Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Alaska Day 19 (May 2nd) Matanuska Glacier


Monday we headed East to visit the Matanuska Glacier.  The drive over took about hour and a half, but there were lots of stopping off points to enjoy the scenery (and find a geocache).  This photo shows the Matanuska river which the road follows all the way to the glacier.
follow this all the way up


This is our first view of the glacier from a stop along the road.



This was on the opposite side of the road from the area where we stopped, loose rock and gravel hill, that just begged to be climbed.  The words and names spelled out in white rocks reminded us of the same thing done in Hawaii, but the white rocks were placed in lava flow areas.


Before heading up to the glacier we stopped for lunch at the Long Rifle Lodge, a great place, that had unbelievable views of the glacier.  We were the only customers there, so we received great service, and really good food, and the prices for Alaska were reasonable.
After lunch we headed up to the Glacier Park area paid our way to get in after signing waivers that we wouldn't hold them responsible for any accidents.  We drove to the parking lot and this was the view that met us.


We followed as well as we could the path laid out with the orange cones, through loose rock and dirt, mud, and under it all, a thick layer of ice.

getting closer but still a ways to go




It's a little hard to see in this photo, but there are small rocks frozen in ice in each of the sections of snow.  The sun will warm the rocks and they melt down through the snow layer into the ice only to refreeze and become encased in the ice layer.  You can walk on top of this and it makes a crunchy sound.
 Closer
 



On the way up there are numerous small flows of water, this one cut under the bank of ice, and shone like silver.







The kids stopped to feel how cold the water was and when they could lay down and drink straight from the glacier, I even did it, that was some good, cold water.

closer, but still farther...
somethings you don't even notice until you're right on top of them, beautiful
on top of the world
a view back down the valley from the glacier
I don't know how Kamryn and Ian got over there so quickly and why they are sitting so close to that crevasse






I'd hate to fall in that!
This is just to prove that I was actually there!





The views just keep getting better and better


how did that round hole get in there?





 a larger rock in the ice layer under the snow.

Now I'm going to stand here, and they are going to hike up to the top, then I'll follow, here we go..

They made it, what can't tell that's them?
okay can you tell that's them now?



The previous photos are all views from the top, we stayed a while just looking around and resting, it had taken about an hour and a half to get up.
views on the way back down, we were up on the highest part in the center, you can see it from a good distance with the white line coming down and the darker scar running across










farther away
back down almost to the parking lot, see the peak we were on?  Wow, I guess we didn't really get that high. It sure seemed like it at the time and took 1 1/2 hour to get there and 45 minutes to get back, it was worth it.

Alaska Day 18 May 1st

 Sunday morning found us back to worship with the Wasilla Church of the Nazarene, a great group of Nazarenes.   We plan to go back on Friday to join their Youth Group for a teen night.  After lunch at the Denali Family Restaurant, we went home for the mandatory Nazarene nap time.  Boy, did that feel great!  Then we got together to discuss our plans for the final week and a half we have left.  Lots of things still on our list.


Even though it was getting late, the sun is up until almost 10pm here, so we went out to Palmer Hay Flats again, the kids wanted to show John the area we had gone before, and I still had caches to find.

This time we saw the sandhill cranes, not just heard them.


 We went down onto the hay flats this time, going to a lower parking area and then out.  It was muddy, but there were ways around the worst parts.  We went to a bridge over a creek and I found one cache there.





The kids raced up the hill, while I kept John company on the drive back up the hill.















On the way back up I stopped to take some photos of a juvenile Bald Eagle that just sat in the tree watching us.

 The view from back up at the top, you can see now the wet patches that you can't see from below.
 One of my favorite sites, the family on a trail leading to a geocache!




some of the views along the way





This is the same cache I looked for last time and couldn't find, so I brought the GPS and found it right away this time, I was looking in the wrong place last time.  Worth the trip both times!




This is Kamryn's rock collection, she climbed out on a fallen log, leaned out and stuck her hand in the freezing water to get them.
 There were lots of ferns in the area around the creek, but they all looked brown like this, I would love to see them in the summertime.




If you look around though you can see interesting things growing.




Ryan even caught a fish by hand, well maybe not a fish...
 and we got to see the Alaska State Bird before Ryan flicked him to his doom.  I  hope that's not illegal.

We managed to hike out before the sun went down.  What a way to spend the day.