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10-02-2020, 01:34 PM #1
AK in the Summer... when to go and what to do.
Wife and I are planning a summer road trip in Alaska. It’s been of those bucket list things we have been wanting to do for a while and I think we are gunna pull the trigger next summer.
Aside from logistics of making that road trip (that will be tackled here in a bit). When is the ideal time to go? Our itinerary will be primarily filled with hiking (no backpacking as we will have a 6 month old kiddo), fishing, and just taking in the sights.
Planning mid August, but honestly not tied to that.
Any must see areas we should put on the itinerary?
Looking at this company as they have some 1 - way road trip options.
https://gonorth-alaska.com/portfolio...yukon-11-days/
Thanks for any recommendations
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10-02-2020, 02:06 PM #2
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10-02-2020, 11:26 PM #3
I would avoid that company. They do not even know the road from Talkeetna to Palmer. It is the Parks hwy not Glenn. Big red flag.
off your knees Louie
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10-03-2020, 12:03 AM #4
August is rainy season. But, good salmon fishing and the day length is nice if you're not used to midnight sun
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10-03-2020, 12:46 AM #5
I’d avoid gonorth unless you like riding in a van with 15 other people everywhere. You’d be way better off to fly up and rent a sprinter or RV and buy a milepost. Mid August would not be my first choice of time to visit. Weather, fishing, and access will be better at the end of June to the middle of July. Mid August at least near the coast get shitty, think all the rain western WA gets, happens in a month and a half.
But Ellen kicks ass - if she had a beard it would be much more haggard. -Jer
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10-03-2020, 12:47 AM #6
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10-08-2020, 12:33 AM #7
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Seconding late June or early July, around summer solstice. The downside is that it's peak tourist season. September is really nice too, even though it's not summer and there's no fishing it's still good temps and there's a chance to see aurora.
Some friendly hikes for young parents around Anchorage include Independence Mine and the Hatcher Pass area, Lost Lake and Crescent Lake down on the Kenai Peninsula, Winner Creek in Girdwood, and maybe Crow Pass. More if you're willing to carry the kid!
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10-08-2020, 09:16 AM #8
Took trip with wife a few years back.
I would do pretty much everything again the same just with lots more time
Canoe and cabin at Denali Lake state park is prime. Cabin did have a mosquito problem. Nothing like sitting in a canoe with no one else on the lake looking up at Denali to decompress Great hiking just up the road
We like to backpack and staying in backwoods cabins is cheap and wife felt safe from bears Great hike and a bit more civilized, caught a shuttle. Ran into people on trail but not bad
Meal at Alyska hilltop restaurant was well worth it hike afterwards watch paragliders in evening light
Denali in one direction and Seward in the other makes for a full trip. I would spend as little time to n Anchorage as possible
Fishing on the Russian river looked like a cluster
Good time fishing out of Seward
Wife is a knitter and liked the musk ox farm north of Anchorage
Bakery outside Talkaneka and beer in town
We saw little wildlife despite hiking. Buy the big canister and be bear smart. If you want the Yellowstone experience ride the bus in Denali national park
Check Denali state park and state website for bc cabin rentals. Reserve as soon as you can as an out of stater
https://www.tetongravity.com/forums/...ghlight=Alaska
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10-14-2020, 10:37 AM #9
Lost lake is 16 miles, then another 16 miles back to the car any way you slice it. Crow Creek is 23 miles, and about 45 back to the car if you go back by road. Lower Winner Creek will put you back on a road only a couple miles from where you start... But OP's kiddo will be 15-18months old next year, right? "Leaving it all on the hill" takes a different meaning when you have a child who still needs looking after when you're smoked after a long day with lots of vert.
OP -
Happily, for every one of those famous trails there's a dozen day hikes that aren't in the guidebooks [although most are out & back]. Just ask around once you get here.
Jed gave you your best timing for a first visit. You should definitely book a trip with him if you like halibut.
Anchorage is a place to get supplies rather than hang out, unless you want expensive hotels and taxis. You'll see. There's a couple campgrounds in town, but one is surrounded by ghetto and the other one will be full. There's plenty of things to do and some of it is clustered downtown in walking distance, but it's a city - A 70s boom town at that.
Eagle River to the N, and Bird Creek to the S are the closest decent campgrounds. Anchorage's burgeoning homeless population has dibs on any clump of bushes big enough to hide a tent in town. You can boondock an RV at Dimond Walmart, just watch your shit or it might disappear.
