Alaska trip 2024

June - August 2024
Starting out for Alaska with the teardrop camper June 1, 2024. Will drive there and back Read more

List of countries

  • Italy
  • Canada
  • United States
Categories
Camper, Camping, Family, Nature, Wildlife
  • 40.7kmiles traveled
Means of transport
  • Flight-kilometers
  • Walking-kilometers
  • Hiking-kilometers
  • Bicycle-kilometers
  • Motorbike-kilometers
  • Tuk Tuk-kilometers
  • Car-kilometers
  • Train-kilometers
  • Bus-kilometers
  • Camper-kilometers
  • Caravan-kilometers
  • 4x4-kilometers
  • Swimming-kilometers
  • Paddling/Rowing-kilometers
  • Motorboat-kilometers
  • Sailing-kilometers
  • Houseboat-kilometers
  • Ferry-kilometers
  • Cruise ship-kilometers
  • Horse-kilometers
  • Skiing-kilometers
  • Hitchhiking-kilometers
  • Cable car-kilometers
  • Helicopter-kilometers
  • Barefoot-kilometers
  • 84footprints
  • 92days
  • 641photos
  • 366likes
  • Bakers Hole day 1

    Aug 5–7, 2024 in the United States

    We made our stops for haircuts and got gas in Bozeman. Gas is is $3.29 here for anyone keeping track.

    We cleaned out the back seat of the pickup, and Bossy and Ducky re-emerged from under a mosquito coat, tissue box, and a bunch of papers from campsites past.

    Our drive to the new campsite was mainly along the Gallatin River. We crossed into a tiny sliver of Yellowstone. Tons of people out fly fishing this morning. There are signs asking people not to fish after 2 pm due to the heat stress the fish are experiencing.

    At the campground, we found our spot much shadier than yesterday, but the mosquitos have returned. Since we will be here two nights, we put up the "bug hooch". After a sandwich lunch, we went into West Yellowstone. It is quite a circus with t-shirt shops, indoor live fire ranges, hotels, and even a McDonalds.

    Phil and I went to the Grizzly and Wolf Discovery Center. It's had a bit of a storied past, but it seems in good hands now as a non-profit. They have about 8 grizzlies who, for a variety of reasons, could not be in the wild. Mainly, they were snacking on human foods and had lost their fear of humans. They had become nuisance bears breaking into cabins, stealing food from vehicles and campsites, etc. They are in an environment now where the keepers "enrich" their exercise area by hiding fruits, vegetables, bird feeders in trees, live trout in their pond, etc. The bears are let out in rotations throughout the day, and the area is reset for each bear. A naturalist explains the reasons why the bears are here and reminds everyone NOT to leave things out at campsites. There is even a "testing" site for items deemed "bear resistant." They load them with a bear treat like peanut butter and if it takes longer than 90 minutes for a bear to tear it open it can be called "bear resistant " by the Inter Agency Grizzly Bear Committee.

    The site also has wolves that could not be released in the wild, and they also received enriched environments. We watched some find meat and other treats hidden by the naturalists. There was a cool display of cutthroat trout and some graylings as well as a large river otter area where the otters also had enriched environments with fish.

    They had some great horned owls, three bald eagles, and some other birds of prey. It was a very nice exhibit with a whole area explaining about bears, hibernation, how bears have disappeared from our landscape and why. They also had an area called Easy Street with chicken coops, gardens, compost areas, bee hives, and bird feeders to show why bears and humans conflict. We looked at the various coolers the bears had made short work of, and ours is supposed to hold up to the 90-minute test. I read a bit about the history, and the facility was originally a commercial venture. It came under pressure as the owners were "making money" off the bears, so it was bought by a veterinarian and 16 employees to turn into a non-profit about 20 years ago or so. Otherwise the company was going to close and euthanize the animals. Phil and I felt it was a good value.

    Our only problem was the children and parents who seemed to shriek shrilly at every exhibit, which caused Phil trouble with his hearing aids. Overall, we are glad families can learn about these animals and what to do around them in the wild, too.

    Our campground is on the beautiful Madison River, which starts in Yellowstone. Our campsite is in the trees but there are others in the sun right on the river. There were fish jumping this morning and again this afternoon when we walked out.

