Thursday, December 30, 2010

"We're off to the red river valley..."


Stuart and I leaveAmarillo with the Quebe sisters’ unique brand of Texas music blasting and warm memories of the best hospitality this side of my parents’ own home on our minds. A snowstorm is currently dumping upwards of 12” of snow on much of northern Arizona and New Mexico, necessitating a new plan for our drive to Las Vegas. We are now heading ~21 hours from Texas down south to Las Cruces, NM then on through Tucson and Phoenix before getting to Kate’s house. The last 24 hours have been amazing, as Mr. and Mrs. Binkley (Bink and Cindy) provided us with fresh showers, home cooked green chili stew/margaritas/tamales/breakfast, some fresh laundry and some great conversation. Before delving into that, here’s a replay of the past 48 hours:

-       -   Left NC at 10 p.m. after picking Stuart up in Charlotte, hitting Gary and Deanne’s for coffee and a vehicle swap, and then leaving town with the intention of hitting Amarillo early enough to spend an eve w/ tres and get a good night’s sleep. In hindsight this was a smart move, as we’re now looking at a much longer trip than we first thought

-      -   4:30 P.M: 19.5 hours after leaving, we arrived in Amarillo to the above-mentioned green chill stew/tamale/enchilada meal and some great hosts in the form of Tres’ parents. The evening continued w/ a tour of the city and ended up in a bar called the Spotted Pony. The spotted pony is a local dive most famous for being the site of many a fight and a recent shooting that left an out of towner dead. Thankfully our experience was rather benign, save the story Tres’ friend Josh a.k.a “True Grit” told us about flushing rattle snakes out of their dens w/ a weed sprayer full of gasoline! Some lone star beer in a can rounded out a great eve and we were sacked out by 12 in need of some sleep






-       --Woke up this morning to some French press coffee, poached eggs, bacon and homemade apple-pecan waffles! After breakfast we made our way out to the beautiful Palo Duro canyon..The spot is amazing, reminding me of the western slope of Colorado, save a slightly smaller cliffline. Photos above and on my facebook page speak to the beauty of the canyon. After leaving the canyon we visited the “Cadillac Ranch” a place that is best described in picutres, as words cannot do it justice.

 N    Now it’s about 5 p.m., Stuart is driving past a particularly rank cattle farm and I am holed up under a blanket in a vain attempt to write a blog post that will keep everyone entertained. I’ll try my best to do so, though Gary’s Honda Element is currently being wind blasted and it's hard to concentrate..also, Stuart just ran over a cat so I'm bummed.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Christmas, the birth of Christ and of new beginnings




Well folks, I am back to blogging again. The phenomenon of me sharing thoughts, photos, ramblings etc. is usually spurned by some dramatic life change or event that I think might be of interest to my friends and family...and this is exactly what's happening. Check it out:


       - In January of 2007 I left the USMC, went climbing for two months, then made my way to Boone, NC the place that was to be my home for 3.5 years

      - Two weeks ago I completed the circle when I graduated from App and set off on a month long climbing/living trip that will include Joshua Tree, Las Vegas, Southern Arizona and a number of places in between

Recent happenings have added an additional layer of excitement to this journey that was supposed to end on Jan 21st with me heading back to Boone. For those of you who aren't already in the loop,  I am moving to California in Feb. for a job. This is exciting as my climbing trip will now serve as an introduction to both the town and state that I will be living in for the next three years. I'll give details once things become more final.. In the meantime, join me, Stuart, Kate, Gary, Ben and others over the next month and I'll promise to post amazing photos, long/boring rambling posts, and perhaps some things that'll make you laugh. Cheers!

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Laura's Visit/Final Week

In lieu of words, I offer a video. Yes I (and Laura) am too lazy to type any more than this.

Monday, July 5, 2010

The Harding Icefield











So I just returned from a BIG two day adventure out on the Harding Icefield. I left with anticipation, excitement, and bit of nervousness, and returned with a sore body, exhaustion, and a sense of contentment.

