Here is an article by contibuting editor to Rider
Magazine Lawrence Grodsky. He came with us in the first week of
August on our Prince William Sound Camp
Tour, 2002.
The article is in the March issue of Rider, 2003
Alaska Rider Tour's Prince William Sound Ferry Tour
Story and photography by Lawrence Grodsky
Before the Mountains Disappeared
To our right, sightseers
crane necks out of car windows for a look at the gravity-defying
Dall sheep. To our left, they wield binoculars, scanning for humpbacks
and orcas. In between lie a series of long, lurid skid marks. It's
not quite wilderness, here along the Cook Inlet, but methinks it
could get wild.
And we haven't even left the municipal boundaries of Anchorage,
Alaska. In less than an hour we'll have traversed this city of a
quarter-million, traveled the length of the state's only divided
highway, watched a Winnebago go up in flames and bid farewell to
our last traffic signal in a thousand miles.
Phil Freeman, owner and chief guide of Alaska Rider Tours, promised
that we'll have seen "more of Alaska than most Alaskans"
on the six-day Prince William Sound Ferry Tour. Our route lies almost
wholly in the shadows of North America's most prodigious mountains,
but you don't go to Alaska for the mountain riding per se. Hatcher
Pass will be the most curvaceous ascent for our 650cc dual-sports.
After maybe 10 miles of delectably banked asphalt (with loose marbles)
it crests at a mere 2,300 feet and winds unpaved down the other
side.
Though the pass opened only three short weeks ago, not a trace of
snow still remains. The days of summer are few but long at the latitude.
Gathered 'round a campsite at 11 p.m. with good company you savor
how lazily they slip into night.
You must meet our group. There's Bob meanly, a DJ from Pinion, Alabama.
For a beer he'll regale you with a car commercial, Alabama style.
He says his friend Rick Jones, from Springfield, Missouri, is "the
most enthusiastic guy I've ever met," and it would be hard
to argue. The retired International Harvester manager and his wife
had just returned from a motorhome trip - to Alaska- when Bob proposed
the bike tour. Now he's over in the creek, wrestling with a king
salmon hooked on tackle provided by our guides.
Steve Cross is a public utilities exec from Wellington, New Zealand.
He reads a lot and scribbles assiduously in a journal, but he's
quietly suffusing our group with Kiwi witticisms. "Stackin'
zeds" and "a good old rogering" will become part
of our tour vernacular. And we'll not forget the tale of Baaa-aa-aa-aa-ry,
the dual-sporting veterinarian who freed a poor lamb whose head
was stuck in a fence
but not before the next wave of riders
crested the hill and spotted him grappling with it in the waist-high
grass.
At the conclusion of each day's ride, Freeman loses the helmet and
dons his chef's hat. Teriyaki stead and poached halibut are just
a couple of his specialties. He's ably assisted by Akiko Morikawa,
a 33-year-old free spirit who five years ago fell in love with the
Alaskan outback on Freeman'' very first Alaska Rider Tour. Akiko,
who rides a Yamaha XT 225 back home, is also group photographer
and copilot to Justin Grebe, driver of the sag wagon.
In 24 hours 26-year-old Justin manages to a) lose a wallet, b0 hitchhike
60 miles with a blown trailer tire c) drop in on a book signing
party d) find a missing article of clothing in a junkyard and e)
deliver the camp supplies-on time.
Chad Sundry, age 29, rides sweep for the group. A Utah native, Chad's
a certified motorcycle mechanic who migrated to Alaska for the hunting,
fishing and skiing. Each night, while he doggedly screws our bikes
back together, we gorge on the smoked salmon he's rumored to have
canned with his homemade two-stroke blender.
Morning two. We vote unanimously to continue up the Petersville
road, an old mining route, now serving drivers of high-clearance
vehicles the most unspoiled views of Mount McKinley. Thirty-four
miles long, it grows rockier, muddier and steeper. For Bob, whose
only previous off-road experience was some backyard minibike riding,
this is motorcycling Outward Bound, but he works out his rhythm
and negotiates the entire length without a spill. Collectively,
we'll bag a couple of thousand miles of dirt road without a handlebar
ever touching the ground.
Riding toward Mount McKinley (20,320 feet) is like sneaking up on
the sum. We crane our necks to see its summit, but it's still a
hundred miles off! Alaskans claim that it's the world's greatest
mountain, several thousand feet taller, from base to summit, than
Everest. And since its peak can be reached without oxygen or expedition
funding, it's a "peoples mountain."
Mind you, Alaskan people might be made of different stuff. At Cantwell,
said to have the nation's largest concentration of Vietnam vets
and FBI most-wanteds, we bump into two of Phil's hometown pals.
They've just completed a 150-mile adventure race (that would be
a foot race) through the Denali wilderness, and their feet look
like sausages about to burst on the grill. It's a record 90 degrees
down here on the Parks Highway, but they've braved, among other
things, an overnight blizzard dumping 18 inches of snow.
On the Denali Highway, we turn our backs to McKinley and spread
out, escaping each other's dust clouds and reaping the solitude
of the immense plateau which precedes the Alaska Range to the north.
The trees here are sparse and low, yet somewhere 30,000 caribou
are hiding even lower to escape the sun's penetrating rays.
