Posts tagged #Adventurer

The Ultimate Roadtrip pt.5

IMG_8661-May 25, 2016.jpg

It’s like Alaska on Steroids

DAY 5, 05/25/16: Saskatoon Island Provincial Park to Pocahontas Campground

Before I moved to Alaska a Swedish friend who lives there told me that Alaska is like Northern Sweden on Steroids. Well here we were, our fifth day of driving, and I could never have imagined that the views would get even better than what they had been. At one point I looked out the window and told W, I am saturated, saturated of mountains. I said, I can’t take it any longer as I put down the camera on my lap and just stared at all these magnificent views. If Alaska is like northern Sweden on steroids, Western Canada is like Alaska on Steroids. These two coming days we were going to drive fairly long stretches, but we also wanted to explore the national parks a little bit.

We were on the road before 8 am and I think we started to get tired by now. Day five, on our roadtrip. Last time we showered was at Liard Hotsprings, but that didn’t bother us as much as sitting still in a car. Luckily we were on our way to two incredible national parks in Canada, Jasper and Banff. Our drive was going to be short today (well, everything is relative right?), because we were finally gonna stretch our legs and conquer a mountain! After about 4 hrs of driving through a wide open landscape that slowly took us closer and closer to the mountains we were now entering Jasper National Park. As you enter Jasper the road immediately takes you into the mountains, and the views are just out of this world. I don’t know of any other place like Jasper and Banff. When you cross the Athabascan river, driving south on the Yellowhead Highway the views are just out of this world. I know I keep using the same adjectives, spectacular, incredible, out of this world, but if you have ever been here I am sure you would have a hard time not to overuse all of these describing words too.

Driving through Maligne Canyon

The views of deep forest, lakes and mountains could be seen in all four directions. It was hard to know where to look at times, and I wanted to stop at every pullout, which we of course did not do. We would probably still be there if I could have gotten it my way. But, we were finally going to hike, so I was super excited about that. We drove towards Maligne Lake because that is where the trail head to Bald Hills is located. We passed the Medicine Lake and drove along fire scarred forests and majestic mountains. Bald Hills summit is a 13.2 km out and back hike, that offers spectacular views. Again the weather was sunny now, but there were clouds on the horizon. I really do not know how we always manage to pick a hike where we see absolutely no other people.

Bald Hills Summit Trail

This trail first takes you through the deep forest, crossing streams and slowly going up in elevation. When you are so far up in elevation that mountains and lakes start appear through the gaps between the large trees that surrounds you. Eventually you break out from the forest and step out into the alpine vegetation, because now you are more than 2,000 meters above sea level.

Up above the treeline

Eventually we broke through the treeline and ended up in a field of snow. It was indeed late May, which in the mountains still mean snow. And the mountains, those mountains wherever you turned your eyes. The last part of the trail is fairly steep, and we were walking through some very deep snow. From the top of the Bald Hills summit you have 360 degree panorama views of the Canadian Rocky Mountains. From the top you can also see Maligne lake, the lake we could spot through the trees earlier. Of course with the rain constantly haunting us we managed to see a wonderful full rainbow over the mountains.

Of course we had to take a few selfies in the mountains too! On the way down we played around in the snow a bit until we reach the trees and the forest again. We had such a good luck with the weather, but as always the dark clouds were coming towards us, and we got in a hurry to get off the mountains before the rain came.

When we were done with the hike we went and got a camping spot. We didn’t want to drive too far after the hike so we had picked out a campground fairly close to the hiking trail, Pocahontas Campground. We had been worried about finding a spot, since it seemed like there were so many tourists around, well on the road, and not on the hike of course. But when we finally got to the campground, it was completely empty, of course. I immediately realized that we had reach civilization when I saw the soda vending machine by the bathrooms at the campground.

Day 5 trip Details - Gas, Camping, and gas mileage:

  • Canada: Shell Canada Grande Praire AB. 18.5 miles from Saskatoon Island Provincial Park. Mileage 25 miles/gallon

  • Canada: Petro Canada Jasper AB. 250.8. Mileage 24.49 miles/gallon

  • Total driving on day 5, about 269.3+ 29.9 miles from gas station to Pocahontas Campground (299.2).

  • The grand total of the whole trip: 1702.3 miles

  • Campground: Pocahontas Campground, AB

Skiing in Denali National Park

 

Adventure Tuesday

Spring in Denali?

    A few weekends ago, when we made a short appearance in Alaska again, we took the opportunity to go skiing in Denali. We were so lucky when it comes to the weather. It felt like spring, snowmelt, 45 degrees and sunny, with some blue sky! Denali is tricky, she can create her own weather patterns, that is why so few people actually get to see her. But we did, and we have so many times in the past too, countless times.