The Harding Icefield is a 700 square mile field of ice and snow that feeds all of the 30+ glaciers of Kenai Fjords National Park. It is a vast desert of snow and crevasses, broken only occasionally by beautiful nuntaks (mountains that rise out of the snow). I was invited to accompany my co-worker Deb and her boyfriend Ernan over the 4th of July weekend and I quickly said yes, partially because my alternative option was staying here in Seward with the extra 27,000 drunk people who descend on the town for the holiday. We met up on the evening of the 2nd to talk logistics over Alaskan IPA, and on Saturday morning we were off.

The trail to the edge of the icefield sits at sea level and rises at about 1,000' per mile over the next 4.2 miles. The hike is gorgeous, as you begin in a dense forest teeming with orchids, birds, and bears and gradually make your way to the alpine where you are afforded beautiful views of the exit glacier. Our packs were quite heavy and I was psyched to put skis on my feet rather than carry them on my back. We arrived at the icefield with some good time to spare and made our way out onto the ice, carefully choosing a route that would lead us around the dangerous icefalls as we made our way to the nunatak where we planned on camping for the evening. The skiing was quite easy, though it began to get eery when fog descended on the icefield and we were forced to navigate in white-out conditions with only the GPS for guidance. Every once and a while a long narrow crack would appear in the snow, reminding us of the hidden dangers that we could encounter. Skiing in the whiteout was crazy, as the ground, sky and horizon all looked the same. I've been told that people sometimes come down with vertigo in these situations and can believe it because I couldn't differentiate between land and sky myself. After a few long hours of skiing we began to question our coordinate, so we decided to sit on our packs, break out the map, and grab a new one. We sat down to do so when all of a sudden the fog lifted the slightest bit and revealed our nunatak about 100 meters in front of us! Everyone's spirits lifted and we skied up to set camp for the evening.

The following morning I awoke to one of the more beautiful vistas I've seen. The fog had lifted in the night, affording us spectacular views of the ice we had skied across, the nunataks in the distance, and many glaciers in the distance. After a quick breakfast we broke camp and began skiing towards Lois' Spire, a rock route that sits atop of a nunatak, and one that we were eager to try to climb if the weather allowed...Which it didn't.

About 2 hours later we were skiing beneath a large nunatak that had deposited avalanche debris with pieces as large as refrigerators. It was a bit disconcerting but was necessary given the huge crevasses that loomed farther to our left. As we made our way beneath this peak and towards the spire the fog returned with a vengeance, obscuring everything from our sight, and eventually forcing us to follow our tracks back towards our camp in hopes that we would find sun and clear skies there. When we arrived back at our nunatak Ernan mentioned that it would be cool to kite ski, so that is exactly what we did. The wind was ripping in the direction we needed to ski to get home, so we grabbed a tent fly and some trekking poles, fashioned a sail, and let the wind carry us a few miles back toward home! It was super fun and our laughter was all that we left in our wake. A few hours later we were back on the icefield trail heading back to Seward, where I took a well deserved sleep and began writing this blog. I have posted photos of our trip on facebook, and would be happy to provide more exciting details if anyone wants to call/e-mail me. Enjoy the video I took when I woke up yesterday!

More Pictures Here:

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=455830&id=572250523&l=2672d66249

and http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=454869&id=572250523&l=5a9d0a2bf6

Cheers,
Mike

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Here comes the sun...







.......for the first time in about a week! Yes, after 7 days of being socked in with heavy fog, drizzle, 48 degree temps, and rain the sun decided to peak its head this morning. Luckily I was sitting at a desk from 8-5, so I didn't have to worry about its harmful rays burning my pale, pale skin. I left work at 5 o'clock fully intending on lifting weights, but the sunny day inspired me and I decided to go mtn biking w/ some friends instead.

For those of you who aren't "in the loop" (feel bad, all my good friends know this already:), mountain biking has filled a hole in my heart. The hole came about when I realized that the 75 bucks I spent to have my lovely girlfriend send my climbing gear was all for nothing, as Alaskan rock is about as good as Alaskan sweet tea or Alaskan bluegrass.( Not good, in case you're wondering. I found both of these out the hard way after being psyched that I found them). Luckily for me, the park issued me an entry-level Kona mountain bike w/ a front suspension as my commuter. Well a few turns of the allen wrench, and two reflectors and a rack later, and I had a trail-worthy bike. I've been getting out a few days a week to supplement the marathon training that I am doing and it's been super fun. But back to today..


