Alaska has moved many to try and capture its magnificence. Michener’s Alaska, Jack London’s Call of the Wild and of course John Wayne and North to Alaska. Over time the fascination of Alaska has called many.
Last week neighbors Larry and Regina Mercer and Bobbie and I added their names to the long list of those legions that have made this spectacular trip. Bobbie and I also celebrated our 45th. Anniversary in Seattle before boarding the ship.
With stops in Tracy Arm Fjord, Tracy Arm is a magnificent glacier-carved fjord just south of Juneau.
Many cruise itineraries include a visit to this incredible place, often as a substitute for the comparable Glacier Bay National Park.
The fjord is part of the 30 mile long Tracy Arm - Fords Terror Wilderness region, located about 60 miles southeast of Juneau.
The fjord is truly one of the most dramatic locations in Alaska, or in all of the world, for that matter. The sheer, glacier-carved walls are often shrouded in mist.
Glacial calving in Tracy Arm can often be quite spectacular, as huge chunks of ice break off and plunge into the frigid waters below.
Skagway, where they took a train ride on the White Pass and Yukon Railroad. Built in 1898 during the Klondike Gold Rush, this narrow gauge railroad is an International Historic Civil Engineering Landmark, a designation shared with the Panama Canal, the Eiffel Tower and the Statue of Liberty.
The WP&YR railway was considered an impossible task but it was literally blasted through coastal mountains in only 26 months.
Juneau, the Mendenhall Glacier...another beautiful stop showing the magnificane of nature.
Ketchikan…where the boats were stacked four deep…end to end (parallel parked “beep beep”).
With one more stop in Victoria Canada the group were headed home, cameras full of pictures, memories full of good times, fellowship and marveling over the sites they had seen.
1 comment:
Hi Richard...I am sooo jealous. Congrats on your 45th!
Miss seeing you.
Deb
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