Alaska
Glacier Expedition
Exploring
glaciers with snowmobiles
20140402-06
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Alaska's
mighty glaciers as seen from the air.
All photos
copyright, Bill Caid 2014. All rights reserved.
The
Trip
I was invited to join Dan, Kai and Roberto at
Dan's mountain cabin near Summit Lake in central Alaska to go
snowmobiling. The locals refer to them as "sleds" or
"mountain sleds" and these are racing snowmobiles with low
weight and high horsepower. Just the right combination
of attributes for a rank amateur like myself to get into
trouble.
Our plan was to rally at the San Diego airport and then fly to
Fairbanks via Seattle, WA. The flight was easy and not
totally full. Dan met us at the airport and we headed
out for the mountain cabin located near the Gulkana Glacier at
Summit, AK.

I found this map of the area online. It shows the
Gakona and Gulkana glaciers as well as the route to the
McLaren River.
Tracking Our
Location Via The SPOT
Some years ago, after
a scary
mechanical failure in the canyons and mesas of southern Utah,
we decided that we need a better way to advertise our position
and call for assistance if needed. Kathleen found out
about the SPOT which is a GPS locator that transmits your
coordinates via satellite so that others can see your
location. The location is plotted on Google maps and a
"bread crumb" feature is available for an additional
fee. We have the enhanced service, so you can see our
historical path back 50 updates or so. See our current
location plotted on Google Maps in Real-Time via SPOT
satellite geo-locator device. This page is
"book-markable" and is updated approximately every 15 minutes,
but may miss updates due to inability of our transmitter to
reach the satellite. The communication is "open loop" so
the device never knows if it's messages are actually going
anywhere, it just keeps trying until the next update is
available. If we are in a congested urban area with high
buildings (like Manhattan) or in deep canyons, the position
may not update. We try to send an "OK" message once a
day just to let everyone know that we are, in fact, OK.
Connecting and
Contacting Us While on the Trip
Because of internet
connectivity issues on a previous trip, we purchased a MiFi
cell phone modem that allows us to connect nearly anywhere
there is 3G service via cell phone (which is most of the cell
phone service area available today). But, as we all
know, cell phones are useful many places, but not everywhere
has coverage, particularly in the remote areas of the western
U.S. Our phones and the modem are enabled daily so you
may contact us, although it may take a few days for us to
respond. But, we will respond. My email, spelled
out, is "bcaid at yahoo dot com".
Trip
Details
The link
table below contains links to the photos and dialog for each
of the days of the expedition. This table will be
updated as the trip progresses.
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Back to Bill Caid's Home Page.
Copyright Bill Caid 2014