Today we rode Lost Lake, a 14 mile out and back that has supposedly been called one of the "top 10 mountain bike rides in the continental U.S." by a few bike mags. Right now only about 8 miles are free of snow, but those eight miles definitely live up to the hype! The trail is rocky and rooted enough to provide a technical challenge on the climb, but smooth and fast enough that the descent will blow your mind. Top it off with a few splashes through streams, the threat of bears (buddies saw one on the trail Sunday), and 100' cliffs on the side of some parts of a narrow trail and you have a classic good time. My buddy Greg had too good a time today and actually took about a 20' tumble down a STEEP hill into some alders, thorns and rocks..it was a grim reminder that we needed to be careful, and I was astonished that he was okay after the fall he took.

Anyway it was a great day that was much needed after a rather boring week spent stuck in the office with rain and clouds hanging around for far too long. I am psyched to be here again, and I hope you all are feeling the same way about where ever you are. Enjoy the few pics/video I got before the camera died.

Cheers,
Mike

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Poseidon, one. Mike, zero.








Hello everyone! I just returned from a week spent exploring the farthest reaches of Kenai Fjords National Park on the park's boat "the Serac." The purpose of our trip was to examine a bunch of culturally significant sites that had been cataloged during a previous archaeology study, in order to determine whether there had been any disturbances/changes to said sites in the past 17 years.

You may have noticed my "poseidon, one..." title. This refers to the butt-kicking (and subsequent hurl-fest) that I received from the great sea God when I decided to skip my customary dose of sea-sickness meds prior to embarking on a four-hour journey through the rough seas of the gulf of Alaska. I had decided on an early trip that dramamine didn't work for me, as I usually feel a bit queasy even when I take it. Well let it be known that it WAS working, and that my punishment for failing to take it was swift and severe. The only upside to my experiment was the sense of elation I felt when we arrived at McCarty Fjord and the seasickness abated. It felt SO good that it was almost worth being sick..almost.

The trip itself was a hoot, if you consider 4 days on a small ship w/ four 50-60 year old ladies a hoot. In all seriousness my sailing companions proved to be great company, though I quickly grew tired of being mothered the entire time. Life on this ship proved to be vastly more comfortable than was life on the U.S.S. Kearsarge/Iwo-Jima . Our meals were all cooked by the deckhand/chef Marybeth, who used her allotted $20 per person per day budget to create fantastic meals, complete w/ appetizers, desserts, and snacks galore. A glimpse at some of our fare:

- Halibut tacos made with halibut caught the week prior by our captain, Jamie
- Coconut and pecan glazed sweet potatoes cooked for 6 hours in the crock pot
- Yogurt and granola + blueberries, strawberries, coffee and more

I could go on and on but it's hard to beat meals prepared from fish caught THAT DAY and placed on your plate a few hours later. At one point Jamie and I worked out that we had consumed $140 worth of Halibut given current market prices, and all it cost us was 20 minutes with a fishing pole and 40 minutes of prep time.

The archaeology bit proved to be a bit less exciting, as I am not a huge fan of digging 15x15cm pits in the middle of random depressions in the ground. Luckily two close encounters of the bear kind and multiple glacier viewings (see photos above) kept things interesting. Seeing a giant black bear only 20' away makes the knees weak, though I was full of bravado after our first bear hightailed it into the alders upon seeing/smelling us. The second bear encounter sucked the bravado right out of me when a black bear continued walking towards us despite our braves cries of "go away bear", and the fact that I was presenting my can of bear spray like I was about to put two in his chest, one in his head. We backed slowly away from the bear and onto the beach, and he must've gotten bored because he turned away, lumbered to the edge of a lagoon, and swam off into the sunset. Whew!

All told I had a fantastic time viewing parts of the park that are rarely seen by visitors unwilling/unable to afford the $500 dollar water taxi that is required to access the Kenai's most remote areas. Alaska is continuing to blow my mind, and I can't wait until I have my first visitors from the lower 48 (my sister in July and my girlfriend in August).I posted a short clip below this, and hope it will give ya'll a nice glimpse of the place I live. Enjoy.

