Sailing in Gray

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This morning’s view is a study in gray with steel blue waves slicing into the light smoke of the horizon.  Closer to the ship, gray puffs of rain-making clouds close in on us.  I pray these lighten by noon, before we reach Hubbard Glacier.

Though the ocean is smooth, I feel a slight sway ever so often.  If I were to relax into it, I could fall back asleep.  But I’d rather not.  Morning is my best time to think and to wonder in the quiet – to write and to pray.

Though I had no intention to, I picked up a couple of books at the Denali Park bookstore.  Books are my particular weakness; yet they also serve as sacred souvenirs of travel.  One I’ve been enjoying this morning comes from an 1879 travel journal penned by John Muir,  where he writes about his first experiences of Alaska.  I enjoy pondering the thoughts of this man, described as part-naturalist and part-poet, who served as the Sierra Club’s first president.

Here’s a passage I particularly like for this first morning at sea:

“The scenery of the ocean, however sublime in vast expanse, seems far less beautiful to us dry-shod animals than that of the land seen only in comparatively small patches; but when we contemplate the whole globe as one great dewdrop, striped and dotted with continents and islands, flying through space with other stars all singing and shining together as one, the whole universe appears as an infinite storm of beauty.”

— John Muir, Travels in Alaska

Winter’s Home

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There is talk of snow arriving in Denali Park Village today.  In two weeks, the last tourist will depart.

The little village that sits just beyond the entrance to Denali National Park, exists solely to support tourists; no restaurants or shops remain open in the off-season.  Before leaving for winter, maintenance crews will board up windows and wrap street lamps within protective covering.  The village will close and fold up like a board game.

For now, end-of-the-season sales keep workers somewhat busy as they talk of going home.  Wherever home is, it’s not here.  Thursday morning’s bus driver will return to Alabama.  Wednesday’s gift shop worker hails from South Carolina.  Wednesday night’s young waitress hopes to land a job in Germany; if not, she’ll migrate to Costa Rica where her uncle has a home.  The Park will return to its home state too; inhabited only by wildlife and Park staff, it will go home to quiet.

The national parks face a challenge in making this wild land and its inhabitants accessible without spoiling them or us.   With over six million acres of land — most accessible only on foot — Denali strikes a fair balance.  The sole Park Road we traveled by bus Wednesday — 92 miles long — begins paved at Denali Park Village.  Fifteen miles in, the road narrows and turns to gravel.  Only buses and those granted special permits — a minimum three night stay is required — are allowed to travel the unpaved segment.  Limiting vehicle count keeps the road passable and wildlife less disturbed; whenever and wherever vehicles meet wildlife – even on top of hairpin curves tottering above land — traffic stops and engines turn off.

Most of Wednesday’s wildlife sightings — Grizzlies, Caribou (Reindeer), Moose, Wolf and Dall Sheep — came courtesy of our tour guide’s sharp eyes.  

How she drove the bus up and down switchbacks and tight hairpin turns, while spotting wildlife out of the corner of her eye, unnerved me – I wouldn’t have minded had she’d kept her total attention on the road.

But she knew best.  This wild land was once her home.  Balancing gas pedal nerve with braking caution, she was in tune with the land and its wildlife, a testament to what the Alaskan wilderness had made of her.  As she drove, she shared stories of her “bush country” life.  With her husband and four children, she lived on homesteaded land in a 16 x 16 foot cabin.  They lived lean — self-sufficient as possible — since their closest neighbor lived 50 miles away.  They hunted.  They made and wore clothes from Caribou.

In winter, they traveled by dog sled, courtesy of sixteen sled dogs.  In summer melt, they canoed waters seventeen miles to their fish camp, which became home for summer.  They fished commercially to buy in bulk, staples like flour and rice.  They bought enough for nine months and stored it high in a cache – a small shed that sits on stilts – to keep it safe from bear raids.

What were her reasons for leaving?  I wish I had asked.  Though maybe I didn’t, since I sensed her reasons lied with the husband she spoke of in past-tense.  For now, she is happy living eleven miles north of the village, mothering her eleven year old son and driving buses year-round – tours in summer, a yellow school bus the rest of the time.  When the time is right, she’ll return home.  Like us.  But not like us.

North to Denali

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My husband and I are friendly types, though not overtly so.  We smile when smiled upon.  We do our part in picking up a dangling comment on the weather whenever a stranger volleys one in our direction.  We graciously respond to questions about the place we call home.  But  never do we initiate contact – especially when on vacation.

We don’t travel to strike up temporary friendships with fellow travelers.  People, like my husband — who still works full-time — travel to get away, to enjoy a little down-time.  So we’ve never felt a need to converse with strangers, maybe because from where we come from, strangers want to stay that way.  But if today’s train ride into Denali Park is anything to go on, our “not-overtly-friendly” years may be drawing to a close.

This is a big year in our married life since we both turn 55.  Alaska is our ‘bon voyage’ into what we hope will become our golden travel years.  But today taught me I’ve got to ‘up’ my game if I want to make it on the senior travel circuit.   Fifteen minutes out of the train station, as my husband and I were quietly studying our Alaska Rail travel brochures, I heard a woman with a Texas drawl come up the aisle visiting with the mostly senior crowd.  When she reached our row, she began talking with the couple sitting across from us.  She squealed upon learning they too were from Texas.

“Whereabouts in Texas?”
“Crawford.  You know, where President Bush has his ranch.”
“Do you know him?”
“No.  These days we don’t even know when he’s at the ranch.  No helicopters, you know.”

From there, the conversation took off.  I tried not to eavesdrop, but when I heard they came from Texas, I got interested in spite of myself.  And when I heard the lady from Crawford tell her new found friend that her husband once worked for Dow Chemical in Freeport, I found myself blurting out, “My husband does too.”

My faux pas broke their momentum a little.  But it wasn’t any time before they were back on track.  Until the woman sitting mentioned she was a retired CPA … and of course, I butted in again.  “I’m a CPA too.”

“Where did you work?
“Well, I worked at Arthur Andersen for a number of years, but I ended up at Intermedics when I moved to Texas.”
“You are not going to believe this….but I interviewed at Arthur Andersen too.  But when I graduated in 1962, Arthur Andersen hired only men.  They apologized to me, but that’s just how it was back then.  I understood.”

Well, from there, our conversation took off.  We talked about everything:  Stock investments…surgeries….religion.

There’s really not a long story short when traveling in senior circles.  Preliminaries like the weather and exchanging hometowns are merely appetizers to the main course, where nothing about one’s life is considered sacred.  Who know what heights we’ll reach if we reconnect in a couple of days – would you believe we’re taking the same cruise?