Category Archives: Dan Branch

Riding with Pedro

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAMy biking partner and I are being taken to the alpine in one of the older White Pass Yukon rail carriages—the one set aside for hikers and German tourists. We could be riding the section of the Klondike Highway that climbs 12 miles from Skagway, Alaska to White Pass, sometimes at a 12 percent grade. Instead we relax, listening to a Yukon gold rush lesson from a disembodied voice generated several cars back as the train clunks over narrow gauge track. In its bowels rest Pedro and Side Meat, the weighed down touring bicycles we will ride 328 miles of British Columbia and the Yukon Territory to Haines, Alaska.  I should be reflecting on the challenges ahead — steep grades, old legs, bears, bad weather, trouble finding drinking water or even beer. Instead I gawk at beauty as we climb from coastal rainforest to a place of glacier scraped granite and alpine lakes.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAAfter claiming our touring bikes from the baggage car at Fraiser B.C. we roll up to Canadian customs where the agent asks the usual questions about money, guns, liquor, and tobacco. (He doesn’t care about fruit.) Since both bikes sport a set of large panniers affixed to front and back wheel racks, these are fair questions. When we answer in the negative, the agent wants to know how we are going to deal with bears or that wolf that recently chased a cyclist on our route. I want to tell him, “good luck and common sense,” but only smile to avoid a pannier search for bear spray.

With a waive of the custom agent’s hand we are released onto the Klondike Highway to pilot the heavily laden bikes into Carcross, YT.  Pedro, my 30 old Trek 520 soon settles down. We milk a tail wind for much needed help while climbing endless steep bumps that make hard work out of the descent from White Pass into Carcross. It’s hot for the mountains and sunny. We are always thirsty. The sun and deep blue sky bring out the beauty of the landscape—at first a broad flat valley of granite and shallow lakes boxed in by steep peaks, then walls of trembling poplar leaves until we reach the long blue waters of Tutshi Lake. For the rest of the day its all light brown scree slopes plunging into lake waters.

We camp night one at Carcross, hauling water from the gas station/cafe/store which also provides us beer and an excellent meatloaf dinner. We eat while watching the Toronto Bluejays game on TV. Outside the sun sparkles on Nares and Bennett Lake and the railroad trestle separating the two.  We we are too tired and thirsty to mind missing the show. Not normally a big beer drinker, the day’s dry heat, the sun, the exertion make me mad for brew.

Day two we break camp and ride into Whitehorse, receiving an unexpected blessing at the Emerald Lake overlook.  An Anglican priest, stopping on his way to his mission church in Carcross to admire the product of shafts of morning sunlight striking the milky green lake waters, offers a prayer after watching me slide through loose gravel in the parking area. It’ a fine blessing that washes away some of the concerns about aging bodies and bad drivers that had been bubbling up on the morning’s ride.

Our good weather continues in Whitehorse, where we stay two days, sharing the Robert Service Campground with Germans and other world travelers. I have a flat tire on the bike path running along the Yukon River. A nice rider stops and helps me patch it. After finding several deep cuts in it, he advises that I replace the failing tire with one I purchased that day at a local shop. I think of the blessing and recognize today’s minor miracles: that I thought to buy the tire, that the shop had a quality touring one that fits Pedro’s outdated 27 inch wheels, that the helpful rider stopped by, that the homeless guy emerging from a riverbank nap didn’t manage to take my bike for a ride. Another miracle was the discovery of a rich patch of wild raspberries which yielded enough fruit to make memorable the next morning’s breakfast.

It’s 100 miles on the Alaska Highway from Whitehorse to Haines Junction, YT. We hope to cover 50 of it on day three of riding. Lack of good camping opportunities force us to pedal 70 miles to Cracker Creek where we cook Indian food on the center line of a redundant section of the highway before collapsing into sleep. We wouldn’t have made it that far if not for Irene, who served us hamburgers, french fries and a Canadian Beer at her restaurant along the the way.

On the short ride from Cracker Creek into Haines Junction. YT we run into a solo biker from Ottawa who wants to make sure we know the Village Bakery is still open. This is good news indeed for which we thank him before he proceeds to announce all the good bakeries he had exploited on his two week ride through the Northland.  After visiting a local farmer’s market in Haines Junction we suck down steamed but ungarnished Swiss Chard in our motel room and prepare for the 148 miles of mountain road we must ride to the ferry terminal in Haines, Alaska.