Cheers,
Mike

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Scat Man

And I ain't talkin' bout Charlie Parker! I'm talking about Martin, the guy from our NPS Anchorage office who spent much of yesterday taking pictures of bear scat. Yesterday's adventure was an overnight trip on the Resurrection River trail, a 40 mile stretch through brown bear country that connects exit glacier road to the town of Hope, on the far side of the Kenai Peninsula. We saw plenty of signs of the bears, and even scared something BIG off about 50 yards in front of us at one point, but we never actually laid eyes on one. I will say that it is a bit disconcerting to see a downed log that has been demolished and still sports claw marks in it (see photo above), but 5 cans of bear spray + 1 shotgun = happy Mike.

(The pictures from this post are here:http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=441023&id=572250523&l=14dec90b0f


just follow the link and you can view large versions of each picture by clickin on them, whether or not you're a facebooker. This thing won't let me upload pics)

The hike itself was a trip. Never one to settle for the "normal" way, I decided to step up the game (NC style), and hike a whopping 4 miles instead of the full 40. I mean almost everyone who hikes this trail hikes the whole thing..it's kinda like "what's the point in that?" Let's just say that my father often said to be a leader not a follower, thus I led the 4 person group I was with to the first major stream crossing where I promptly declared "No way I am crossing that, it's too cold, the water's moving too fast, and my stomach is growling too much" at which point we stopped and set up camp.

The reality is that we had every intention of pushing further, but the melting snow coming down the slopes from Mt. Ascension turned Martin "Creek" into a river that scared me more than the time a 225lb ripped Marine buddy with bullet tattoos practiced giving an I.V. with my puny arm as his test dummy. The result of our failure to cross the creek was that we ended up having a wonderful evening beside the river munching on fresh Alaskan halibut that had a slightly spicy taste to it. The spicy flavor came from an accidental discharge of a shot of bear spray, which ended up soaking/burning my clothes, hands, tongue, eyes, and pride. Word to the wise: Don't put bear spray in a cargo pocket where a clown (i.e. ME) swinging a handful of firewood can hit the spray button, sending his friends running off into the woods coughing. To all my Marine buddies..CS ain't got nothing on bear spray! I was still getting it in my eyes this afternoon despite vigorous scrubbing w/ soap and water.

Tomorrow morning I am leaving and spending a week living on ship. Many of you recall (or were a part of) my short-lived sailing career whilst deployed on the 26th and 24th Marine Expeditionary Units. Well it's round two, starting at 7:45 tomorrow. I am leaving with a crew of archaeologists/cultural resource folks from the park and heading deep into Kenai Fjords' coast, where few people ever travel due to the remote location. By day we'll survey old Alutiq settlements and mines from Alaska's gold rush era. By night, we will sit aboard "The Serac" and dine on meals cooked by the boat's deck hand/Chef. Not too shabby, and (unlike last time I was on ship) I won't have to worry about running into a grumpy 1st Sgt. w/ too much time, and too little brains/vocabulary on his hands:) I hope everyone is well.

Cheers,
Mike

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Two is one, one is none








What A Week! That's all I can say about the week + that has passed since my last post. Last week was super busy as I (and three other folks) was tasked with taking a boat out to the remote Aialik Bay in order to get the coastal ranger station set up. Here's a brief run down of the three days I spent on that little mission:

Wed- Up and out super early to the docks in order to get the boats loaded with fuel, propane tanks, food, tents, and all the other supplies necessary for setting up the Aialik Bay Ranger Station. The ranger station is the part-time home of Josh and Sarah, our two coastal rangers, and it was our job to go shove snow, set up the shower/water system (more on that later) etc. The day was absolutely beautiful, and we were accompanied by a bunch of Dal's porpoise and a few humpbacks as we made our way out of Resurrection Bay in to the Gulf of Alaska...and then one of our motors failed. I mean epic fail, oil burning, smoking and whining fail. To be completely truthful most of the whining came from me, as I saw the realization of my lost at sea nightmares beginning to come to fruition. Luckily we has a second motor, so we began our trip back to the bay at a very leisurely pace. In the end the government (and you lovely tax payers) ended up paying me for a day on a boat in calm green water with whales and porpoise as my companions. Not too shabby!

