Saturday, August 24, 2013
Carved by the Tires of Other Travelers
(Belated post - catch-up)
We left Eagle Plains not sure if Michael still had a job. We
had built in 4 days extra in case the road was difficult, and we ended up being
on the road an extra six days! If you are going to do this road, make sure you
have wiggle room in case it goes south. There is something about this road that
I just love. I believe this road is a breathing living entity. It can choose to
let you pass with no problems and a simple easy ride, or it can choose to play
with you. I have traveled various parts of this road on 3 different occasions.
I believe the most gorgeous part is up to Tombstone – if you can’t do the whole
thing, then do that part. The rest of the road is just for the sake of
traveling and doesn’t offer any earth shattering scenery. But the adventure it
can throw at you, there is that. It depends on your disposition.
The road changes daily, it can be one completely different
animal on the way back down then it was going up - our road we traveled back
was completely different. It was rutty and hard, carved by the tires of other travelers.
Very little mud. In my mind I am thinking the road is satisfied in the price we
paid for the privilege to see Inuvik. We are thankful to hit pavement and roll
into Dawson.
We met up with Anna in Dawson. They were topping of their
tanks and heading to the Lower 48 to finish the rest of their travels in the
US, soon they would be heading back to Europe.
Trip details and photos to come.
Monday, July 15, 2013
Mozzies, Lorries, Backhoes and Bulldozers...
*Pictures to come later
Back in Fort McPherson…
Back in Fort McPherson…
We were hopeful. We woke up to the news that the road was
finally open. Now the pressure was on the ferry man to get the boat going. We
could see the traffic starting to stack up on the other side of the banks. This
was wonderful! The banks had been empty for days. Now, it appeared that it was
possible to move pass the road washouts.
The log jam was not cleared out completely, there was one
resistant pile hanging on, with one very larger tree still hanging on the
cable. Earlier they had loaded a backhoe onto the ferry, drove to the other
side of the boat, hung the arm over the water and tried to clear debris that
way. This was very exciting, as they did not counter weight the other end of
the ferry, and the whole ferry was weighted down and heavy on one end, causing
the boat to be way low on that end. This
cleared some of the jam, but not all.
Finally, a ferry man climbed on top of the woodpile with a
chain saw. Talk about getting paid to do stupid thing! It was sort of like
standing on pick-up sticks and removing the sticks… I shook my head, I wanted out of there, but
not at the expense of someone getting hurt. A reminder how you just need to do
what you need to do this far north. He
climbed back in the boat and they rammed the woodpile again, most of it broke
up and floated down stream. The northern peanut gallery broke out in cheers.
The next thing that needed to happen was to complete the
load ramps. The high river had washed away the dirt loading ramps on both
sides. They were having difficulty in making a stable dock on the south side.
Too much of the bank had eroded away, and all the gravel they were putting in
was falling through and getting washed or saturated to where there was no
stability. They worked on it for hours, and finally ended up with a bank they
hoped would work. We spent the entire day watching them push dirt around with
machinery. The best we could hope for that late in the day was Eagle Plains.
![]() |
Playing dangerous with a chainsaw |
Now, all the people who wanted to get out of there were not
so sure they wanted to go first! Dave the truck driver, said he would rather
wait until it was more compacted down. We hemmed and hawed. With skinny motorcycle tires, we would
certainly sink further than a lot of folks.
I told Michael, I would rather drop my bike on the other side of the
bank and have people have to help me up, then to be stuck in FM another night.
We volunteered to go. It turns out this was a good move.
We waited for the entire ferry to empty, The ground was like
oatmeal… we approached the south ramp and the ferry guys eyes got real wide.
Michael went first and dropped into the slop… and sunk. He
throttled it to get through and fishtailed to the top. I went next, the ferry
guys eyes got wider. I swam through the oatmeal, got purchase and made it to
the top and didn’t look back We were finally on solid ground on the sound side
of the Peel River.
We heard later that this was a very smart move on our part.
When they tried to reload the ferry right after us, a truck pulling a trailer
got stuck and tore the ramp up, even with repairs, it was too soft. The first
car off on the south side ripped it’s bumper off completely, and several
motorhomes scrapped the undercarriages trying to get off… some doing damage.