Facing a headwind and rain, we climb out of Haines Junction for 3.5 miles to where the road takes on a rolling personality, dropping only to rise a little higher as low clouds appear to chew on the surrounding mountain tops. This is our hometown weather so we push more on than 50 miles to the Million Dollar Falls Campground where, we were told earlier by another group of Juneau bikers, cold beer would be on offer. Those 18 were riding naked bikes behind support vehicles that haul their clothing, camping gear, and food. They delivered. The beer refreshed and the company’s kindness reaffirmed the power of our Emerald Lake blessing.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAWe leave Million Dollar Falls with the group of 18, who soon disappear into  fog covering the long incline of road leading toward Alaska. This becomes a special day as fog gives way to broken cloud conditions, sunshine illuminates retreating glaciers and broad flat river valleys full of clucking ptarmigan, nervous ground squirrels, golden eagles, swan pairs, and at least one grizzly bear sow and cub. We see the later fairly near the road on a treeless river plain. We stop. You have to, through if she thought we endangered her child, the mother bear could easily run us to ground. We are nothing but slow moving caribou to her. She is simply lovely with still wet golden brown fur glistening in the mountain sun, watching over a miniature version of her self in a darker brown coat.  We leave when she and her charge start moving towards our spot on the road.

My affection for Pedro always grows on days like this when it takes me to a top of the world place then lets me ride it down from it on steep descents to the familiar tidewater forests of home.

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Still More Sun

P1110129After packing the bicycle panniers for a seven day ride, I drive Aki out to North Douglas Island for a walk through the old growth forest. We are still rich in warm sunshine. It’s the middle of the day so open areas like beaches and meadows have all detail washed away by bright light. Not so in the forest where sun penetrates to illuminate hidden spider webs in sparkling light, turns the thorny devil club leaves into translucent green plates.

P1110134Warmth weather following a few wet days had triggered an eruption of fungus growth in the forest. My favorite are the orange waves of Chicken of the Woods (Polyporus) that just formed on broken tree fragments. Aki peed on this one, which is acceptable only if seen as a mark of respect. I never sure with dogs. P1110144

Tasting Salmon Berries in the Sun

P1110112With the wealth of trails in the Juneau area, I knew we would have this one to ourselves, even on this warm, sunny Sunday. Just a gated gravel road ending at an old mine, the trail climbs through and then above an old growth conifer forest. Succulent salmon berries, red or yellow, grow along the trail. The red ones’ glittery translucent makes them the easiest to spot. When ripe they taste like watered wine and leave a wild after taste on the tongue. I haven’t worked out a way to describe the taste of the opaque yellow ones.

P1110094Away from flight and helicopter corridors, the trail offers silence as well as tasty berries. After minutes of climbing we only hear the sounds of boot strikes on gravel and Aki’s panting. Undeterred by the heat the little poodle mix pushes on ahead. I worry about the lack of trail side watering possibilities until we hear a small brook ahead. Even through thirsty, Aki won’t approach the water on her own but waits from me to slip and slide down a small slope to where the stream enters a culvert. Aki takes a few caution sips then moves up stream where blue berry brush and ferns form a shading canopy. When she has drunk her fill we return to the sun washed trail and find that American Robin just ahead— the one that all summer has waited for our approach on each trail taken.   P1110092

A Bear’ Bed. A Beaver’s Den

L1210418Back in the rain forest after two weeks of sun in Anchorage, I’m wandering the Troll Woods with Aki.  A gray world of softness, the woods offer the best place to relax after cramming a semester’s worth of learning into 12 days.  Yellow-green moss climbs the trees and covers the ground five inches deep. Beavers hauling freshly cut tree branches to their wood stash have worn a trail in the moss, which we follow to where a break in thick alders offers a filtered view of a pond.

L1210400I never noticed the pond before and wonder if it is another beaver public works project. Ever interested in finding the new in well known places I lead a reluctant Aki around an alder tangle then down a recent path formed through three foot tall grass. It ends in a circle of crushed grass near the pond’s edge—a bear’s bed. “Why not,” I tell Aki. If I were a bear recently sated by Sockeye Salmon snatched from Steep Creek while tourists snapped their cameras, had endured helicopter noise and bus fumes, I’d come here to contemplate this pocket pond. I’d watch water bugs skate its surface, dig the perfect reflection of the deep green buckbean stalks choking one bay, laugh at the how a solitary glacier erratic looks like a partially submerged skull sporting mossy hair. When darkness shuts down the industrial tourism machine I’d curl up on the still soft grass stalks and dream of more salmon. I’d wake in the morning before the mosquitos and snatch a few Nagoon Berries before heading to work.

