Friday, July 3, 2020

Alaska: Photo Gallery of Denali National Park


Denali: in the Athabascan language, "the High One"

Even at 20,310 feet, the highest peak in North America, it wasn't just Denali that dazzled. It was the sheer vastness. Mountains that seemed to stretch forever, large swaths of tundra, ribbons of water running through every valley: an endless terrain of majesty.

A picture is worth 1000 words.





















The beavers were busy...
...making a series of dams























The Alaska Railroad connects Anchorage to Fairbanks
and runs through the park


The metal box was our 'noisemaker" to alert large mammals to our presence...




























...but we only saw small ones
..

We did see lots of prints and scat, though!

As close to a bear as we would ever want to be



















moose nuggets, not the hershey's kind

moose tracks, not the ice cream kind



It's very rare for Denali to be visible;
we were incredibly lucky and got  treated with multiple views





Still more mountain peaks,
above the braided Savage River

It wasn't just "all good",


it was all spectacular!

From the sky, glaciers...




...and Denali!


Alaska: Sitka

Alaska! As magnificent a destination as any we have reached, we were instantly smitten with this land of ravens and raptors and mountains meeting the sea.


Sitka, a town of 10,000, has a large fishing industry and is a cruise ship stop due to its beauty, safe harbor, and cultural heritage (Tlingit clans, Russian traders and American prospectors). With no cruise ships operating due to COVID-19, the place was calm and quiet--just hardy fishermen and women going about their business. Local clothing has gone from shorts and flip-flops to corduroys tucked into knee-length rubber boots, usually accompanied by one or two large dogs.

Sitka receives 11 feet of rainfall annually, hence the gray skies in these photos...

Streams, islets, mountains...
the scenery is stunning

The main downtown street, charming and now empty

St. Michael's Cathedral,
the first Orthodox church in the Americas



Not much Russian influence remains,
but there are some buildings and shops with Russian flavor
(the shops were closed, so unfortunately this was taken through a reflective window)


Five harbor areas are each full of fishing vessels


The supermarket has no seafood section.
Locals catch their own, or pick up a meal on the fly if they are out and about.
(Yes, everyone is masked.)






A modern totem pole
commemorating the battle in which
the Tlingit ceded the Sitka area to the Russians











































Many totem poles line a trail through the rainforest 
A merganser family on a river through the town
Other local residents: bears!
(We were there on 6/20)

The museums are outstanding!
This ingenious waterproof parka made of seal gut is one of the myriad ingenious ways
the people who have lived here for 10,000 years adapted and flourished


And on our last day in Sitka,
SUNSHINE!