A black-and-white road trip to Skagway
I sorta got sucked in by the weather offices yesterday, but I suppose it’s okay because I really needed to hit the road for a day. The weather forecasts for both Whitehorse and Skagway were for mostly sun, clouding up in Whitehorse in the afternoon. As it turned out, I got heavy cloud all day and some moderate snowfall on the way home.
I followed this parade, led by a snowplow, for a few miles just south of the Carcross Corner, but after that there was very little traffic – 3 fuel tankers, 3 Highways Dept. pickups and 4 private vehicles during the 100-mile trip.
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The flat light wasn’t particularly conducive to photography. This is a mile north of the White Pass summit. There seems to have been a heavy snowfall overnight (8-10 inches), and none of the pullouts where I usually stop to run the dogs were accessible, right from Tutshi Lake down.
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Entering Alaska at the White Pass summit.
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The US Customs officer questioned why I’d drive all the way from Whitehorse without a good reason – I just said that checking my mailbox is an excuse to get out with my camera on a drive that I never tire of. He, I’m sure, isn’t the only person who thinks I have a screw loose.
Skagway was very quiet – and 0°C (32°F) with a bit of a north wind. This photo shows the major construction project underway in town – $3.3 million worth of wave barrier to protect the Small Boat Harbor.
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The Railroad Dock – only 5½ months until the first cruise ships of 2010 arrive! 🙂
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A great deal of work is going on at the Gold Rush Cemetery to handle the summer crowds more effectively. The work that was done about 4 years ago, creating paths through the cemetery, made it not worth visiting anymore – at least the current work just “improves” the parking area, foot access from there to the cemetery, and the restrooms.
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There’s something sad about seeing hundreds of millions of dollars worth of railway equipment, buses and boats parked for 7 months or so every year. Some people wonder why Alaska tours are so expensive – this is the major reason why that’s the case.
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There are several passenger cars sitting outside Shops, I think being readied for paint.
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I like them better when they’re running 🙂
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Approaching Fraser, a tiny bastion of civilization in the frozen wilderness.
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Tutshi Lake. The name means “black water” – appropriate in today’s black-and-white world.
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