Our group's arrival probably triples the population of Gracious
House, Alaska, but with an airstrip, campground, guesthouse and
bar, it's the "capital" of the Denali Highway. It's also
the final resting ground for just about anything with a motor
a
'57 Caddy, a '30s era pickup of indistinct lineage, an airboat and
a pair of early Japanese trailbikes. The museum tour could go on
and on, but a loud tortured wail in the nearby brush sends us off
in pursuit of a very large sounding beast, armed only with half-full
beer cans. Phil, whose wit can be as dry as this August heat wave,
claims to have enough material for a northwoods tell-all book, "Moose
Maulings"-including the tale of a motorist who attempted to
confirm a road kill with a rather ill-advised probe.
"If you survive a bear attack the guys at the bar will at least
buy you a beer," ways Freeman, building his case for the alleged
cover-up "
..but who will admit to being molested by a
herbivore?!"
Wrangell-St. Elias is the nation's largest national park, home to
nine of North America's 16 tallest peaks. Along the McCarthy Road
their images are painted in mirror smooth lakes speckled by trumpeter
swans and framed by cotton grass and fireweed. Phil, who'd set us
up for a dusty 60-mile blast, makes a difficult admission as we
pause at a 400-foot-high railroad bridge.
"This is the first time I've seen those mountains. In five
years of tours, it's never been this clear!" We arrive at McCarthy
just hours after the ice breaks on the Kennicott River, sending
the town (25 permanent residents) into a frenzy of impromptu partying.
It's been a long day, and after touring the copper mine ruins the
group heads back to the campground at Kenny Lake, but I elect to
hike down to the Kennicott Glacier. Until this year, Freeman, only
32 but a world traveler, fluent in Spanish, Portuguese and Japanese,
catered solely to Japanese motorcyclists. He confesses he's just
learning about the American rider's greater need for independence,
but I'm greatful for the loosened reins as I scramble down the winding
trail and onto the swelling sea of blue ice.
The rest of the group samples this otherworldly trekking the following
morning at the Worthington Glacier on Thompson Pass. Halfway up
the pass though, we sight a monster, and it's steamrollering angrily
toward us. Faster than we can con our rainsuits the temperature
plunges and visibility slips to nada. Just like that the great northern
summer has become a fond, fleeting memory.
The port of Valdez, terminus of the Alaska Pipeline, is enjoying
a pleasant fall afternoon. Wile Rick and Steve fish for our last
camp dinner, Bob tours the local museum and I explore another mining
road, this one leading up a canyon lush with wildflowers and towering
waterfalls. In solitude, I pick salmon berries as my contribution
to the special meal. I do so surrounded by a symphony of water sounds-from
a faint tinkle to an oceanic roar. A few hours later, in a soft
drizzle, I fall asleep at the campfire and have to be nudged to
my tent.
It's dark when we receive the trip's only wake-up call. In sex spins
of the globe we've watched nighttime boldly snatch hours away from
day. On the four-hour crossing of Prince William Sound, we spot
sea lions, kittiwakes and an eagle or two. In the fog we make out
traces of icebergs, but it's far too soupy for the anticipated whale
watching. The dreamy gray crossing seems a fitting come down from
the Disneyesque days on the road.
My tripmeter reads 1,060, group exuberance having pushed us nearly
300 miles beyond the published itinerary. Perhaps half the total
came on dirt and gravel roads for which the Suzuki, Kawasaki and
BMW 650s proved will suited. Riders with some off-road experience
(which Freeman strongly recommends) will not find the routes technically
demanding. Attirewise, layers are the way to go. The tour season
runs from may 15 to September 15, when the average temperatures
are pleasantly temperate-but wintry weather is never too far off.
At about $3,000 this ride ranks just on the high side of one-week
tours. If you equate with lots of twisty pavement or the number
of stars embossed on your hotel portal, then you'll probably be
disappointed. If you're put off by dust, you'll not be happy (although
the mosquito and black fly menace proved largely apocryphal). There'll
be no chocolates on you pillow unless you pack both, but sturdy
tents and cots with extra sleeping bags (riders are advised to pack
a three-season bag and a towel) ensure that you'll sleep well at
the end of a long ride.
Wetting up camp is a lot more difficult than flashing a credit card
at the end of a 200-mile day, and this was the best staffed, hardest-working
tour operation I've ever traveled with. They cheerfully handle all
the camp chores, although I suspect most riders who sign on for
such a tour will want to pitch in. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend
the tour to inexperienced campers. Camping tours start and end with
B&Bs, however, all three guests from the lower 48 skipped out
early, owing to the high percentage of red-eye flights leaving Anchorage.
Criticisms? Even off-road-equipped motorcycles can't venture where
float planes and canoes can, but I would have preferred to camp
beyond the reach of motorhomes. I think that an evening backpack
followed by a midweek B&B would spice up an already flavorful
itinerary. Freeman also offers a non-camping version for $500 more,
plus three other Alaskan routes and specialty tours on demand.
Unlike most organized tours, you almost can't spend money on an
Alaska Rider Tour. The Package includes every meal, snack and libation,
plus all of your gasoline and a pricey ferry crossing-- costs that
would mount quickly in a region where nearly everything must be
flown in. the only thing Freeman doesn't cover, curiously, is you
shower-three of four bucks should you ever feel the need.
I would, however, recommend that any visitor stash a Ben Franklin
for a 90- minute bush flight. And try to schedule it early, because
you never know when the mountains will disappear.
|