Thanksgiving Thoughts

Point Orford, OR

“If you live the life you love, you’ll get the blessings from above.” Van Morrison

What a wonderful world we live in! I just spent a couple of days traveling the coast through Oregon and northern California to visit some friends for Thanksgiving. It was a spectacular drive, even though it was very rainy.  It was so beautiful it broke my heart. It filled my soul to overflowing and brought tears of joy to my eyes. It was a good thing it was rainy, or I never would have made it to my destination for Thanksgiving!

Wrangell Mountains, Alaska
I am very thankful for this view from my front porch!

The drive made me  reflect on my blessings. I have so much to be thankful for. I am thankful above all for the beauty in this world and the opportunities I have had to experience it. I am thankful for the love of family and friends and the kindness of strangers and acquaintances. I am thankful for my home in McCarthy, and the satisfaction my seasonal job as a ranger in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park brings me.  I am thankful for my little Toyota truck, over 250,000 miles and still going strong.

Kennecott Historic Landmark, Alaska
My job as a ranger is in this super cool old ghost town.

I am also thankful for a new opportunity I just found to help market my photography.  If you’re interested in getting one of my images as wall art, on a coffee mug or a tote bag, check out this link. My site here is still under construction. I have a few bugs to work out, and I am in travel mode right now, so have patience. I will continue to add images as I can.

Take advantage of Small Business Saturday and Cyber Monday! From now through Monday get free UPS ground shipping with every order. If you are in Alaska and can’t get Ground Shipping, keep tuned and I will have other sales throughout the holiday season.

Cactus Blossom, Death Valley National Park, CA
This image could be hanging on your wall!

Good Lord Willin’ and the Creek Don’t Rise (The View From My Front Porch Part II))

Fireweed Mountain, Wrangell St. Elias National Park

McCarthy Creek is flooding. I may be stranded here at home for a while.

Earlier this spring I had the opposite problem. I couldn’t GET home. Early winter cold temperatures with no snow cover, coupled with a late spring, caused the ground to freeze hard & deep, leading to a humongous lake in the low spot on my road. It was so deep my neighbors called it Lake Michigan. Just to keep things interesting, there were seven new trees down on my foot trail, too.

McCarthy, AK
The lake in my road

Even after the ground finally thawed and the lake drained, it was solstice before I could finally drive my ATV home. I had to wait for the road to dry and firm up so I wouldn’t turn it into a permanent bog. At least I was able to get the trees cleared so I could hike in.

Last spring access was difficult, too. A freak windstorm after days and days of heavy rain the previous fall had downed whole GROVES of aspens. Friends helped me clear my road after the storm, but I never got around to even looking at the foot trail.

Blocked trail
One of the trees down on my trail

When I came in that spring, there was a lake in the road, although it was much smaller than this year’s and only lasted a couple of weeks. When I went to try my trail, the dozens of blown down trees were piled ten to fifteen feet high, stacked like pixie sticks. On top of all that, I had a sprained ankle from slipping on the ice. Ahh, breakup! ‘Shwacking through the woods to get home that spring was NOT fun!

I had another interesting challenge that spring. Like a lot of folks who live off the grid in Alaska, I have a “cold hole” for refrigeration. This is a mini-root cellar constructed of three fifty-five gallon drums with the ends cut out, stacked together and buried. Things stay real cold and it had worked well for years. But that spring, ground pressure from either ice or a rising water table started warping the barrels. You know that scene in Star Wars when Luke, Han, Princess Leia and the Wookie start to get crushed in the trash compactor? It was like that. My bottom cooler got completely wedged. Folks that I had come by and look at it to give me advice just looked down and shook their heads. It was such a ridiculous “only in the bush” kind of problem that it was actually rather humorous. But it was still a problem.

Stairway Icefall
My fireweed garden

There’s a reason they call living out here the do-it-the-hard-way club.

I don’t have a garden. I’m overwhelmed enough with my house project. I don’t have time for one yet, especially in a year like this one. But I do have a wild garden – a combination fireweed/rose garden/raspberry patch. I encourage certain plants that grow here naturally by spreading a few random seeds in the fall.

It was starting to look pretty good. Most years the fireweed is taller than I am, and the raspberries had really taken off.

Moose Calf
Baby Moose

Then the moose discovered my garden. It started about 2 years ago – I came home from work one day and all those five-foot high fireweed blossoms had disappeared. I was astounded.