Thurs-Friday- We pulled up to the beach marking the location of the Aialik Bay ranger station and I was absolutely spellbound. Across the bay were the Pederson and Aialik glaciers falling into the ocean. Behind the cabin the mountains rose sharply to the sky, and three waterfalls spilled down the cliffs onto beach. The setting was amazing, and I promise to post pictures of it ASAP. The two days spent setting up the cabin were pure delight. The cabin itself consisted of a one room building w/ a wood stove, a propane-fueled kitchen, and a sweet loft where we squeezed our cots and thermarests. Picture your dream cabin in the middle of nowhere..this was it. Our water came from a bunch of PVC piping that we ran up the hill to the large waterfall directly behind the cabin. I won't bore you with the details but we spent the evenings enjoying fine Alaskan IPA,gazing out at the two tidewater glaciers in the distance, and enjoying the endless sun (it doesn't get "dark" here until about 12 and even then it looks like twilight).

Now to the weekend! And what a memorial day weekend it was. I spent the better part of Friday hiking the 7.5 mile round trip to Ptarmigan Lake, seen in one of the photos above. The highlight of the weekend came on memorial day itself. On this day Chuck Lindsay, Mike T., Luke, and myself made the 7 hour round trip mission to the summit of Mt. Marathon..and then I died and went to heaven. At least that's what it felt like, as I spent the day kicking steps up STEEP snow, dodging small avalanche sloughs, and ultimately topping out on the peak after digging our way through the overhanging cornices that guarded the access to the summit. The peak itself is only ~ 4700' tall, but it rises to that height from sea level, and thus makes quite a long day. We basked in the sunlight (supposedly unusual for Seward..perhaps I've been lucky this past few weeks) on the summit for a while, then Chuck took off downhill on his telemark skis, pushing small avalanches off in front of him and clearing the path for us to glissade down the super steep snow slopes on our packs. What a great day.

That's the gist of the last 1.5 weeks. I'll try to do a better job of keeping this thing going in the near future, as it's hard to catch up on that much time without missing some of the finer details. Alaska is wonderful..but I must say, I miss NC. I miss Laura, I miss the best friends I've yet to make in this life, and I miss the warm embrace of the blue ridge mountains. That said, I will strive to make the most of my time here, and hope ya'll will continue to join me! I've posted a video, and links to more pictures below this post. Be well.

Cheers,
Mike

Pictures here: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=438798&id=572250523&l=82ad72363f

Video Below

Monday, May 24, 2010

Mount Alice






6' of snow, epic views, and a few more photos of week 1 in Alaska.No news, these are just the promised pics from Friday eve. This was followed up w/ a fire, and a soft light in the sky as we drank Alaskan I.P.A, ate fire-roasted bananas (1 banana, marshmallows, a slit down the middle, some chocolate, a few strawberries and some foil) and parted ways to go to bed at 1:30. It never did quite get dark.

Cheers,

-Mike

Sunday, May 23, 2010

No room for ego






Today I had my soul crushed, as I realized that I am not a naturally born tele skier.

At 5 o'clock Mike T, Dano, and myself headed up to race point, the (3,300' in 1.5 miles) peak behind my house. The thing is an absolute crusher and my thighs and heart were feeling this week's previous efforts. Our goal was to climb race point, then ski in the alpine bowl on its backside. No matter that I've never tele skied and we were going to be on terrain that would be challenging for me w/ alpine skis.Hiked up in shorts, took a few summit photos, changed and were ready to rock!

I don't want to go into too much detail except to say that the best photos weren't ever taken due to the conditions and the fact that I was often face first in the snow. The sights were sweet, the mountain commanded respect and The bowl was HUGE, steep, and scary. We made our way down one at a time, watching each other in case something happened. Luckily I was w/ two very experienced mountaineers/skiers, and we were careful to be safe.The video below shows Dano taking some turns.

I didn't learn how to tele ski (though I pulled off a few right turns) but I did learn some humility while feeling more inept than I EVER have before...all in a beautiful alpine environment w/ a trail head that is 4 blocks from my house. Good night lower 48.

