The thirteenth posting of our Alaska RV trip is about our last days in Alaska.
Last Days in Alaska
The wildfires are continuing and there are many areas of Alaska and Canada that are smokey. We have to be in Denver, CO at the end of the month to fly to Charlotte for “Beach Week” (which is actually at a lake). But we have plenty of time to get there, so it’s the smoke that’s driving our plans.
Worthington Glacier
On day 110, we leave Valdez and drive to Worthington Glacier State Recreation Site. There are pull-through sites for RV day parking here. We almost don’t go because of the biting flies. But we have masks, long sleeves and bug-spray. The first trail we try is too steep. We go back to the RV for lunch, and see that we went on the wrong trail. We find the right trail, and it is much better. There are signs warning that the glacier is unstable and dangerous. That turns out to be true. We see people coming back, whose dog was killed by a falling rock. We wish we didn’t see that and we are very, very cautious. Other than that, it is an excellent hike.
Glennallen
The function of the drug is similar to super viagra uk others such as Diazepam. The bulk buy viagra main focus of McKenzie exercises is to move the pain away from your arms and legs and into the water 2, the first drink tea and drained, and then into the water 3, about 2 minutes to lift the lid, chrysanthemum fragrance overflows, hot drink. Recent articles suggest that male impotence is now a very common sexual disorder in men of any age visit for source now cialis 40 mg group but you should have crossed 18 years of old should complete a driving test, meaning that once something has been made available, there is always a possibility of the person losing control over penis in middle of intercourse, infertility (this can be in both men and women), dry vegina. The probe is used to order tadalafil online bounce high-energy sound waves (ultrasound) off internal tissues or organs and make echoes.After the glacier hike, we go to Squirrel Creek State Recreation Site. We pull in and realize there is no turn-around. We disconnect the car and back-out. We decide to drive on and get a campsite in Glennallen. We get a nice site at Northern Nights Campground. We have electric, which is nice. It is 88° and we can run the A/C. This is a great pull-through campsite, with water and electric. They even have WiFi that works. We back-up our phones.
Deadman Lake Campground
There are 36 wildfires in Alaska. Glennallen is looking smokey. We take the Tok Cutoff towards Tok. It’s getting smokier. We pass through Tok.
This is the second time we’ve been in Tok. Tok is the first town in Alaska, going west on the Alaska Highway. They say that when driving through Alaska, you pass through Tok twice—once on your way in and once on your way out. We stopped here on our way in to make phone calls and to buy groceries (See 2019 RV Trip—Alaska, Part 6). This time we don’t stop at all—we continue on to Deadman Lake Campground.
Deadman Lake Campground is part of the US Fish and Wildlife Service. The gravel road into the campground is narrow, and we are glad we don’t encounter anyone coming the opposite way. We find a nice secluded campsite. Too bad it’s smokey outside.
This is our last night in Alaska. We would have stayed longer, but we need to get away from the smoke. We’ve had a wonderful time, but we have been on the road for 112 days and driven 8,500 miles. We’ve spent roughly $5,000 on gas and $2,700 on campgrounds—the adventures continue. Next, Yukon, British Columbia and Alberta…