Dave, whom we met up with in Eagle Plains for a beer later that night, said
when his front two tires of his diesel hit the soft ground, he felt it sink and
say “oh crap.” He had a vision of his truck being stuck half on the ferry and
half on this soft sinking bank.
Once on the road, the road was a smooth ribbon winding
through the bush, with only minimal ruts. We passed Rock River and couldn’t
even tell the road was nonexistent just the day before. Every time we stopped
the mozzies fed. Dragon flys kept hitting my windscreen with loud thunks.
We were told to keep an eye out for the porcupine caribou herd;
it was migrating in the area. We kept an eye out, but had not look. We did
catch more moose, and several folks saw grizzlies, but with my eyes focused on
the gravel, it is hard to watch the road and the scenery consistently. Several
hunters were success with caribou.
We rolled into Eagle Plains and got the last room available.
We had Lead Dog Ale in the bar, and Dave joined us for road stories. We
exchanged address and plan to stay in touch. I said hi to Jaz’s favorite friend
in the bar.
Friday, July 12, 2013
FM4
We spent the day watching the ferry men ram the log jam with
the ferry. We think, but are not entirely sure that the road may be repaired by
tomorrow.
Dave the trucker called Eagle Plains and learned that the culvert was
salvageable. They had the culvert in place and stabilized with wood by 1 pm
yesterday. They were waiting for dump trucks of gravel and fill to be hauled in
to cover the culvert, and then they could resurface the road - the road maybe
ready to cross as early as tomorrow afternoon. We were so thankful to Dave for
keeping us in the CB-loop, that we gave him our last cold beer. Dave almost
cried. The man has been sitting in his truck starring out his windshield for 5
days. He does not want to leave his truck because he has 1,000 liters of fuel
in tanks on the bed. He is worried his about his gas. He thinks the road will
be open soon.
Ferry spent day ramming log jam and breaking it up in little pieces.. you can only watch debris float down river for so long. It is the hot ticket in town though... |
If we could only get across the effing Peel River…
Locals are using small boats to go across. No way we can put motorcycles in those. |
The tourists are gathering on the North side of the Peel
River, with mutiny in the air. There is talk about boarding the boat. Of course
it is all fantasy, but that is what DEET for days does to you.
Savage DEET... note the image of the trail in the wetlands...30% DEET guaranteed to make tourists fantasize about mutiny. |
The Canadians from other provinces are
convinced there is a plot against the natives… the Europeans are incredulous,
and the Alaskan’s are just tired… all of us have ideas how the job could have
been done more efficiently.
I got all the tourists to line up in protest. They are all watching the agonizingly slow work on the log-jam. |
The contractors for the ferry company are pointing fingers
at the NWT transportation government office; the NWT transportation government
office is pointing fingers at the contractors. It appears they argued for two
days trying to figure out who was doing what and more importantly… whose fault
it was. Finally today, they tried to work together to get something done.
A full day of ferry-ramming seems to have finally cleared up
the log jam. Tomorrow they must check the line for damage and re-anchor it. If
the line is good, we may be able to cross tomorrow. None of us are holding our
breath.
Finally, after two days of watching debris hang on the lines, workers mover to stop more debris from getting hung up. |
The B and B owners brought us over a frozen solid turkey
(like you have for thanksgiving). They were concerned if we had enough to eat.
We thanked them and put it in the freezer.
I turned to Michael and said… it will take a full day for that bird to
thaw out, and we couldn’t cook it until the day after… do the townspeople know
something we don’t about how long it will take to get out of here? He shrugged
his shoulders.
The plan is to be down at the boat at 9 am hoping like hell
it is running. If we can cross the river, then we can camp at the washout until
it is open.
(Note: This may be my last post for a while if the road opens in the morning - will try to catch up in Dawson.)
(Note: This may be my last post for a while if the road opens in the morning - will try to catch up in Dawson.)
FM3
(Fort McPherson: Day 3)
We got up and evaluated. We had a very nice comfortable
night, actually slept in. We need to make the most of our sleep time, as we can
only stay here one more night. Room cost is a premium; I have paid less for a
room at the Marriott in the heart of Washington D.C.
We have been adopted by a native woman that is well traveled
and highly respected in the native communities. Her name is Roberta and she is
the equivalent of the subsistence manager for the Indian nation Tr’ondek Hwech’in.