Cheers,
Mike

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Prepare to high boat carry






DISCLAIMER: MY WRITING IS POOR, AND I CONSIDER MYSELF TO BE MUCH FUNNIER THAN I ACTUALLY AM. THAT SAID, IF YOU WANT TO SKIP THE WORDS AND MOVE ON TO THE PICTURES THEN GO TO THIS LINK:

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=434270&id=572250523&l=ee2161bff3

P.S. (it's okay to read this and still follow the link later)


UP BOAT!!! RRT boys and folks whose hobbies include recon Marine lingo will know that this refers to the action of lifting a zodiac above one's head (with the help of 5 others) in order to make said individual suffer. This suffering must take place in order to gain entry into the fraternity that is reconnaissance. It's actually better than a fraternity, because there are a million rules, you have to shave daily and cut your hair weekly, and there are no single women..... I digress.

The whole reason I bring this up is that a zodiac (the boat often used to torture young Marines) was the boat we took out today during the annual "Resurrection Conservation Alliance Beach Clean Up", which takes place in and around the bays of Seward, Alaska. I had seen the event publicized all over town and eagerly volunteered hoping to meet some folks and see more of my new home. And that is exactly what happened, as seen in the photos above. The weather was absolutely perfect, enabling us to land at 5 separate beaches in the area. Some of them are rarely visited as the surf is often too rough, so we were amped to be able to visit/clean/survey the beaches. The wildlife viewing was on point, as usual. I'm now 4 for 5 on bear sightings (more later), and we also saw orcas, seals, sea lions, and sea otters. The sea otters are the best, as they float on their back and are always just chillin' watching you roll by. The day was long (about 12 hours) but we managed to collect between 50-75 over-sized garbage bags worth of mostly plastic bottles and styrofoam. It was tough to roll on to a beach that might see less than 3 visitors a season, and have it completely covered in plastic bottles. Anyway, the cause was good, and we were able to enjoy a day that more than made up for puke-fest 2010 (last Sunday's maritime adventure w/ Dad).

So that wraps up today. Here's a quick recap of the last two days:

Thursday- Helped mark a trail to the 300 square mile (1,100 if you include its glaciers) Harding icefield which makes up the bulk of Kenai Fjords National Park. The hike was amazing, especially as it took the place of working in the office that day, thus I was paid to do it. The snow was 6-8' deep in most places, and we saw (drumroll please) a brown bear sow w/ her 2 year old cub (we watched them playing in the snow for almost 30 minutes), a black bear, two wolverines, and a number of mountain goats. (I won't even go in to the fact that there are as many bald eagles here as there are mullets at a monster truck rally.) I'll post photos from that day later, but the scenery on and around the glacier is out of this world.

Friday- Hiked about 1/3 of the way up Mount Alice, the tall, gorgeous peak that looms over Resurrection Bay and stares me in the face as I eat breakfast each morning. This hike too was awesome (I need to think of better ways to word these, lest ya'll stop reading my blog). The last 2 hours we were hiking up a steep snowfield past someone's ski tracks, which meant that the hike down was done on my butt, sledding w/ my rainjacket as my sled. Sweet.

I'm not feeling too creative, thus my writing is probably a bit dry tonight. I'll try better next time..perhaps some more sleep will help. Tomorrow evening I am going backcountry skiing in the alpine bowl behind my house..it's going to suck but my boss virtually insisted that I borrow his tele skis and learn how to "free the heel so I can free the mind." I don't want to make him angry during my first week, so I am going to humor him and make myself hike into the alpine and cruise down the 8' of snow that is lingering there. Man, life is so unfair sometimes. Oh, check this link for more photos of today: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=434270&id=572250523&l=ee2161bff3


Cheers!
-Mike

Monday, May 17, 2010

Bowl o' Butt



w







That's what I had for dinner. A bowl of butt..that's what they call the HUGE bowl of beer battered halibut chunks at Thorn's Showcase Lounge in Seward, my new home for the summer. Between all of the fish I've been eating and this fresh sea air I'm inhaling I might as well just grow fins, poke a hole at the base of my neck, and live the rest of my life in Resurrection Bay amongst the humpbacks..on second thought, that hole might be better place on my upper back, lest I suffocate myself with my own neck fat (a side effect of the beer battered fish.Vicious cycle but hey, that's nature).

