Sep 1, 2008

Following Fields and Fjords


This is what Seward has usually looked like this summer. When it does finally clear up and we get a few sunny days (which has been about 1 or 2 days out of 10 rainy ones), I take every opportunity to go outside and do something fun.



This weekend I had a couple of days off so the first day I went out on the Kenai Fjords National Park boat tour. I went out once before in the beginning of the season, but it was cold and most of the mountains were still covered in snow back then. This time it was more beautiful even though it is getting late enough that most of the animals are starting to migrate already. But of course the sea lions are always on their favorite haul-out rocks.






I also saw three whales but my camera was giving me trouble so I didn't get pictures (which is Ok because whales can be difficult to photograph anyway). I always feel a sense of wonder when I see or hear whales. There is something mysterious about them that I feel with every encounter. It's one of the reasons I came back to Alaska. We moved on and went as far as Northwestern Glacier.






It is a pretty active Glacier and we saw lots of big chunks calve into the water.






The vastness, beauty and power of glaciers are other reasons I wanted to see Alaska again. Of course wherever there are many glaciers there must be an icefield feeding them. The Harding Ice field feeds all the glaciers in Kenai Fjords National Park and about 9 miles up the road from where I live is a trailhead to a lookout point over the ice field. So the next day my friend Andrea and I decided to hike the 4 steep miles up to see it.



The views were incredible.

Of course we girls appreciated all kinds of views . . . .

The trail follows Exit Glacier (a piedmont glacier, or one that ends on land) up all the way to the mother source of it's super-compacted ice.



As we got further up the trail other hikers kept warning us that they had seen multipe bears (as many as three different ones) So we kept our eyes open and our granola bars hidden. Sure enough we saw one foraging up on the hill. We watched and waited until it passed behind us.


A little while later I started wondering if we would see any others since other hikers had warned us there would be more. Right when this thought came into my head I looked up and saw a bear eyeing us not far from the trail. It meandered along and went behind a rock out of sight. We waited and waited for it to come into view and never did. So I inched my way up to peek around the rock when Andrea saw it's head pop up in a different place further behind us. We stayed in one place and continued to talk and sing loudly. Eventually it kept going up the snowy mountain.



As we continued on the trail we saw where the bear had crossed in front of us. The paw print is a little bit bigger than my hand, which isn't very big for a bear, but still big enough to rip my face off.


We continued up and made it to the emergency shelter which is just before the Harding Ice Field lookout point. There was something about the place that made me want to light a big bonfire to help Gondor call for aid.


When we finally made it to the lookout there was an amazing view that looked kind of like what Idaho looks like in the winter. But this was August - we weren't in Idaho, and I knew this vast land was the source of all those beautiful glaciers down below.








As we were gazing over the land suddenly two of our rebel friends stopped by to say 'hello.'




Ok well maybe not, but it did remind me of the Hoth system in The Empire Strikes Back.

The views were beautiful again on the way down only we had to keep moving because the sun actually goes down now and we had to make it down before dark.


As we were coming down the path we met a little marmot friend who was not scared of us at all.



And as long as we are on movie themes, this little guy reminded me of something right out of the Kingdom of Narnia.



We made it down the trail with plenty of daylight and went to the restaurant for a big plate of nachos. I'm pretty sure it was the nachos that made my stomach hurt the next day and not from drinking giardia infected glacier water (though I guess that could have done it, too). But I feel fine now even though it's back to raining all day again.

5 comments:

Nathan Winder said...

Ha ha! Nice.

Man, I'm so jealous of all your travels, I've never even left the state! Woops, one of the kids just poured honey on my kzeyborad.

Aimee said...

How incredible! I am dying to go on an Alaskan cruise sometime.

Unknown said...

I love your blog! Alaska is one of my top picks for places I really want to go to. I love the jagged landscape and its wide spanse of colorful tundra. So much to see, I'm glad your sending pics!
Anyway, can you send me the title of the book(s) that you are using to plan out Thailand, I would like to get it/them and read through it/them.

Wendy said...

Thanks for the larger text!! It does help.

What a great Denali adventure! My climb to the top of Kings Peak this summer is suddenly seeming not quite so adventurous - though 3days of backpacking was plenty for me! What beautiful photos, too!

Emily said...

These pictures are so great! I would love an adventure like that right now. Idaho is looking pretty brown. miss you