More about my ride to Hyder, Alaska

The trouble is the more spellbinding scenery you drive through the more you start to get blasé about it. Yesterday, after driving for about fifty miles through relatively gentle forests and farmed plains, we crested a gentle gradient to see a snow capped mountain range that just went on for ever running along the Alaska Sea coastline. You can see it very clearly on Google maps if you switch to terrain view.

We then rode through this – the roads are in the valleys thank God and don’t try to cross the mountains – past/by the side of flowing rivers, melting snow falls and glaciers. Yes glaciers! At one stage we rode on a stretch 130 km long that didn’t have a house, fuel stop, lay by or anything for its length. The scale of things is just enormous.

We stopped for tonight and tomorrow at a place called Hyder in Alaska (just). Basically it’s an old gold town that’s been left unchanged as a tourist trap. The roads are sort of packed mud and 30k up the road is a place we’re going today where tourists view bears grazing and or catching and eating salmon.

On Saturday we resume our journey North, back into Canada through the Yukon and then into Alaska properly. We’ve done about 2000 miles now so it’s about another 1300 miles to Fairbanks before contemplating the last 500 miles to Prudhoe Bay on the Dalton Highway.

The group has gelled pretty well together. An odd bunch that probably have an average age in their mid fifties – if you exclude the youngsters who are forty and forty five respectively. Two or three are recovering from nervous breakdowns, on or two are retired after voluntary redundancies, one is a very senior civil servant and none of us seem hard up.

Last night I slept from 9pm to 7pm – which gives an indication of how tired we get in the day: My room mate is still snoring away as I type and it’s nearly 8am. Ah well, coffee and breakfast time now and then I’ll upload some photos.

I’m in Alaska and I’ve seen a bear(s)!!

Just a short post to say I’m in Hyder, Alaska which has limited internet and no mobile phone facilities. Indeed if I didn’t have Wera’s old laptop which has an ethernet connection I couldn’t speak to you?

We’re here for a couple of days – to look at bears and how the early Alaskan’s lived. We then head back to (nearly) civilisation. I’ll try and update the blog tomorrow when I have more time. At the moment I’m just tired having spent 8 hours on the road having driven through ‘epic’ landscapes.

PS The bears look so cuddly and tame!!

Canada is huge!

Today we started at 8am and finished riding at 4pm. We did 310 miles approx down a main road for as I said previously there aren’t really any other options here apart from trekking through forest paths! We have traveled to Vanderhoof – our last stop in BC before going to Hyder in Alaska tomorrow.

When we first set of today the scenery was pretty desolate and I wondered if this is how it is going to be the more North we go, but after about 50 miles we started riding in a rich, verdant plain with a sprinkling of farms along the way. And that’s how it’s been all the way to Vanderhoof.

For the last 100 odd miles I chose to ride alone and enjoyed doing so. However as hard as I looked I didn’t see any bears or caribou (there were quite a few beware signs for these large creatures).

The motel we’re booked into is pretty good and but there were no good restaurants local so my room-mate and I went for a burger at a local take away (not a McDonalds!).

Everybody’s putting a brave face on it but the prospect of the distances we have to complete over the next few days is daunting to most and it will be interesting to see how things pan out. I’ll definitely go to Fairbanks – but I’ve got an open mind about doing the next 500 miles to Prudhoe Bay. Not because the road is difficult but more because Prudhoe is a real dump where you aren’t allowed to get to the sea and the place is swarming with mosquitoes. However it is the most Northerly point of the continent and many in the group will feel duty bound to do the last leg as they’ve come this far. I don’t share that compunction. However, if I’m feeling fit and the weather is good I may go the whole way. A day at a time …………..

Tuesday the 19th.

I’m currently in Caribou Lodge, Clinton, British Columbia. I’m thinking I should have done a blog yesterday because today has blown yesterday away. We did quite a bit of mileage on an Interstate yesterday (boring) with our one big detour being to Mount St Helen, when after about a 10 mile ride up twisty roads in the pouring rain to the observation point of a neighbouring mountain (Mount St Helen is still an active volcano) we discovered we were in the clouds and couldn’t see anything!