Last year I caught her in the act, a mama with 2 babies. I watched her mow down my flowers and cringed as the whole family tore into the two tiny birch trees I had been so carefully nurturing, the only plants I had actually transplanted onto my land. What was I to do? I sure wasn’t going to mess around with a mama moose!

Cow moose
She likes raspberries!

Then I woke up this morning to a moose in my raspberry patch. No-o-o! Stick to the fireweed! I had to go stand on my porch and tell her she needed to share. She wasn’t so sure about that, but since I wouldn’t go away, she eventually ambled off to the other side of the house.

I think she might be one of last year’s calves. She looks young, possibly a yearling. I’m resigned to losing the fireweed, but the raspberries? No fair! I didn’t even know moose LIKED raspberries until today! As soon as she left, I went out to pick what was left before she came back.

So why do I put up with it? Why deal with all the hardship? Why not go somewhere with the basic comforts of life, like electricity and running water?

Young Snowshoe Hare
Baby bunny

Well, I like watching my neighbors the moose, even though I don’t want to share my raspberries with them. I like waking up to the birds singing and greeting the bunnies hopping around my front yard.

As a former Colorado girl, owning an aspen-filled ridge is truly living the dream. How did I ever get so lucky?

I like lying back on a mossy hill, surrounded by lovely lichens and low-bush cranberries. I like living in a land full of kind, courageous, happy, amazing people, that it is a privilege and a pleasure to call my friends and neighbors. I like looking out at one of the most sublime views on the planet. Living here, I feel like every day, as I gaze out at the view from my front porch, I hear the angels sing.

Is living here the do-it-the-hard-way club? Most certainly. Is it worth it? Absolutely!

Stairway Icefall
The View From My Front Porch

Driving the McCarthy Road in the Sweet Light

Wrangell St. Elias National Park

I love the McCarthy Road. The road drifts east 60 miles from Chitina to McCarthy, a tangled dance of Park, private, Native and State lands. It’s a bit on the raw side. If you make it in 2 hours, you had a very good day. Most days it takes about three.

McCarthy Road
Wrangell Mountains in the Sweet Light

I don’t think I’ve ever made it in 2 hours. I like to take my time. It helps me make the transition from laid-back McCarthy to the modern world.

It used to be called “the worst road in Alaska”. The first year I was here, every time my friend Jill drove the road, another part fell off her car. After 2 summers of losing pieces, she was done. Back then, travelers understood that the journey was just as important as the destination. A trip down the McCarthy Road was an adventure in itself.

Leaving Chitina, you pass through a one-way cut, remnants of an old railway tunnel. It’s a kind of gateway, your first clue that the McCarthy Road is a different kind of drive. Around the corner, you get your first glimpse of BIG water, the confluence of the Chitina and Copper Rivers. It’s the 10th largest river in the U. S. in volume and the only river in Alaska that’s longer is the Yukon.

Copper River, Alaska
Copper and Chitina River confluence in early spring

The Copper is famous for its fishery. Copper River Red salmon is regarded as one of the finest salmons in the world. At the bridge is a State subsistence fishery, so people come from everywhere on Alaska’s road system to try their hand at dipnetting for some prime fillets and a few fish to can or smoke for the winter. Upstream you can look past a jumble of local fish wheels to the glowing snows of Mt. Drum.

McCarthy Road
Summer sign for the MXY Road

Cross the Copper and there’s the sign. It’s a warning sign – Are you SURE you’re ready for the McCarthy Road? The sign is a lot more severe in the winter “Travel on this road is NOT recommended. Expect avalanches, road glaciers, extreme cold…” Be prepared for any eventuality. You’re a long way from nowhere.

Right after the sign, the road climbs the Kotsina Bluffs, a microcosm of future challenges. The washboard on the way up the hill will rattle your parts off. Skinny road, steep cliff, no guardrails, and mudslides sloughing off the hill to the right.

Kotsina River, Wrangell St. Elias National Park
Kotsina Bluffs

The Kotsina River has recently changed course, crossing its broad floodplain to erode the bottom of the bluff directly below you. Look for the half-buried RV near the Copper, stranded and then inundated when the Kotsina made its sudden detour. But maybe you’d better keep your eyes on the road, watching for potholes, falling rocks, or oncoming traffic around the next curve.