She is staying with a friend in FM. She has come by and spent time chatting about the native
battles with the Yukon Government over development of the Peel River. We also
spoke of how the native groups are organized in Canada and how that differs
from Alaska. She has boated most of the distance of the Yukon River (no small
feat), and will be visiting us in Anchorage in a few weeks
Went to the grocery store and picked up a few things.
Canadian Kit Kats are the bomb. The prices are incredible, the conversion rate
from US to Canadian currency is nearly the same, so when you look at a price,
it makes the mouth drop open.
Half gallon of milk $7.69 |
Small box of cereal $9.75 |
We rented
videos because we knew were going to be here for a while, and the B and B
has a DVD player, but no satellite reception – it is down due to the winds. The
woman told me if the ferry opens unexpectedly and we find ourselves having to
bug out of town quickly, leave the videos in a plastic bag on the loading dock
of the grocery store.
Coming out of the grocery store we met up with fellow
stranded German travelers Zig and Peter. These Euros have been having a bit of
a rough go on the road. Peter was a bit emotional, on the verge of tears. He
said it took them 3 years to save enough money for this trip, and now they are
stuck and unable to do their trip.
The Euro's - Peter and Zig on the right of Michael. |
They rented a motorhome. Michael helped them
put the mirror back on, it kept vibrating loose with road conditions, and they
had no tools. We carry an assortment of tools on our bikes. On top of that it
was a dry community and they had finished their beer! We told them we may
become neighbors in a day or too and would look for them at the campground.
Peter and Zig's rental rig, and probably our new neighbors in the campground. |
We got gas because now that we are at a supply standstill on
the road gas prices are going up.
While at the gas station, we ran in to Dave, a truck driver.
We chatted with Dave about road
conditions, the truckers know the most. Apparently the folks in Eagle Plains are
the hub of accurate information, tending to know more than even the Canadian
Mounties. Dave echoed what Roberta said – the provinces do not talk to each
other very well, information will be sketchy. Dave is the one that gave us the
most info – about the current situation.
Dave, the one good source of info in FM |
The washout occurred at a place called Rocky Creek. One of
the culverts broke loose and the road washed out due to unusually high water
from all the rain. The culvert floated downstream and banked. In order to
repair this, special equipment must be brought in from Dawson, first to x-ray
the culvert to ensure safe re-use, and second to haul it back up stream. All
the appropriate equipment has arrived on scene, but now they are waiting for
the river level to decrease in order to start. The road crews were anticipating
a delay as long as 10 days, but may have a single lane open to let the stranded
people through. All this is weather dependent. The forecast for the next few
days is clear. There is hope! We thanked Dave for the update and headed back to
our little house.
We are on the wrong side of this washout at Rock Creek - note the culvert downstream. |
Someone came by to do their laundry, a cement truck driver.
The native couple that own the house do not live onsite, a nice elderly couple,
he is disabled and apparently this provides them a source of income. The owners
gave permission to the driver to do his laundry. He shared info as well, and
between him and Dave, we had a clearer picture of what was going on. The
Canadians are worse at updating their websites then the Federal government is.
Roberta came by and invited us to tour the town with her. We
hopped in her beautiful Ford Raptor pick-up truck (apparently only 6 are
imported in the Yukon). First thing we did was go check out the situation at
the ferry dock. Not looking good at all!
Grounded ferry at Peel River |
We stood on the north bank of the Peel River and watched
trees and large debris float by. The ferry men sat with us - watching the debris
drift downstream, get snagged on the cable lines of the ferry, hit the ferry.
One ferry man says to us “Go to Inuvik.”
Ferry crew was amused and thought we should go back to Inuvik. |
The ferry guys lived on the other side of the river. They
could use a small boat to maneuver around the debris and get home. We were stuck.
There was a single motorcycle rider stuck on the other side of the bank. We
were better off than him. He could not go south because of the road washout, he
could not go north, because of the ferry being out. We could at least go back
to Inuvik. The ferry man took pity on the single motorcycle rider and moved him
into his house out of the mosquitos. The ferry man laughed. He repeated to
Roberta, go to Inuvik. Roberta agreed with us…. We did not dare lose what
ground we had struggled to accomplish.
Ferry guys transportation home, Notice the size of the debris next to their boats... |
The Peel River ferry has a cable that goes from bank to bank
due to the swift current. When the water level got high they stopped the ferry.
