Saturday, June 29, 2019

Hope on Summer Solstice


High alpine wild flowers collected in a "Solstice rainbow challenge"
SUMMER SOLSTICE. A holiday mostly passed by in the Lower 48 but celebrated with vigor here in AK. A whopping 19 hours of bright light here on the Kenai Peninsula, before the sun sinks just below the horizon for 5 hours of dusky twilight. We slowly build up to it, so in some ways it doesn't seem terribly dramatic. All the same, we find ourselves having conversations that would never happen in the colder months:
8 PM - J - "I'm going to run up Mt. Marathon, okay? Any plans for dinner later?"
11 PM - Indigo - "Let's go out for ice cream for dessert! ...what do you mean it's closed?" 
1 AM - Kim - "I know it's the good part in the movie, but shouldn't we get to bed?"

Midnight on the Summer Solstice
HOPE. This year we decided to head to the tiny town of Hope, Alaska to celebrate the Solstice with a crew of friends. We camped out, went to hear Reggae legend Clinton Fearon in a grassy outdoor venue, walked the mudflat trails along Turnagain Arm, and hiked up the Palmer Creek valley through wildflower fields and over snow fields quickly melting into raging creeks in all the light.

A town of under 200 people, Hope is a hidden gem of kindness, historic intrigue and wild beauty. The sort of timeless spot that perfectly fits these secular holidays.

Classic front porch in Hope, Alaska



This sweet message inspired me to pick up old toilet paper on the public bathroom floors!

About as simple as you can get - the main drag in Hope, Alaska
THE CHERRY PIE MIRACLE. So Indigo's one request for this three day adventure was to get a tasty baked good - preferably, a slice of cherry pie. (Forget the gold panning, epic Alaskan vistas or incredible music, right? Just give the American girl some pie!) Hope does have a few good bakeries so it seemed a reasonable request. Indeed, the first night Indigo scored a miniature cherry pie for $3 inside the Creek Bend's music venue. Delicious, but just a taste... and the more we talked about it as a group, the more everyone got excited for pie!

The next day we explored a few bakery counters and cases but they were empty; the Solstice shenanigans had turned Hope a bit upside down. That evening, we sat around the campfire and our friend Chris got ready to walk to a second night of music. 
Indigo: "Chris, if we give you some money, and they have one of those little cherry pies left, could you please buy it for me? We could stand on the other side of the fence and you could toss it over?"
So Chris, Indigo and Ty headed off down the dirt road on a pie mission. They figured with $20 and some luck (it was late in the evening and very likely that the food trucks had sold out), they might get a few little pies to enjoy.

A half hour later, Indigo and Ty returned, hands full of little cherry pies! The little pies had dropped to $1 per pie and Chris had bought everything they had! Imagining a torrent of pies raining down over the fence as they were chucked over, I learned that Indigo and Ty received a pie hand-off at the venue gate in civilized fashion. A cherry pie miracle!

Home of the Cherry Pie Miracle









Saturday, June 15, 2019

A Break from the Thick Bastards

THICK BASTARDS. Many a visitor to Seward Alaska has absolutely no idea that they are surrounded by white capped mountains or next to a sparkling turquoise bay. Why? Because of what a poet friend of ours named the "Thick Bastards:" a heavy cloud layer that sits low over the water and obstructs all views. When the Thick Bastards move in, parts of Seward Alaska become any flat working-class town in America, except that you just flew thousands of miles for thousands of dollars to get there, and it smells like fish!

However this June the Thick Bastards have been beaten back by an unusual sunny spell, allowing the mountains to rise high in all their glory, and allowing us to get out on the bay and on the trails from sea to summit.

SEA. Thumb Cove is a 45 minute water taxi ride from our small boat harbor. Part of the State Marine Park system, it houses two dry cabins and a jaw dropping natural wonderland backdrop complete with hanging glaciers, waterfalls, mountain goats and marine mammals galore. Usually booked out 6 months in advance, the Spruce Glacier Cabin must have had a last minute cancellation, so the Leslie Ladies and some friends jumped on it!

Tucked in a spruce forest beyond a tidal stream, the cabin is accessed by a sweet bridge and boardwalk.
The view of the Cove... Ahhhh....


Happy Campers, Indigo and Kim.

Who needs to pack toys when you've logs, sand and big rocks?

Yes, the ocean water is still frigid; these SUPers are crazy bonkers.

What does one bring on a trip such as this? Lots of dry bags, totes and coolers of course!

Returning from the Sea, with the Summit ready to climb...

SUMMIT. Team Leslie has been celebrating Father's Day the past few years by taking a backpacking ski trip. Yup, I said ski trip. In June. If there is still white stuff up high, J Leslie will get to it no matter what the season. So we stomp up Mt. Marathon from our front door, camp in the natural bowl protected on her north side, ski the snow fields, and honor J's loves of family and sharp slide-y toys. This year we hit the trail a few days early because we heard the Thick Bastards would be making an appearance over the weekend. So glad we did!

What does one bring on a trip such as this? Apparently, EVERYTHING. (J is super human - I couldn't even lift his pack off the ground, let alone carry it miles uphill.) 

Happy Campers, J and Indigo (and American Girl Doll Lily - Indigo is always happy to carry that extra weight!)

After getting sun OVERNIGHT through our tent, this was almost too much - maybe those Thick Bastards aren't so bad?

We made it!

Happy Father's Day!

PIPER. And this Father's Day is an extra special one because my little brother Chip gets to celebrate as a new dad! He and Kate welcomed Piper Rogers into the world at the end of May; we can't wait to start adventuring with her! How small do they make backpacks???