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Globe Trekker: Alaska |
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Traveller Ian Wright begins his journey in
the town of Eagle, on the banks of the Yukon
River. Eagle is home to the Athabascan Indians
who live a subsistence lifestyle, eating salmon in the summer
and moose in the winter.
From Eagle, Ian travels to the town of Chicken
(population 25) which has no running water, electricity or
telephones and is completely isolated in the winter. He parties
with the locals and goes on a tour in a 1946 light aircraft
made of wood and fabric. While hes in town, Ian also
goes gold-dredging in the Fortymile River. |
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Ian continues his journey north, to the twin towns of Kennicott
and McCarthy, situated in the Wrangell-St
Elias National Park. Kennicott was once the richest source
of copper in the world, but when copper prices collapsed in
the 1930s, the 800 miners were made redundant and Kennicott
became a ghost town. Just outside McCarthy, Ian goes glacier
climbing on the Root Glacier.
Next, Ian heads for the coast. He travels up Prince
William Sound on the state-run marine ferry and eventually
arrives in the town of Seward. This is the departure point
for a sea kayaking trip, and Ian encounters whales, dolphins
and sea lions.
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En route to Homer, Ian stops off on the
Kenai River for a spot of fishing. He discovers
hes not a natural fisherman however, as he doesnt
manage to catch even one salmon. Arriving in Homer, Ian goes
sky trekking in a Cessna 185. Lori, the pilot takes him out
to remote lakes and mountains and they spend the afternoon
watching grizzly bears and catching salmon in waterfalls.
The final leg of the journey takes Ian north, past Mt
McKinley, the highest peak in North America, and
up above the Arctic Circle to the land of the midnight sun. |
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Bear dining on the finest salmon at the Kenai River |
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