The water level overtook the cable. With all the debris coming down the river
it snagged on the cable and caused a log jam in front of the ferry. The
operators wanted to drop the cable, but management would not let them… the
cable costs 10k. Now the cable is stuck and snagged and stretched. They will
probably have to drop the cable.
Ferry guys |
This means that they need to string a new cable across the
river (we are really hoping they have that in stock), cut the old cable and
free up the log jam. They also need to evaluate the ferry for damage.
We watched the guy jump to the boat from a bulldozer. We saw
and learned everything we needed to know. It appears that the ferry crossing is
going to be the bigger deal.
We drove around town. It took 10 minutes. Saw everything to see.. 2 grocery stores, 1 church. 1 hotel, 2 gas stations, and the tent factory.
We drove around town. It took 10 minutes. Saw everything to see.. 2 grocery stores, 1 church. 1 hotel, 2 gas stations, and the tent factory.
The one restaurant in town |
We went to the tent factory and watched them make tents.
Supervising the tent making in Fort McPherson |
Specializing in large canvas outfitting, but also bags and small items if you ask. |
The cement truck driver was doing laundry and asked if he
could get us anything. We jokingly asked if he could get us Lead Dog Ale beer
from the Yukon (sold in Inuvik). He made a call and the beer was on its way. He
left with clean laundry and later returned with our beer a few hours later! Got
to love truckers!
The motorcycles were parked out front. The village was coming
by to meet us. Village kids are riding
their bikes over here to check out our motorcycles and read the stickers on the
side of the cases. They all want to know where we have been.
We both emailed our bosses and told them we have no idea
when we will return to work. We sat around and chatted with Roberta and Art
most of the evening, and watched a couple of videos. Only 2 of the videos
worked. It took hours to watch the 3rd video because it kept
hitching. We had time.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
The Pucker Factor
We woke up fairly early and got the bikes ready to roll. The
plan was to make it to 230 miles to Eagle Plains early so we could get rest for
the 260 mile ride back to Dawson the next day. We had heard the ferry across the
McKenzie River had closed down the night before for high winds, so the first
thing I did was check the website for updated conditions. According to Canadian
Highway websites all ferries were operating. We blew out of town without
coffee.
It was a cold morning, cold enough to pull out all the
heated gear. The wind was pretty bad, and the gravel was the size of marbles. We hit a spot of sloppy mud where the bike zigged and zagged
down the road… Michael has started ranking the spots by the “pucker factor.”
We get to the McKenzie ferry crossing and all is shut down.
Europeans are milling in frustration, some having spent the whole night
waiting. We got there at 10 a.m. and it was looking like hours. The sky was
looking ugly. We walked down to the ferry and spoke with the driver; he
suggested we waited it out in the employee warming hut/house. We thanked him for the hospitality and head
up the hill.
The road out of town |
Gravel like marbles |
The little house reminded me of a fire station, living
quarters were upstairs and a small kitchen and living room downstairs.
We met
the ferry captain, a burly guy named Rick, that was sticking to his safety
guns, even though the phone was ringing off the hook… people wanting to know
when things would start up again. Rick’s standard answer “when the wind stops
blowing.” Rick has been guiding ferries across Canada for 30 years. The folks at the station made us feel
welcome, a friendly lot of men that basically live up here in the far north 5
months a year away from their families. They work in shifts to cover the
generous ferry hours, baking bread in the down time.
We hung out for hours in the ferry station house |
Rick worrying about the conditions on the river |
We chatted about all things Canadian, including the recent
train wreck which was taking all the airwaves on the telly. Rick would get up
and look at the “windsock” answer the phone and laugh, even though you could
tell he was worried about the conditions. We sat in the station until 6:30pm.
While sitting there waiting out the wind, it starts to snow. The ferry captain...
"Think of it as big wet cold rain"... In response to Michael’s “It
isn't really snowing right... Tell me that I'm not really seeing snow.”
Ferry terminal "windsock" |
Then, just like that, an announcement comes that an attempt is going to be made
to cross the river. We are thinking more about being stuck there longer… then
what the word “attempt” might mean, we jump to our bikes and load them on the
ferry. The winds were actually white
capping the water. The boat had to be brought in backwards. This meant we had
to turn our bikes around on the slippery metal deck covered in mud. That was
fun. You know it must be something when the ferry drivers congratulate each other for making it across.