Even if ppl are active and are focused on an endeavor like climbing or skiing. I still recommend a big road trip on their first visit here. Take about 10 days to drive around and car camp - Denali NP area, cross the Arctic Circle and see a touch of the Brooks Range, the Eastern Alaska Range from the Richardson, see Thompson Pass & Valdez, the Kenai Peninsula...Oh man yeah.
Bring the best camera gear you can lay your hands on.
30% of the restaurants are surprisingly good, some are incredible. The other 70% range from "disappointing" to "dangerous". If you want to do a roadside foodie tour, try to get local reccos before you pop in!
Always have rain gear and be well shod.
Native art makes the best gifts and souvenirs.
Get the 2021 Alaska Milepost, and the Alaska Atlas and Gazetteer if you don't already have digital topo maps of the state.Last edited by highangle; 10-14-2020 at 12:01 PM.
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10-15-2020, 02:07 PM #10
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10-15-2020, 02:37 PM #11
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Another thing “to do” is get your wife and kid mosquito net hats! No matter how uncool you think it is, it can be a mental lifesaver for you.
Our trips have been fly in and float trips so hopefully you get more chiming in on hiking... Spending some time in Denali I’d recommend the tour bus that drives through the park and talk to a ranger before you hike - you do not want to pull over because something looks cool and start hiking toward it!
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10-18-2020, 02:44 AM #12
I second the mosquito netting. Some years it’s not bad. But if you happen to hit it when the mosquitos are raging it’s brutal.
I love the Lake Clark National Park area. Been going up there for quite a few years now. Requires about an hour bush plane flight from Anchorage but it’s epic. Glaciers, volcanos, fishing, hiking, bear viewing. All the stuff you hope to experience in the Alaskan wilderness. We stay at The Farmlodge in Port Alsworth. Awesome family friendly place. Amazing food, etc. You can floatplane trip out of there, but it isn’t necessary to as you can do quite a bit by just going on a boat day or hiking locally. Even if you only zipped out there for a couple days I think it’d be totally worth the experience.
thefarmlodge.com
Here’s a video of my climb up Tanalian mountain which can be reached on foot directly from the lodge.
https://youtu.be/nN5b9QcGt_o
And a few pics of the area.
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04-20-2022, 09:03 PM #13
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I lived in Alaska for a year. Those guided trips are almost always a ripoff, skip them. The baby will make things tougher, depending on how much you get the baby used to hiking and how much you are willing to rough it.
I second the recommendation that you just rent a car and go on an epic road trip. It really is the best way to see the state.
Good times to come are early June and then very late August/early September. July can see mosquitos the size of hummingbirds. Any time, bring head nets and at least one set of long sleeves + pants just in case.
If you look at a map, the major roads you would consider driving are largely shaped like an upside down Y- one road going north out of Fairbanks up to the Brooks Range, then two going south - one past Denali NP on the way to Anchorage, and the other going towards Valdez.
My personal recommendation would be to fly into Fairbanks, then on day 2 drive south to Denali NP. You can stay outside the park (there is a cool geodesic dome bed and breakfast), then take the shuttle in each day. The whole shuttle loop to the final lake and back is 8 hours, so maybe not worth doing with a baby (and the mosquitoes out by the lake are monsters). But I'd highly recommend getting off at polychrome for the views and a quick hike. You could dayhike for weeks if you wanted, but I'd probably spend only 2-3 days in Denali if you can't backpack overnight.
Drive south to Anchorage to see it, then out onto the Kenai peninsula. Depending on your timing, you can go fishing for salmon with a guide which is always fun. Go to Alyeska ski resort and eat at the Double Musky restaurant in Girdwood.
After Kenai, you can drive back to Anchorage and across a cutover highway to Valdez. Valdez has epic iceberg kayaking tours that you should try to do (even if you have to take turns over two days, it is worth it), and the driving around there is breathtaking.
Drive north after Valdez up the other highway back towards Fairbanks. If you want to, you can drive to Wrangell St Elias NP off of this highway (I've not been but heard it is epic, though probably not baby friendly), and then make your way up to Fairbanks.
From Fairbanks, I'd recommend the hot springs about an hour outside of town (guaranteed to see moose on the way). You could then take a two or three day trip north to the Brooks Range from Fairbanks. Do your research before though as there is a major lack of gas and services up there.
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04-21-2022, 03:30 PM #14
I thought roadside Alaska underwhelming in my short trip and wished I’d spent $ and flown or floated further away.
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04-29-2022, 10:26 PM #15
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Denali access road will be closed at polychrome in 2022 due to a landslide that will take a couple of years to build a bridge over.
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05-06-2022, 07:11 PM #16
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how was it?
."we all do dumb shit when we're fucked up"
mike tyson
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