We then stayed at the most dire Motel ever. Without being racist it is our experience that motels run by Americans are usually good whereas motels run by Asian Indians in America (a growing phenomena) are run down with poor service. You can guess who ran this motel. However I slept well and was on the road again at seven. After an hour we were through a very friendly Canadian custom point and quickly driving through the outskirts of Vancouver, To the north of Vancouver we drove the coast road a bit and the scenery was breathtaking. We then started going inland through the valley of a mountain range and for mile after mile you just experienced both exquisite roads and scenery. British Columbia is huge!!

After about a two hundred and twenty odd mile ride the tour leader said there was a dirt rode to the hotel (which was ten miles away) – which we had to do, or lose face. So I then did about 10 miles standing on the pegs riding through mud and shale. But we all stayed on and I won’t be doing anymore of that. The upside is the motel is top class and the owner is a biker who threw 100 dollars in the till for our drinks. Great guy!

One observation about driving in BC. You look at your sat nav and don’t see any other roads than the one your on most of the time. That’s because there aren’t any. There’s just one road going through vast sways of wilderness with small hamlets dotted along it every 50 or 100 miles. Not a place to break down in.

Beware of the bear (or actually ‘don’t feed the bear’) signs have been appearing for the last 100 miles, but we haven’t seen any yet.

Well I guess that’s it for the moment. I was thinking as I rode I should have a tape recorder to record my thoughts as by the time I blog I have forgotten half I thought and saw – like the experience of riding through Seattle in the pouring rain yesterday on a road network that makes spaghetti junction look like a toy. But I guess a recorder would be overkill. I’ll try and post some pictures now if I don’t fall asleep first. Bye for now.

Sunday the 17th.

We started riding at 7am today and found a hotel to stay at in Salem, Oregon at 7pm: We rode nearly 450 miles. I then had a shower, as did most others, and went for a Mexican. It’s now 9pm and I’ll go to bed soon as we start again at 7am tomorrow.

Interesting day, or some of it was. Initially we rode for about 100miles alongside the Pacific going North in California. The road and views were nice but it was quite cold and it got bleaker the more North you went – just look at the breakfast joint we went to in the picture album. We then started going inland towards Oregon. A lot of this ride and that up the Pacific was through a vast redwood forest. Trees, trees and more trees. But the whole size of this quite natural forest is vast – hundreds of square miles.

Oregon proved pleasant to start with and very ‘TV’ American: Flags flying, pick-ups everywhere and trailer parks by the road. Plus wide open spaces. We then crossed a plain on an interstate to get to Salem – we did 150 miles on a dead straight road! Really. It was boring but necessary to move us quickly towards the Canadian border which we’ll get to tomorrow evening via a stop at mount St. Helens. An active volcano.

I’ll probably edit this post later as it’s a bit rushed – I’m quite tired – and it doesn’t give a full flavour for what I saw today.

The Pacific

Only rode about 200 miles today. But the ride was firstly along the Pacific Coastal Highway which is a road that follows the coastline and, surprise, surprise, is just one continuum of tight corners. A great road to ride, but quite hard work as you have to concentrate pretty hard. The views were great – though I have to say the coast road from Italy down through Croatia was perhaps more beautiful, and the Med looked far more tempting than the Pacific which is very cold and grey up here. We then started to go inland through Redwood forests – yes, they are big buggers – again on very twisty hilly roads. All in all a bikers dream ride – but quite tiring.

I’m now in a motel room, just about to get some petrol and then think about eating. It’s 6pm as I write this.

The group has jelled well and the guy I’ve paired up with is very organised and good company. Indeed, as we get to the motel he goes and organises and pays for the room, sorts the internet passwords etc and I just unpack my luggage and log on. He’s even made me a cup of coffee………