 
 

Too warm to ski?

    The only downside to cross country skiing when its above 40 degree is that it is slightly too warm. But, we really really wanted to get out, and hiking was not an option since the snowpack was so deep. We decided to ski up this creek, towards the mountains. Sun was shining and the snowpack was thick, if you were trying to walk on the snow without skis you would sink through, well actually that tend to happen a bit with the skis too. We saw open water at some places but not a single animal, well, we did see some ptarmigan, but that was about it. We packed the snow down at our tunaround point and sat down for some lunch. I told W how lucky we were, lucky to be out here in the middle of Denali National Park. We glanced up the creek towards the mountains, and bot of us were thinking about the same thing. We wished we had a tent, more gear and time to actually get ut there and get somewhere. But we were pleased with the outing still. You take what you can get, right?

 
 

    Snow will stay on the ground until late April, early May, sometimes even later in Alaska. In Madison it's completely snow free now, and I walked around in shorts this past weekend. 

 

ad·ven·ture - /adˈven(t)SHər,ədˈven(t)SHər/

 

Adventure Tuesday

"By replacing fear of the unknown with curiosity we open ourselves up to an infinite stream of possibility. We can let fear rule our lives or we can become childlike with curiosity, pushing our boundaries, leaping out of our comfort zones, and accepting what life puts before us" - Alan Watts

 
 

Adventuring

    These days many people are out and about in the world, adventuring, and then afterwards we like to share or experiences. Do you ever read about other peoples adventures and wish you were doing the same? I do all the time. What a lot of people fail to recognize is that most of our life is a big adventure. W always reminds me that "this is our Adventure, right here and right now". If you keep thinking about what you could be doing you are going to miss the biggest adventure of your life, your life! I am pretty sure all of us can think back to a time (or several times) when we did something adventurous. Now, the worst thing you can do is to compare yourself with others. I think this is a problem that is nowadays slowly increasing, because we get fed by Instagram and Facebook, and see pictures of all the awesome places people go to, and think "hey I wanna go there too". 

    Back in the day, before Instagram existed I would go on hikes and live my own little life in my bubble. I wouldn't think about my hiking as an adventure. Maybe because if you keep doing something on a regular basis it is not an adventure anymore, it becomes a habit? I couldn't care less about what other people did out in the world, because I didn't know about it. Am I the only one who look at other peoples Instagram feed or blogs in awe? I guess social media comes with a lot of packages. 

 
 

Adventure in Books  

    When I was browsing the internet world googling about adventuring I came across a few sites that are showing the usage of different words through time. So according to them, are we adventuring more or less nowadays?

 
 

Do we Adventure Less?   

    So, it seems like adventuring has decreased lately, well in the last 200 years? Maybe, maybe not. Question is how we define adventuring. I guess back in the day they wrote about the conquering of giant dragons and sea mammals in the ocean? In my opinion an adventure is what you make it. If you think something is an adventure you are probably right. The whole world can't have the same viewpoint of everything, nothing would be an adventure then. Someone who climbs Mt Everest might not think that going to the local park is an adventure. But Sam who's 5 years old might think the world of that park and call it an adventure. Or Christina who is 43 years old might call a hike in the small forest close to her house an adventure, because it includes things she wouldn't normally do in her day to day life, like jumping on stones to get across a creek.

Plus, a search on the statistics about google searches on adventures shows us:

 

 

Canoeing Adventure

 

I am a hiker/adventurer?

    The development of social apps has opened up the world of adventures for many people, but unfortunately it also opened up the world for criticism. Angeliqa wrote about that not to long ago in her Swedish hiking blog. People get judged for how they look (body appearance) when they go hiking, as if you wouldn't be enough of a hiker just because your body shape isn't representative of all the mindless mannequins in a store. Just because you don't look like you can run a marathon doesn't mean you can't, just because you look like you can run a marathon doesn't mean you are able to go hiking. Peoples perception are most often skewed, and if we fail to recognize that it can hit us hard, really really hard. Not everyone are able to let comments like that go by us without a batting of an eye. 

 

Solo bike adventure <20 minutes from a city

 

Hiking and Preparations    

    There are tons of right and wrongs when you go hiking, things you can do before hand to make it easier, gear you can wear or use to make it easier, but that doesn't mean that you have to have all that gear to be able to go hiking or go on an adventure. Hiking and adventuring is for everyone. The biggest preventer for me to go on an adventure right now is TIME. 

    What is your opinion about hiking and adventuring?

    Here is a positive thing about hiking,