    Back at camp now, trying to charge my batteries with solar panels. Yesterday's site would have been better for that, but we are grateful for the shade.
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  • Bakers Hole Day 2

    August 6, 2024 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 81 °F

    After I posted yesterday, it rained on and off all evening and much of the night. This morning, I tried to charge batteries again with solar panels with limited success.

    We made a trip over into Idaho about 50 miles to Mesa Falls, where the Snake River flows over some volcanic formations, two beautiful falls. There is a Visitor's Center at the Upper Falls. Phil and I have considered volunteering here in the future, so we stopped in to chat with the Volunteer on duty. That sounds like a pretty easy gig.

    We headed back into town and had lunch at a Chinese restaurant. There are many Asian restaurants here, probably due to the large number of Asian tourists. We made a trip to the grocery store for cheese and ham sandwich stuff and some ice.

    We're back at the campground waiting to see I it will rain again, or just blow over. Tomorrow, we move to Lewis Lake on Yellowstone for 3 nights.
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  • Yellowstone Lewis Lake Day 1 1/2

    Aug 8–11, 2024 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 54 °F

    We have a little service while we are in the Old Faithful complex for breakfast, so I will try to post.

    Yesterday, we got up, went to town to do a load of laundry, and stopped at the hardware store for more propane and bug spray. At the laundromat, we met a man from China who needed help with laundry soap. He tried using bounce sheets as he did not know what they were. He was also considering using bleach, but in the end, he asked me for help using his phone's translation app. We gave him a soap pod for his load of laundry. He conveyed that they did not have this kind of shop in China where lived. Later, he asked for help in choosing either the big tumble dryer or one of the smaller ones.

    After our trip to town, we hitched up and drove to our Yellowstone campsite at Lewis Lake. The roads were pretty traffic free except around the main sites where people were parking along the roads as the lots were full.

    At Lewis Lake, we discovered that our campsite, while large, was very steep. The camper is parked in the only level area, and I'm still sliding downhill into Phil overnight. Parking the pickup was more difficult, and the passenger door was either going to be under a tree or the slope was going to allow everything to slide out of the back! These sites are for units less than 25 feet. No generators. No electricity. There are lots of tents here, and the sites are small and very uneven in terrain.

    We took a walk to the lake and came back to have supper and set up the solar panel. Best charge so far. We also stopped in the Ranger Station to get our briefing. We are not allowed to even spit our toothpaste out on the ground here due to bears. Apparently, bears like toothpaste.

    This morning, we got up early and drove 30 minutes back to Old Faithful for the breakfast buffet. We'll spend some time here and then not sure where we'll go today. We want to stop at Grant, which is on Yellowstone Lake, and get a shower today.
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  • Yellowstone Day 2 1/2

    August 8, 2024 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F

    We had a great day. We had breakfast at Old Faithful Inn, visited the Native American cultural center, which is new to us, bought Phil a T-shirt, and bought a can of sloppy Joe stuff for tonight. We also bought two new beautiful pieces of artwork to hang in our living room at Gainesville, where there are a couple of bare spots. They will be shipped via Fedex to my father and step mom's house, and we'll retrieve them upon our return.

    When we arrived at Old Faithful, the parking lot was empty. When we left about 11 am and the parking lot was full. We drove up to the Firehole Lake drive as every other time I had been there, it was closed. It was much less crowded. We saw lots of thermal features.

    As a little girl, we visited Yellowstone when I was about 6 over Memorial Day weekend. My aunt Sue Ann also went with us so she would have been a teenager. I remember one evening it was very cold and we waited and waited for a geyser to go off and it never did. That reminded me of a sign we saw today that said a geyser MAY erupt between 4:30 and 8:30 pm.

    We also drove across the park to Canyon, then down the Yellowstone valley as it comes from Yellowstone Lake. The bison were beginning their rut, and the big bulls were all rolling around in the dust and posturing. We just sat and watched a while and wondered what the landscape was like when there were millions of these beasts instead of a few thousand. We stopped at Lake for ice, but they were out, so we just bought a couple of ice creams. I usually don't eat stuff like that, but it tasted good today.

    We drove on to Bay Bridge to get ice. Then we stopped at the West Thumb geyser basin to see thermal features in the lake and on shore. Last stop today was at Grant to get showers. Very good operation there, and showers are $5.25.

