Did you ever go someplace, see some stuff, leave, and immediately know you didn’t do it right? I guess it happens to all of us, especially us “travelers”. Sometimes “schedules”, real or imagined, push us on. Life’s journey may or may not ever bring us back. Here is a an experience we had up here in Alaska.
Early in June, we were in Fairbanks, just beginning our Alaska discovery. We heard about the Chena Hot Springs Resort, 50 miles northeast of town. We drove up and stayed at the Hot Springs one night. At the end of this post I will show you some photos of this neat resort area. But now I want to tell you about “doing it right”.
We had left Chena Hot Springs Road the next day thinking, “this is what we pictured Alaska to be”, we have to come back some day. But right then we figured we had to get on with the Alaska “tourist tour” stuff.
Almost two months later, while we were camping on the Delta Clearwater River, we decided we needed to go back west again and spend time on Chena Hot Springs Road as well as see visit the Fairbanks Fair and travel the Denali Highway. So off we went, retracing a section of the highway back to Fairbanks. It was Saturday and we knew popular areas, especially around cities, are very busy over the weekends. We wanted to arrive on Sunday afternoon when those who work had to return to work (we remember those days well) and the best places would not be crowded, just waiting for us. So we pulled into the Wal-Mart parking lot, got a couple movies from the Redbox and relaxed for the evening.
The Hot Springs Resort is at the end of the 57 mile, paved two lane Chena Hot Springs Road (hereafter called The Road, because I am tired of typing the whole name). It cuts through the huge Chena River State Recreation Area a mecca of outdoor opportunities such as fishing, hiking, camping, rafting, canoeing, hunting, ATVing and wildlife viewing. We drove about 35 miles up The Road and unhooked the Jeep so we could check out many of the gravel/dirt turnoffs to see if they would be OK for the motor home. There were many opportunities. We wondered if just a few hours earlier the weekend campers were packing up and heading back to Fairbanks. We certainly saw quite a few on The Road heading the other direction.
We found what looked like the PERFECT SPOT to camp. Down a good gravel road to 45.5 Mile Pond. We went back and got the motor home and pulled in with the front windshield of the Trek ten feet from the water’s edge, overlooking the lake. AND THERE WE STAYED FOR FOUR DAYS!
Across the pond as an active beaver lodge. That evening three beavers came across the pond and one swam right in front of the motor home. He (or she) seemed to be checking us out and wondering “what the hell were we doing on his pond?”. Back and forth he swam and then he started slapping his tail on the water. I guess he was either telling the others to stay away but more likely, in my mind, telling us to get out. The beavers showed up every evening, but after the first day, they seemed to accept us as “friendlies”.
Moose were frequent visitors to the pond, which was only a couple hundred yards across. It was a good thing that I kept the motor home ten feet from shore so the moose could walk between us and the water . Dee thought long and hard about the best names for the moose and decided One, Two……Twelve was very descriptive. Some we only saw once but several returned. There was a mother and two calves that we saw several times that we really enjoyed watching. One calf stayed pretty close to mom, but the other wandered around a bit more. At one stage he meandered out on a point of land, just eating grass, while mom and the other calf went into the woods. When he finally looked up, he was shocked and panicked, although we know mom was watching from in the trees. He took off running and just a little later we saw all three close together eating at the edge of the pond.
How did we spend our days on 45.5 Mile Pond? Well first we got up and brushed our teeth….. just kidding. Watching the wildlife, reading, napping, enjoying happy hours, walking and going for rides to explore other places along The Road. Eating was also a popular activity In the afternoons I went fishing, usually catching a couple Arctic Grayling in different spots along the North Fork of the Chena River. I didn’t mention that 45.5 Mile Pond has only very small fish so I don’t fish there. One day we watched a beaver catch a fish. Cool. As far as the reading goes, Dee loves her Kindle and has a backlog of many novels to read. I, have about five books going and have yet to start Michener’s Alaska. I can usually read up to six pages of any one book before dozing off. I think it some type of reading disease. I love to buy books but getting through them can be a real challenge. But more often than not we are gazing out over the waters and shorelines of the pond.
We have pondered and thought back on our ten years on the road, and come to the conclusion that 45.5 Mile Pond is probably our ALL-TIME Favorite Campsite! And that is a big deal considering all the campgrounds and boondocking sites where we have camped.
We did it right and we will be back!
The Chena Hot Springs Resort is a really neat commercial operation at the end of the road. They have lodging, a campground, restaurant and many outdoor activities for vacationers, especially those from Fairbanks for a few days. Their geothermal tour featuring renewable energy projects is impressive. We enjoyed the hot springs and the Aurora Ice Museum, a structure full of beautifully detailed ice sculptures.
Now off to the next adventure……..
2 comments:
You two DO know how to pick a campsite! Wow...what an amazing place you've found. Maybe you should have kept it a secret?
This is one of my favorite posts yet. It not only shows the natural beauty but give me some insight into how you spend you time. Keep on going!
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