So by now you've gathered that we've made it to Seward. Our last morning in Talkeetna proved excellent, as we ate at a "local" restaurant where everyone was seated at the same table, necessitating either awesome conversation or the sound of someone slurping their scrambled eggs amidst bouts of awkward silence. I DID awkwardly slurp my eggs, however we still had an amazing series of conversations with the folks to our right and left. To our right, a bunch of hippies working on some birch farm for the summer in exchange for some fresh moose turds that they used to cleanse their aura or something along those lines. Super nice though. To our left was this great family from Anchorage. The father, a native Talkeetnan, told us that he loved Anchorage because he was only "30 minutes from Alaska." This was in reference to the many Alaskans who camp out on their couches in the city rather than the great outdoors! Sounds like a lot of the folks at App State:) The town was mostly empty, though we were told that trains and tour buses would soon bring upwards of 400 tourists A DAY into the small one-lane town.We decided to head to Seward after a quick stop by the Talkeetna Ranger Station's climbing museum..

As we arrived in the Kenai Peninsula we had amazing views of the Chugach Range, which still boasted upwards of 10-15' of snow in places. As we pulled into Seward we saw two bald eagles, another moose (Bullwinkle's ugly sister), and then the gorgeous fjords of the Kenai Coastline. The contrast between 5,000' snowy peaks rising abruptly from sea level and the deep green ocean of Resurrection Bay is hard to describe. Our lodging for the last few evenings has been the Moby Dick Hostel and Lodging, where one can rent a private room for about 65 bucks a night. We've met a whole host of great people here from as far away as Sweden, Chile, France, etc. The living is simple and clean, with shared bathrooms (very clean) and a kitchen where everyone congregates to play cards and talk in the evenings.

Yesterday was quite eventful..Dad and I took a cruise out into through the Gulf of Alaska into Aialak Bay to view glaciers, wildlife, and people vomiting into the ocean. He was one of them, and it took all I had to hold it down. The seas heading into the open water of the Gulf of Alaska were pretty terrible, and reminded me why I haven't been on the open ocean in about 4 years. On the bright side we had amazing views of the Holgate and Bear Glaciers, and saw mountain goats, black bears, bald eagles, two humpback whales, a number of porpoises, sea lions, sea otters, etc. The cruise was spectacular, particularly as we were able to observe the amazing coastline in the company of many green-faced passengers.

Yesterday culminated in a night hike of ~ 1500' worth of the 3300' Mt. Marathon. The beauty of this, and many Alaskan adventures, was that we started our hike at 9 p.m. and finished at 11:45 just as it was getting "dark." I was accompanied on that journey by a UNC student, and a Swedish p.h.d candidate who remarked that our quest to get above treeline to the snow was," very much like American politics...every time you think you've seen the last bush, another one pops around the corner!" Classic.

This morning I started my first day at work amidst a group of wonderful people. My house is an awesome three bedroom fully furnished apartment with table side views of the harbor/mountains, and a basement full of toilet paper, laundry detergent, and soap (provided free to the staff). Cha-ching. I have plugged in with a number of folks who climb (including one mountain guide from Patagonia) and have been given the skinny on some low-key climbing areas, so I am sure many adventures will be had. The rest of the week will likely be the boring 9-5 computer stuff that most of you are experiencing at this very moment, as you sneak my blog in during your workday. Don't worry, I won't tell your boss. Saturday I've signed up for a Resurrection Bay cleanup with the Resurrection Bay Conservation Association, and that should yield some good photos.

Next week I'll head to Anchorage on Tuesday, before leaving on Wednesday for a three-day trip to the VERY remote coastline of Ailak Bay. I am going to monitor the coastline (length/important waypoints/etc) and do some gruntwork and in exchange I get to spend 2 nights sleeping in a tent on a beach that is about about 1.5 hours (by sea) from the nearest electricity. The photos above give an idea of the setting.Sweet.Dad heads off tomorrow, and it'll be sad to see him leave this father/son trip of a lifetime.Sorry for the wordy post. Until next time...

Cheers,
Mike