We rode the distance to the Bed and
Breakfast in Fort McPherson. While waiting in the station I called around, it
turns out there is only one hotel in Fort McPherson, the Peel River Inn, and it
was filled. There is only one B and B, and she has only two rooms. We got one
of them. We at least knew we had a place
to stay for the night. We learned that a second washout has occurred at Sheep River,
we have no idea how long we will be here. We also learned the second ferry was not operating, due to high water levels.The other room went to a fellow
stranded traveler, Art. He is from Dawson.
He is a gold miner that pans for a living these days. We spent the night
chatting about the business of dog mushing and gold panning.
Traffic jam at the end of the road. Europeans traveling rentals. |
Art, our new displaced traveling friend.. he belongs in Dawson |
Michael, thrilled to be on the other side of the river |
Me thrilled to be somewhere other than a ferry station |
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Shopping Inuvik
We spent an extra unplanned day in Inuvik . The closing of
the Taylor Highway bumped our reservations at Eagle Plains. They could not
accommodate us coming back, unless we stayed an extra day in Inuvik. We opted
to stay and see the sites, rather than camp in Eagle Plains.
Catholic Church with unique dome |
Inuvik |
Gas station |
The place to eat in town - The Back Room |
Downtown Inuvik |
We found a cappuccino shop and had a wonderful cup; we
visited the grocery store and refilled our stash of fresh food. We found the
liquor store and purchased a six pack of Lead Dog Ale from the Yukon. We did a
little bit of clean-up: washed clothes, cleaned the bikes, lubed chains and
cleaned out the filters.
Coffee shop - note all the buildings are elevated above ground because of the perma-frost |
My motorbike is riding rough, I’m afraid there may be dirt
in the fuel system or I might have bad gas. I’m hoping that I won’t have
issues. The wiring harness on the back
of my bike fell apart; I no longer have a right rear blinker. The zippers blew
out on my top trunk bag and can’t be salvaged.
Michael has blown a zipper on his Wolfman tank bag and his speedometer
wires are giving him problems. We patched as best we could.
Main drag in downtown Inuvik - gift shop row |
We visited all the gift shops – I got coffee mugs, and a
nice fur parka for Poopy. Given the road conditions, I had the shop ship them
back to Anchorage.
My new coffee cups |
Poopy sporting her new fur parka and mukluks |
We found new stickers for our boxes. All this shopping and we ended up with a rare burden... change. Since we have no tax in Anchorage, we rarely collect change. And Canadian change is heavy.
$2 and $1 coins weigh a lot |
We drove all around town to see what we could see. We
considered a tour up to Tuk, but the airline fee was $1200 for both of us; we
decided we would rather go to Hawaii.
The rest of the day was relaxing, visiting with the locals
and getting caught up on blogging - a nice day. There is a large native
gathering going on, similar I think to the Alaska Federation annual meeting.
Next week is a large art show. Too bad we will not be around for that. We
headed back to the cabin, the Arctic Chalet. We could not stay in the same
place for two nights because of the conference. A nice long evening sipping
beer and blogging was what I was looking forward to. We broke open the Lead Dog.
I have no idea what they were selling... |
Then Michael noticed he lost his phone. We ripped the room
apart. We went through all the motorcycle gear, once, twice… three times. It
wasn’t a big cabin. We took out the flashlight and looked under the beds.
Nothing. We ripped the bikes apart. We spent an hour looking through everything…
then we started again. We still did not find it. He came to the conclusion
that it must have fallen out of his pocket while we were sightseeing. Do you
recall that I said we covered all of town seeing the sites? We then left the
cabin and putted at 10 miles an hour through all of Inuvik looking for his
phone. I now know what every bush in Inuvik looks like. No luck. After an hour
of searching town we gave up. The town was filled with way too many walkers…
for us to find his phone. If he dropped it someone had found it. In his small
case he carries his bank card and his driver’s license. On top of that, he does
not password protect his phone and we are in International charging zones for
any calls made on his phone. I feel a headache coming on. We go back to the
cabin.
I call the phone company and suspend his phone. I call the
bank and cancel his credit card. 5
minutes later he finds his phone in the window sill of the cabin behind the
curtain.
He is not allowed to drink Canadian beer anymore
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