    Back at camp, I whipped up some sloppy Joe's with a bagged salad. The mosquitos are bothersome tonight, so we are in our bug hooch enjoying the quiet of this campground.

    Tomorrow, we'll drive up to Mammoth Hot Springs. I'm not sure after that. We're here a third night, and then we move to Grand Tetons.
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  • Yellowstone Day 3

    August 9, 2024 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 70 °F

    We got up and had our usual yogurt, coffee, bananas, and poptarts and headed out. We stopped at nearby Grant to use their flush toilets, get more coffee, and reply to emails. Then we headed north toward Grand Prismatic Spring. It is a huge thermal spring that is 200 yards across, and it is a beautiful cyan blue. Around the edge orange bacterial mats the ground. From the ground, it is stunning, and from a drone, it would be more fully visible. There are many Yellowstone bags, postcards, and artwork that feature it. Generally, it is slammed with cars parked up and down the road either direction, and the parking lot is full of cars, tour buses, etc. Today, we were early enough to get a spot in the parking lot and walk the boardwalk at a less crowded time.

    Then, we drove further and stopped at Obsidian Cliffs. Obsidian is a black volcanic glass. The Obsidian mined here by Native Americans was traded all over the US. Archeological finds east of the Mississippi, north into Canada and in the US southwest have been traced to here. It was used to make spear points and arrowheads.

    Finally, we made it to Mammoth Hot Springs. We toured the upper terraces, which were less crowded. Then we went and mailed post cards and had a soup and salad lunch. Mammoth is the park headquarters, and there are historic army barracks and buildings such as the Corp of Engineer office in addition to the hotel, etc.

    We headed back and came upon an accident. A large pickup had turned on its side around a curve. Two men looking glad to be alive were waiting for a tow truck.

    On our way back, we stopped again at Grant for showers. One of my big batteries isn't charging right, so we'll go back to camp and see if I can work that out. Tomorrow, a pancake breakfast, and then we are off to Grand Teton National Park.
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  • Moving Day Teton Natl Park

    Aug 10–13, 2024 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 68 °F

    We had a leisurely breakfast with blueberry pancakes and crispy bacon along with hot coffee. Checkout was at 10 am and I am still having trouble with one of my batteries. There was no chance to charge this morning. When you need a sunny site, you get a shady one. Go figure? I reset the unit and hoped to charge that one later. It seems not to want for charge above 52%, and I had no internet for trouble-shooting.

    The drive to Grand Teton was short. We were here at least an hour before checkin. The checkin guy did not want to let us in, but Phil gave him a charming-old-man story about our trip to Alaska and being on the road now more than 70 days so he let us go in and drop off the camper.

    It was really smokey and also threatening rain. Phil and I drove into Jackson and found a taqueria for lunch in the posh Jackson city center. After we walked up hand took pictures by the Antler arch on the square. Same as when I was 6 years old, but much more snooty and high-end.

    We made a grocery store run after, and Albertsons was slammed. Found everything but the individually wrapped wet ones that I like for my pocket after a pit toilet stop. We'll just use hand gel for now, I guess.

    Back at Colter Bay, we checked out the laundry and shower facility for later. This whole complex has hundreds of campsites. The infrastructure was from the Mission 66 era (1966 that is), so about the time my family came here in the late 60's and they are considering what to do next to update the aging infrastructure. We do have flush toilets here across from our site.

    I charged the big battery in the sun with the solar panel and it went up to 54%, so that's a good sign. Unfortunately, it is a little rainy this afternoon, so the sun was limited. Phil wants pork chops on the grill for supper. Easy clean up and not many dishes.
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  • Tetons Day 2

    August 11, 2024 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 72 °F

    Quiet day. We each had an extra cup of coffee and then went to the shower house. After a shower, we went to the Colter Bay Visitor's Center. Phil got some info about fishing here.

    We had a pizza and a salad at the cafe and then spent the afternoon using the solar panel to charge the battery, which was acting up. I got it above 80% with the solar panel, and that will work for now.

