• Lacey Travels
  • Lacey Travels

North Pacific Passage

Cruising the North Pacific Passage via the Alaskan coast, the Aleutian Islands, Eastern Russia and Northern Japan. Les mer
  • Seward, AK

    21. august 2019, Forente stater ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

    Shrouded in thick bushfire smoke, Seward is almost hidden from the ship. The fires are 60 miles away in the Kenai Peninsula but the prevailing winds are sending the smoke over the mountains where it is settling in Resurrection Bay.Les mer

  • King Crabs

    21. august 2019, Forente stater ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    The red king crab, also called Kamchatka crab or Alaskan king crab, is a species of king crab native to the far northern Pacific Ocean, including the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska, but also introduced to the Barents Sea. It grows to a leg span of 1.8 m,Les mer

  • Kodiak

    22. august 2019, Forente stater ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    Kodiak Island and the city of Kodiak are our next port of call. Situated in the Aleutian Islands, Kodiak gets lots of rain and snow but the port is ice-free. It's home to a huge fishing industry. The warehouses along the port road receive the fish, snap freeze then ship it. No canning is now undertaken on the island.Les mer

  • Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge Centre

    22. august 2019, Forente stater ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    The Wildlife Refuge Centre demonstrates to visitors the key role that the wildlife refuges of the US and, in particular, Kodiak, have in preserving and maintaining native and migratory species. All of the exhibits are models in realistic setttings.
    We learn that the Kodiak Bear is a brown bear but much larger than their mainland counterparts, the Grizzlies. The bear density near Karluk Lake is estimated to be 220 bears per square mile. Density for Grizzlies on the mainland (Denali NP) is 1 bear/12 sq miles.
    Les mer

  • Kodiak History Museum

    22. august 2019, Forente stater ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    Formerly known as the Barenov Museum, this building has several claims to fame:-
    1. Oldest building in AK
    2. Only 1 of 4 remaining Russian structures in AK
    3. Oldest Russian building in USA
    4. Earliest log structure in West Coast USA, built in 1808
    Its a really interesting museum depicting the 3 cultures of Kodiak - the Alutiiq, the Russians and the Americans.
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  • A Russian heritage

    22. august 2019, Forente stater ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    The Alutiiq have been in this region for some 7,500 years. Their story is told in the Alutiiq Museum.
    The Russians came in the late 1700's and set up this building in 1808 and set up a Magazin, the Russian word for store.
    The US purchased Russia in 1867 and this building became the home of the manager of the Kodiak Trading Company.
    In 1911, the Erskine family turned the building into their home.
    In 1948, it was a rooming house.
    In 1967, the City of Kodiak purchased. the building and opened the museum.
    During the tsunami, of 1964, the waves reached up to the front porch of this building which is high above the waterfront.
    Les mer

  • Kodiak

    22. august 2019, Forente stater ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    Found this little interesting painting in the Museum - the four saints of Alaska. St Herman, St Innocent, St Peter the Aleut, St Juvenal.
    St Herman was a monk who came to Kodiak in 1794. He lived on Spruce Island where he had an orphanage and school. His home on MOnk's Lagoon is a place of pilgrimage today.
    St Innocent was the first bishop in Alaska. He translated spiritual texts into the Aleut Language. His encouragement spread literacy among the first peoples.
    St Peter, the Aleut, was a Kodiak sea otter hunter who refused to convert from Orthodoxy to Catholicism in Spanish California. He was killed as a result.
    St Juvenal came to Kodiak with St Herman in 1794. He travelled north among the Church first peoples baptising them. According to oral history he was killed in Yupik territory.
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  • Dutch Harbour, Unalaska

    24. august 2019, Forente stater ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

    Simply known as Dutch to the locals, this is a wild windswept, cold and rainy place in the summer with wind, ice and snow in the winter. The volcanic islands of the Aleutians have very steep sides and rise sharply out of the ocean. Situated right on the Ring of Fire, the islands run along the Aleutian Trench, a deep sea formation where the Pacific Plate is sliding under the North American tectonic plate. The surrounding waters are rich in wildlife and are often referred to as the Cradle of Storms.Les mer

  • WWII Museum, Dutch Harbour

    24. august 2019, Forente stater ⋅ 🌧 11 °C

    It was here in the Aleutians that the US forces came up against the Japanese in WWII around the time of Pearl Harbour.The Japanese attacked Dutch Harbour and occupied the island of Kiska in 1942. In 1942/3, US forces began to occupy Amchitka. In May 1943, the Battle of Attu saw 12,500 US soldiers land and began a slow and costly campaign to defeat the Japanese. It was a war combining air strikes and ground assaults. Those Japanese that were still alive, all committed suicide. Of particular note is that the US issued leather army boots were no barrier to the intense cold, causing extensive frostbite. Both they and the Japanese eventually opted for Aleutian traditional garb to combat the cold.Les mer