Not wanting to be here when the bear returns, we take a reverse course on the beaver’s logging road.  Near another pond, the one where last Spring she dashed across too soft ice to investigate beaver tail slaps, Aki stares at the water then dashes over to a newly formed beaver den of branches and mud. With the tense posture of an interested poodle and tail a metronome she stands on top of the den until reluctantly answering my summons to, “Get away from there you stupid dog.”    When will she learn that the big toothy rodents do not want to be her friends?L1210417

Old Rondy Trail

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With a name like “The Old Rondy Trail” this dark line on the map promised a little adventure. It should also provide a way to avoid the traffic noise I would have to endure using the street alternative. So, at 6:45 on this overcast Anchorage day I steer my beefed up comfort bike onto packed gravel past a “Dog Musher Only Sign.” Knowing those boys won’t arrive until the winter snows I push on. It’s all civilized gravel until I reach a wooden bridge partially covered with tuffs of white hair. I guess it is from a shedding moose but can’t figure out why so much of it ended up on this flat wooden deck way.

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Now looking carefully for moose I continue through a boggy, birch dominated forest that offers occasional views of mountains. I have to ignore the possibility of moose when the trail deteriorates into an obstacle course of mud, ruts and exposed tree roots. Being a road bike guy it takes all of my mountain bike skills to make it to the pleasantly paved Campbell Creek Bike path and its easy trail back to the dorm.

Lessons in Solitude

P1130434This trail, beginning at the Alyeska Ski Resort and ending in a string of beautiful subalpine meadows, teaches the value of solitude. The first half mile hosts a near constant stream of hikers, most just taking a curious peak into a northern rain forest. A smaller number push on to see the Winner Creek Gorge and take a promised ride over the stream in a bucket suspended from a cable. The trail forks before the gorge where I right turn to explore a less visited section of the creek.

Before the fork, I dottled along finding spaces between groups so I can enjoy the play of lights of darks in the forest understory. After taking the road less traveled I am alone except for a tiny vole galloping up the trail then diving to safety beneath a blueberry bush. Aki would have loved that. There was also a raven sounding like a honking Canada Goose.

After the junction the trail climbs through a forest of smaller and smaller conifers before delivering me to the subalpine meadows. I guess you should call them that. They form in places where the creek valley opens into a shallow “V”—large swaths of grasses and taller plants like the Elderberry and  Wild Rhubarb. In between I find almost hidden clumps of dark purple Monkshood, blue Wild Geraniums, and even red Columbine. Above rises two glaciated peaks. Here the wind cools and blows off the mosquitos, the stream sings its low sound without having to shout to be heard over the sound of passing conversation.

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Cranes on the Coast Trail

P1130408I’ve ridden to this spot three times to see the cranes that I saw here Saturday week. There they are, two huge birds, mostly brown, harvesting food on a grassy mud flat. They ignore me and the other traffic on the bike path, the noise and vibration of a passing train, the oil tanker they can easily see down inlet from their feeding station. I am pretty sure they are Sand Hills but have no confidence in my birding abilities. While I am a little jealous of those who can tell one gull from another, I can’t get over the awe stage that settling in while watching early morning light enrich the colors of a wild bird’s feathers.

Signs from Canada

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I am still in Anchorage, 1200 miles away from Aki, riding a rental bike each morning before classes begin. The sun shines down on the Chester Creek Trail on this morning’s ride, at one place striking Canada’s beautiful red and white maple leaf flag as it hangs next to a Stars and Stripes still in shadow. I catch the translucent thing through the forks of a birch tree while flying down the trail. Is it a sign?

The plan was to ride all the way to Cook Inlet and back but a gang of Canada Geese, maybe 30 or 40 derailed me. They occupy the entire bike path near the bottom of Westchester Lagoon. A jogger on the other side of the geese waits a respectful time then slowly chugs through, Moses like, while the Geese part—driven by an unseen hand or common sense. At this time of the day either explanation works.

The geese close in behind the jogger to retake the ground. Not feeling the jogger’s power, I turn around and pedal back to the dorm, passing a surly looking group of chubby birds standing motionless in the water.

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