"He gestured vaguely and mentioned
a few landmarks along the way, being careful not to make it too
easy."
I read a version of the legend of
Parceval just before heading off to Alaska this summer. My trip was
not legendary, except perhaps in my own mind. The words above
however, taken from that story, were with me. The scene is a young
Parceval, living in the woods, unaware of Camelot. Two Knights appear
and see something in the boy, but only give him enough to awaken his
sense adventure.
The attitude toward hiking in Alaska is
different than most places I've been. Most parks and wilderness areas
will have a variety of warnings and requirements. Where I went in
Alaska, there were no permits required, I didn't need to check-in
anywhere, if I hadn't initiated contact, they wouldn't have known I
was there. There was no signage, no trailheads, no warnings posted.
Part of this is, I'm sure, due to
the sheer enormity of the space and the barriers that have to be
overcome to get there. Most of the filtering out of people is done by
nature. If you manage to get by the mountains, the snow and the
freezing water, there are the bears. Let's hope the Alaska Department
of Natural Resources isn't thinking that they want to throw you the
wolves, or bears, or whatever else might be out there, but they
definitely expect you to figure out more for yourself than your
average walk in a park.
In Minnesota, before entering the
Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, you are required to get a
permit and watch a video about hanging a bear pack and "leave no
trace" camping. When I hiked the Grand Canyon, there were a lot
of signs up about dehydration and how it is most common that fit
young men are the ones who succumb to it, because they are most
likely to think they won't. There was nothing like this for the Lake
Clarke Wilderness. There also weren't trails.
There is a sketchy explanation of the a
few hikes around the Proenneke cabin area on the NPS website.
http://www.nps.gov/lacl/planyourvisit/low-pass-route.htm
The hike I originally planned involved walking along the lake shore
and, as their description says, "you should be able to discern
which drainage will lead to Low Pass because it's the most
significant one in the vicinity...". Now, without surveying the
entire area, I don't know how you would determine "most
significant", worse, as far as I can tell, the directions start
off sending you east, when you should go west. After that, they say,
"follow the tundra ridge to the pass."
I wanted to make this a loop route, and
the Low Pass description says that at some point, that will lead you
to the Hope Creek route. That description refers you to the Hope
Creek route description, which says that at some point, it will lead
to the Low Pass route. That's as good as it gets.
I have some experience with reading
topographic maps, but if a pass has a name, I don't know how you find
it without that name appearing on the map. I read a few other
descriptions written on wilderness guide websites, but I would expect
them to be vague, since they want you to pay them for what they know.
I thought I had hit pay dirt when I found someone's homemade map, a
satellite photo with a big arrow on it that said "Low Pass".
I matched that up to my topos and found a wide area that was at 3,000
ft, surrounded by the 5,000 or more foot peaks. This seemed to be
"significant".
In case I sound like someone who was
proceeding foolishly, I was, but I wouldn't have tried this without
someone who had some experience along with me. Luckily I have a
brother who lives in Alaska and has worked in the brush. He reviewed
my plan and said it was aggressive. Actually he said, "whoa,
whoa, whoa". Anyway, we changed the plan to the Hope Creek
route. This one proceeds due south from the cabin, following a creek.
It even starts out with some trail, but that trail quickly starts to
break up.
By the way, I looked for books on
hiking in Alaska. I checked guide books, there was less in them than
what I found on the NPS site. On the drive to Homer, we stopped at a
map shop. Nothing. I found a copy of a National Geographic map of
Lake Clarke park on sale on amazon. It was $350. Apparently paper
maps are a collector's item. I was hoping maybe one of the float
plane operators I talked to would give me a little free info, but
most of them hadn't even been there.
Crossing the mountains on the way there
gave me some appreciation of what I was getting into. It's a mere 20
miles or so on the map, but looking down on the cliffs and snow
covered peaks, I knew I wouldn't be walking out of there if anything
went wrong. It was a little bit of a relief when we were greeted on
the radio as we flew up into the Twin Lakes valley. We landed right
at the cabin, which is just a few feet from the water and were
greeted by a rainbow that also came right down to the water. I
realized that was something special when I saw how excited the park
ranger and float plane pilot were. I would have thought that was
something they see every week.
After spending some time in the
historic cabin and getting the obligatory picture in the doorway, we
tried again to get intel on the hike from our park ranger. We got a
couple more details on the Hope Creek route, but it ended with the
same "then you get up on the ridges and you can follow them over
to Low Pass." She literally waved her hand over the map at this
point. Once again, "whoa, whoa, whoa." But that was the
best we were going to get.
The actual experience was, as my
brother expected, much slower than I expected. If we had known better
about where we were going, we might have made it over the ridge and
back down the other way. After a day and a half of hiking, we made it
to a ridge, and could see where it went over into the next valley.
Ridge hiking is a much easier hiking experience than the side of
mountain covered with low bush cranberries and blueberries and
various lichens. But there were many unknowns beyond that and no
reason to challenge them.
When we got back, we met one more park
ranger, and that one finally pointed right to a spot on the map and
said, "that's Low Pass". It was the next valley over, much
more narrow than the one I had found and another 1,000 ft higher. I
could also see by looking at where the streams started, that there
had to be ridges between them, and by following those high spots, it
would lead you right to the ridge we had stood on above Hope Creek.
I didn't actually go there,
so don't take these directions as anything close to a suggestion that
you go there and follow them. I can't know what was over the high
point that I saw. Just before we got to the ridge, we had a choice
between a 200 ft mound of boulders and a scree slope. I choose poorly
and could have easily lost a lot of progress or been injured sliding
down that. Some scree is listed on maps, but most of it isn't. If a
description of an Alaskan hike says "This route crosses a couple
steep scree slopes", as the Low Pass description does, you
should take that very seriously.
There are many things to do
around the Proenneke cabin. There is a small camp site right there
with metal caches to keep the bears away from your food. You can hike
the shore line. There is one rustic lodge on the opposite side of
Upper Twin Lake. Port Alsworth is not far away on a large lake with
many lodges. Many people fly from there and visit the area for a just
a couple hours. I would recommend any or all of those. Whatever you
do, don't miss enjoying the incredible scenery.
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