At the top of the bluff, you hit the chipseal. A few years ago, the DOT chipsealed most of the first 17 miles of the road, from the top of the bluffs to the Kuskulana. We warned them this wasn’t the best idea. Within a year it was a minefield of horrendous potholes and frost heaves so bad that entire sections of road had just fallen away. The “improvements” haven’t changed the character; you still have to pay attention.

Chitina River Overlook, McCarthy Road
Chitina River

After a few miles, pull over for a scenic view of the Chitina River. I get a warm fuzzy feeling when I look at that vast wilderness upstream and realize I’m going into the heart of it.

Wrangell - St. Elias National Park
Ponds along the McCarthy Road

Travel past permafrost ponds filled with ducks, beaver and water lilies, catching glimpses of Mt. Blackburn through the trees. Wild roses form hedges along the side of the road.  At the end of the chipseal is the Kuskulana Bridge.

This was the 11th highest bridge in the United States when I was built in 1910. It’s a long way down. How long? Grab a couple of rocks, the bigger the better. Walk to the middle of the bridge. Drop them. I like to drop one on each side. Listen for the sound of the impact. You’ll listen for a little longer than you thought it would take. Yeah, it’s a long way down.

McCarthy Road
Kuskulana Bridge

Back in the 1980’s, the crossing was 2 planks. No guard rails. You needed a spotter to make sure your tires stayed on the boards. Not many people made it to McCarthy back then.

In the ‘90’s, you could occasionally bandit bungee jump off the Kuskulana Bridge. Word would go out through the grapevine – tomorrow – bungee jumping on the Kuskulana… It was free if you went naked, and a party even if you didn’t jump.

Wrangell - St. Elias National Park
Traveling slow on the McCarthy Road

Back in those days, we all traveled slow on the McCarthy Road. It was a one-lane road then, gravel all the way, and the road crew didn’t make it out our way very often. Only one or 2 RVs a year made it all the way down back then, and we all thought they were crazy. Traffic was so light that when you saw another car you stopped to pass the time of day. I kind of miss those days.

There are rewards for going slower. Less dust, more wildlife. One of my favorite spots for viewing wildlife are the ponds and marshes just west of Chokosna. This is the best spot on the road for Trumpeter Swans.

Trumpeter Swans on the McCarthy Road, Wrangell St. Elias National Park
Trumpeter Swans

Sometimes you get lucky and the parents bring their little cygnets close to the road for you to see and photograph. The reflections of the surrounding mountains on the water are sublime. And if you hit this patch, as I often do, at the sweet light time of the evening… You, too will fall in love with the McCarthy Road.

One spring I saw an eagle eating a duck here. Last week an eagle practically landed on my windshield on the Kotsina Bluffs. Raptors, waterfowl, songbirds, the McCarthy Road is a birdwatcher’s delight.

Moose on McCarthy Road
Moose on McCarthy Road

It’s no Denali, but wildlife sightings are frequent. Moose sightings are common. Twice I’ve seen a wolf, once a lynx. Some lucky souls have seen bison recently near Chitina, stragglers from a small herd of Plains Bison introduced to the Copper River in the 1930’s. There are bears, too.

One of my all-time favorite wildlife sightings on the road was a massive grizzly bear in the Crystalline Hills. I followed gargantuan piles of scat and footprints for about a mile before I saw him. He continued to nonchalantly plod down the road in front of me for another half mile before eventually turning into the brush. That dude OWNED the road!

McCarthy Road, Wrangell St. Elias National Park
Gilahina Trestle

The Gilahina Trestle marks the halfway point. This is the prettiest part of the road in the fall when the aspen turn.

Music is an important part of a McCarthy Road trip for me. Good tunes add to the already abundant joy. Some tunes are especially suited to the drive. I like to have Leftover Salmon’s “Dance on Your Head” in my I-Pod feed as I approach McCarthy after a long absence – “There’s no stopping this party, cuz this is a festival town”.

Crystal Lake, Long Lake, and you’re on the home stretch. Although it’s been a long drive, you still have to pay attention. The last 10 miles are the roughest.