    We have 2 more nights here. Then, we'll drive south to the Fossil Butte National Monument for a visit at the Visitor's Center. I made us a reservation at "Little America" between Evanston and Rock Springs on I-80 for Tuesday night, and we can definitely get everything all charged up there. Our journey is coming to an end soon. We'll be back in the Laramie area by Thursday evening.
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  • Tetons Day 3

    August 12, 2024 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 70 °F

    We had a more active day today. It was rainy on and off, so we ate breakfast at the restaurant and then showered. Phil wanted to "see the sights" today, so we first drove back north to Flagg Ranch. We stopped and examined Polecat Creek as a possible fishing spot. Phil chatted with a ranger just back from putting out someone's campfire. The main problems here are 1. Coolers and food attractions left out where bears can access them, and 2. Unattended campfires, people not extinguishing their campfires, and unauthorized fires in the back country. Another problem is people accessing two hot springs near Flagg Ranch that are protected.

    We drove back south and checked out the Snake River, but by then, it was too windy to cast a fly line properly. We stopped in at our campsite and switched out the batteries. (One is still acting up, but limping along.)

    We drove south to all the scenic spots and the trailhead to hike/climb the Grand Teton. A sad notice at the trailhead asking that if anyone finds certain items (pictures of them posted at the trailhead) that they could be a hiker gone missing in 2021 and please turn them into the Ranger Station.

    We stopped and watched the bison for a while again on the way back. Our wildlife count has been a deer in our campground, a snowshoe hare in our campsite, a mysterious gopher who is pulling plants by the roots underground into his hole, and a coyote.

    On return to our campsite, we have rolled over 10,000 miles this trip. So far, an average of over 22 miles per gallon for the whole trip even towing the camper.

    Tomorrow, we'll head toward Fossil Butte and then begin the trip to Laramie the next day.
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  • Little America, WY

    August 13, 2024 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 72 °F

    We are at an I-80 landmark called Little America. It is kind of in the middle of nowhere but has an old school hotel, truck stop, restaurant, and now a brand new RV park.

    We were ready to get here after driving much of the day in rain and sometimes hail. We made a quick stop in Jackson to restock on yogurt and a few other things. Then, we stopped for lunch at a pull off by the Snake River. We pulled into a campground to use the bathroom and spent 20 minutes talking to the camp host.

    We drove south through Star Valley, then over the Salt River Pass and into what used to be a shallow inland sea area. Great Salt Lake is all that remains of the inland sea. It would have been a beautiful drive to Fossil Butte Visitor's Center, but it was raining and then hailing so hard we could barely see. I grabbed my raincoat and ran in through the rain because I desperately needed to use the restroom.

    The Visitor's Center was small but very interesting. One of the technicians was working on a fossil slab and explained how it was done. The sea had a bottom layer of salt, which kept scavengers from eating dead fish, plants, reptiles, and mammals.

    After leaving, we drove through an area where the hail.was so deep that they were using a snowplow to remove it. Also, there is a lot of localized flooding.

    Tomorrow, we hope to be back in the Laramie area, and I will end the blog. It will be another couple of weeks before we are settled in Gainesville, MO, but mostly that will be filled with doctors and dentist visits, visits with family, and the transition to small town life.
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  • Willow Campground Site 15 near Laramie

    August 14, 2024 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F

    It was foggy this morning but became clear after breakfast. Such a beautiful drive with buttes, sage, and antelope. We stopped for a picnic at Ft Steele rest area and then turned off I-80 and drove through Saratoga , up one side of Medicine Bow Mt and then over the top and down the other side.

    We stopped at Nash Campground near the top of the summit as it was recently redone. It's very nice, but no shade.

    We checked out our favorite campgrounds, Pine and Willow, at Libby Creek. The one good site at Pine was full. Our favorite site at Willow was reserved, but the second favorite next to it is open indefinitely. We'll be here at least 8 nights, depending on how our dental appts go next week. We hope to drive back to Missouri slowly. Phil wants to stop at the Meindl Boot store in Sydney, NE. He also wants to stop in Topeka to visit his parents' graves. We hope to stop in Kansas City to visit Phil's brother and family, my Mom and Stepdad, and maybe my brother and his wife if everyone is around. We will also stop in Nixa, MO, to see my dad and stepmom. We hope to also swing through Branson and go to Silver Dollar City since we have season passes and have not been yet this year.

    Thanks to all of you who came along for the 75-day ride with us to Alaska and back. It was a great trip and makes us want to do more of these kinds of road trips in the future.
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