrong. We reached 3 bays never finding the town.
This is when things got interesting, after hiking over unmaintained trails, never reaching the town for lunch we were hungry tired, spread out on the trail and quiet. Not a good thing to be in bear country. Suddenly we hear Katie and Elias in the front, yell back "BEAR!" and as they say this we see a black bear running straight for us! All I see is a bear charging in my direction, while in reality it was just trying to get away from everyone. No one was hurt but our adrenaline at full capacity.
The rest of the hike out we made sure to stay vocal and keep the group together. The entire hike was 5 or 6 hours, we never made it to the town. Once back at our camp I could barely move, sat around and finally I went to bed around 9 p.m.
Saturday morning we had to wake up at 5:30 a.m. to meet Dwayne back at the dock by 6:30 because the bay we were in is only accessible during high tide. Tired and hungry we rode the much rougher ride back across the bay. We stopped for breakfast at a little organic cafe. They were known for their Ah! Laska Chocolate, needless to say, I had the best mocha I've ever drank accompanied by delicious french toast.
Four hours later, back in Anchorage. Our final night was filled with more Catchphrase and Smashed Bros. Our final day was spent running last minute errands and saying our goodbyes.
The flight back went quickly, watched Good Night, Good Luck, which was much better than Aquamarine on the flight over. We met Scott and Juli's cousins at the airport to pick up some bags that we brought back for them. Dominic picked us up right on time. After a short visit with Dom and Tyson we headed back on the road for our three hour drive to Portland.
I finally made it back to my own bed on Monday night. Overall the trip was absolutely amazing. Without a doubt some one of the most beautiful parts of the states I've ever been to. I would recommend anyone visiting Alaska, just make sure to get out and do some hiking and camping, the town's can be a bit blah.
What's next? Ireland?
3 comments:
Nice! Sounds like a ton of adventure. Roll on baby!
-rocco
Wow Jude!! What an experience. I'm very jealous. :)
love
kathy
You didn't tell me about the earthquake!!
Thanks for the updates, photos, etc.
Hey, Brenda might like to use some of those DVD photos for the site next year. Your nieces are adorable.
Look out Eire, here comes Jude the Adventurer!
Post a Comment