McCarthy Road, Wrangell St. Elias National Park
Beaver Dam in the road

The marsh near the DNR rest stop is my favorite place to see moose. Earlier this summer I saw a moose family reunion there, 8 moose in one place, from the oldest, grayest, Grandma moose I’ve ever seen to a newborn calf. You never know what’s around the next bend on the McCarthy Road.

When Porphyry and Sourdough Mountains dominate the view, I know I’m almost home.

McCarthy Road, Alaska
Mudslide on McCarthy Road

Just a mudslide or two and a few hellacious potholes and I’ll be there – there being the Kennicott River. It’s still 3 miles on the ATV to my house, but that’s another story.

Thoreau said “The rougher the road, the finer the filter.” I like the McCarthy Road being rough. Keeps out the riff-raff. Makes people slow down and pay attention. I love the McCarthy Road, potholes and all. It’s always an epic journey to me.

Porphyry and Sourdough Mountains, Wrangell St. Elias National Park
The Homestretch
Beautiful Jacob's Ladder
The flowers are nice, too!
McCarthy Road
It’s one stunning view after another.

 

 

The View from My Front Porch – A Blast from the Past

When I was 16 I ran away from home. I wasn’t mad at Mom & Dad or anything, it’s just the whole country was on the move and I didn’t want to miss out. My first big adventure.

In the course of this adventure, I ended up hopping a freight in New Mexico, with 3 guys and 2 dogs. It was a rough ride, a constant struggle not to bounce out the open boxcar as the train jostled down the track. My friends went to sleep, but I spent all night watching lightning play over the mesas as we traveled along.

We jumped off the train at sunrise, and stumbled into a surreal landscape. We wandered through a circle of weird fake ticky tacky teepees. Teepees in the desert? That’s just not right!  Where the Hell is this? We walked up to a neighboring gas station and asked. The old guy working there looked at us a little strange and said, “Holbrook, Arizona.

My wigwam

The ticky tacky teepees are still there. Wigwam Village is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Built in 1950, it’s a slice of historic Route 66. Classic cars are parked in front of each “wigwam”.  It’s still a working motel.

Well, of course, I had to stay there, for old times’ sake. There are cheaper places in Holbrook to stay. There definitely are fancier places. But there’s nowhere with more character.

Inside the teepee

Why stay here? Holbrook is the closest town to Petrified Forest National Park. If you are a nostalgia fan, get your kicks on Route 66. Stay at the Wigwam Village in Holbrook.

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The View from my Front Porch

Mt. Donaho & Stairway Icefall

We all have our priorities in life. Words and actions that guide us on our path. Maybe it’s family, first and forever. Maybe it’s work hard so you can retire by the time you’re 50. Well, I’ve never been especially ambitious. Although I love a lot of people deeply,  I’m basically footloose and fancy free, with no super close emotional ties. So my priority is a little different. From early on, I vowed that the best way to keep my soul alive was to wake in beauty every day.

Bonanza Ridge
Bonanza Ridge

I’ve tried to be true to my vow. I’ve lived in a lot of beautiful places – from the Florida Keys to the Rockies to Hawaii and of course, Alaska. I had the great good fortune to discover, many long years ago, one of the most beautiful places on the planet – McCarthy, Alaska. This has been my home for a long time, and I wake in beauty every day there, as you can see. I took all these pictures one day from my front porch!

I’ve spent winters in McCarthy, winters filled with a peace and solitude few ever experience. But we don’t call it the “do it the hard way club” for nothing. And my half-finished house is not really ready to stay in during the deep cold of a winter in the Alaskan bush. Besides, there are just too many beautiful places in the world to spend all your time in just one, no matter how incredible that place is. Too many ecosystems I haven’t experienced.  Life is short and there’s so much to see!

Porphyry Mountain

So, this winter I’ll be taking an extended road trip. In the coming weeks the view from my front porch will change, as I travel through the West before heading back up North, following the flowers from the desert to the coast.

Fireweed Mountain
Fireweed Mountain

As the view changes and evolves, so will my blog. I will have updates on the wildflowers, of course, but I’ll try to keep things interesting by mixing it up a bit. I’ll share my passion for our public lands as I discover new places. Look for vignettes of quirky, off-the-wall destinations, interesting tidbits about the natural world, lots of pretty pictures, and maybe even a little history now and then.

my favorite view
my favorite view

Join me on my travels by staying tuned to this blog. Follow my posts and share them with your friends. Walk in beauty with me always, I would love the company!

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