| Sign Post Forest - Watson Lake, YT |
We stayed the night at the Baby Nugget RV Park and finally got laundry done. Poor Jade had to "go commando" It was actually kind of nice to spend the afternoon doing something as normal as laundry. But that night we made a horrible discovery (the hard way) about our RV. You cannot sleep with the windows open even with the screens closed. The mosquitoes find there way in the gap between the window and the screen. (We are keeping a list of "design flaws" to send to the manufacturer when we get back - lol!) There is no rubber gasket thingy-ma-jig between the screen and window when the window is open - go figure! So after complaining about mosquitoes in my last post, I got a taste of just how bad it could be. Suffice it to say that we ended up getting up at 4:00 a.m. for the second battle of the night to kill the little creatures and at 5 a.m. had to admit defeat. We just got up and got on the road. UGH! We were all a little loopy that day from lack of sleep. Thank goodness Jeff figured out the problem. We also bought a huge can of insect spray and sprayed around the slides in and outside the RV. Let's hope the carcinogens in the bug spray get the bugs and not us.
On our way to Whitehorse we were treated to an amazing site. A whole herd of bison crossing the highway
. Unlike deer, moose and other animals that dart across the highway, these guys act like they own the place!! They just saunter along and it's us that have to wait for them to decide to get out of the way - pretty funny.
| A herd of bison - there were probably 25 of them! |
We breezed through Whitehorse - the largest town in the Yukon Territory with 27,000+ people and again saw places we recognized like the S.S. Klondike - a sternwheeler that carried passengers and supplies on the Yukon River back in the late 1800s. We continue to average about 250 to 300 miles a day and on some of these roads, that is a miracle.
We stopped just west of Haines Junction at Otter Falls RV Park. Talk about the middle of nowhere!! But the folks there were really friendly and as long as we have water and electricity, we are Happy Campers!! I asked the woman who worked there what brought her out to that area. She was from Whitehorse, her last child had just graduated,and she needed something to do - so she said now she is a gypsy. I thought that was pretty cool!
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| Otter Falls - middle of nowhere - Yukon Territory |
| Jade showing off the dirt. It's worse than it looks! |
Our journey from Haines Junction to Tok, Alaska covered THE WORST road we had yet to encounter. There was one frost heave that sent the RV in front of us practically sailing. He pulled off the road shortly after his encounter with that "bump". Jeff said it probably scared the pee right out of him - had to make a bathroom stop - lol! By far the worst stretch is about 40 miles before the Alaska/Canada border. When we were at Otter Falls, we kept seeing these REALLY dirty vehicles going by and I told Jeff that didn't bode well for us. They were coming from the direction we were heading. We quickly learned WHY they looked so bad. Apparently, they have yet to invent highway paving materials that can withstand the shifting of the permafrost. You'd think with all our technological advancements, that would be figured out by now but NOOOOOOOO! In a big rig like ours it almost makes you seasick with with swaying of the vehicle. We've had a few times when Jade and Mya both looked a little green.
What I find really peculiar is that there are two border stations, one for Canada and one for the U.S. and there is a stretch of about 10 miles (of the worst stretches of road on the planet) between the two. I called it no-man's land! Why not have one building - save some money for road work - lol! Between these two stopping points is the actual physical boundary.
The International Boundary Commission cuts a 20 ft. swath of land to mark the boundary and it is responsible for keeping that up. Pretty amazing to stand at that point and see this "path" stretch as far as the eye can see in both directions. Rarely have I seen a physical demarcation of a boundary. It stretches from the Bering Sea south through the Wrangell St. Elias mountains.
| International Boundary between Alaska and Canada |
| Who gets the job of mowing this path? |
The International Boundary Commission cuts a 20 ft. swath of land to mark the boundary and it is responsible for keeping that up. Pretty amazing to stand at that point and see this "path" stretch as far as the eye can see in both directions. Rarely have I seen a physical demarcation of a boundary. It stretches from the Bering Sea south through the Wrangell St. Elias mountains.
We spent the night in Tok, Alaska last night, had dinner at Fast Eddy's, and woke up this morning early to wash the road grime from the RV. This is fire season in Alaska and the night before we arrived, lightning had started a fire about 16 miles outside of Tok. The air is full of smoke and comes and goes with the direction of the wind. Tonight we are at the Tolsona Wilderness Campground - one of our old favorite camping spots. The girls remember playing in the sand on the banks of the river. Folks have told us that this year's mosquito hatch is the worst it's been in years and I think they are right. Even covered in bug repellent they are swarming us. We just came in from a walk around the campground. The bugs were all over us. We need one of those decontamination units you see on TV shows. A transition area between one area and another to keep the bugs out of here!!
It's time to head to Anchorage and civilization. Can't wait to see friends and family.
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