Monthly Archives: May 2014

Tok (RV day 14 : Sat May 31)

We made it to Alaska! The last 20+ kilometer stretch of the Alaskan Highway in Yukon was under heavy construction. Most of the road surface was gravel and traffic was restricted to one-way travel under the direction of pilot cars. We had heard a lot about frost heaves while researching this trip and we were happy to find that the road was free of any particularly dangerous heaves. Once we entered Alaska, the road quality improved dramatically.

Earlier, in the morning, we stopped by the Village Bakery in Haines Junction for some delicious cinnamon buns, scones, and bread.

Our campsite is Tok RV Village in Tok, AK. It seems like a pretty good campground, with well maintained bathrooms, laundry facilities, and plenty of mostly level campsites.

Whitehorse (RV day 13 : Fri May 30)

Today, we drove through Whitehorse, the largest city and capital of Yukon! We parked by the visitor center, where the Yukon tourism associate pointed out some of the key destinations in town. We ate a hardy lunch at Klondike Ribs & Salmon in downtown Whitehorse. After lunch, we stopped by the MacBride Museum of Yukon History, but declined to walk through it due to a lack of time and a steep $10/person admission fee.

After a quick stop at the Wal-Mart in Whitehorse, we drove to Haines Junction, YT. Our campsite is Kluane RV Kampground. There is only one single-occupant bathroom for each gender, but they are clean and well maintained. There’s also a hiking trail that abuts the RV park that we walked along for about half an hour.

I’ve been told that there’s a good bakery in Haines Junction and I’m looking forward to sampling their goods tomorrow.

Bear Watch 2014 & Watson Lake (RV day 12 : Thu May 29)

We’ve seen more wildlife along the side of the Alaskan Highway than at any of the national parks. Today, we saw a few more bison, a wolf, and 8 bears (no bear families today). Valerie’s mom is very excited whenever we encounter wildlife. We sometimes slow down the RV to take pictures when it is safe to do so.

Day # of bears seen
Tue 1
Wed 6
Thu 8

We stopped by the signpost forest in Watson Lake and the nearby visitor center. We watched a short movie about the construction of the Alaskan Highway and then received a whole lot of helpful information from a Yukon tourism associate.

Our campsite was the Yukon Motel in Teslin, YT. It has free WiFi in the restaurant, which serves pies and cinnamon rolls. It is located just after the bridge to Teslin, so bridge noise might keep up light sleepers (like Valerie).

Liard River Hotsprings (RV day 11 : Wed May 28)

After filling up on gas and propane in Fort Nelson, we started our drive to Summit Lake in the Stone Mountain Provincial Park. We briefly tried to walk around the lake, but cut our hike short due to mosquitos. As we drove down the mountain, we saw six bears (including what we assume was a momma bear and two cubs), a herd of bison, and lots of stone sheep. We stopped at the Salt Lick Viewing Area near Muncho Lake for a quick hike to view salt lick (but sadly no animals licking the salt) followed by lunch in the RV. Finally, we headed to Liard River Hot Springs Provincial Park for a dip in the hot springs. As expected, the hot springs were hot and the facilities were quite nice (except for the lack of a shower).

Our campsite was the Liard Hotsprings Lodge (across the street from Liard River Hot Springs Provincial Park). I would not recommend this campsite. In retrospect, we should have dry camped at the provincial park instead of staying here.

On the Alaskan Highway! (RV day 10 : Tue May 27)

We left camp around 11:00 this morning to head to Dawson Creek, the official start of the Alaskan Highway (aka ALCAN or Alaska-Canada Highway). After a quick stop at the visitor centre and a quick lunch at Pizza Hut Express, we departed for an 7+ hour drive to Fort Nelson in British Columbia. During our long drive, we saw a bear foraging along the side of the road as well as what was either a large dog or a wolf. While I was expecting the Alaskan Highway to be difficult to drive, this section of road is much less scary than the logging road on the way to Grande Prairie from Jasper NP.

Our campsite was the Triple G Hideaway in Fort Nelson. They have good WiFi, laundry machines, a restaurant, a friendly staff, and campsites that are level. However, to use the showers costs 1 loonie.

Grande Prairie (RV day 9 : Mon May 26)

In the morning, we drove to Jasper town and stopped by Tim Hortons for some donuts and free WiFi. After that was a long day of driving down the mountain. We stopped by the Wal-Mart in Grande Prairie, where we stocked up on supplies and picked up some dinner.

Our campsite was Camp Tamarack in Grande Prairie, AB. There are a lot of mosquitos here. The WiFi is pretty good though.

Lake Louise, Columbia Icefield & Jasper National Park (RV day 8 : Sun May 25)

In the morning, we stopped by Banff town for some breakfast at McDonalds and a nearby shop for beaver tail shaped fried pastry called a “beaver tail”. Yay for free Wifi at McDonalds!

Then we were off for a long day of driving. Our first stop was Lake Louise, which was mostly frozen. (It looks nothing like the postcard!) After being cold for a while, we walked though the public areas of the nearby Fairmont hotel and returned to the RV. Our next stop was the Columbia Icefield Centre, from which one can see at least 5 glaciers with the naked eye. The company running the centre also offered tours that drive out onto the glacier in a bus (which looked pretty cool) and something called a glacier skywalk (which seemed less fun). We declined to participate in either activity as we still had a lot of driving to go.

Around 20:00, we arrived at our campsite, Whistler’s Campground in Jasper National Park. It’s a long walk to Jasper town. However, there is a big RV parking lot just outside of town on the other side of the train tracks on Highway 93A.

Banff National Park (RV day 7 : Sat May 24)

In the morning, we decided to take a scenic drive to Red Rock Canyon by way of a tiny mountain road. After that harrowing adventure, we headed off to Banff National Park.

We noticed that the Parks Canada rangers always greet us by saying “Hello! Bonjour!”. In addition, the signs in the parks are bilingual, while the regular road signs in Alberta are only in English. The Canadian park rangers are as helpful and friendly as the American park rangers.

Our campsite was the Tunnel Mountain Trailer Court. It is a pretty long walk from the Trailer Court to Banff town. There is a shuttle from the for $2/person that runs fairly frequently, but we decided it would be more time-efficient to just drive into town and park our RV outside the downtown area.

I’m beginning to worry that this trip is too long. I think 5 days is a good length for an RV trip. Any more than that and I fear that I may slowly go mad. Only ~2500 miles to go…

Hello/Bonjour! Waterton Lakes National Park (RV day 6 : Fri May 23)

Today was our first day driving the RV into Canada. The Canadian border agent mentioned that he saw a lot of the Great Alaskan Holidays RVs passing though his tiny border checkpoint on Chief Mountain Highway.

Since we drove directly from Glacier National Park to Waterton Lakes National Park, we didn’t stop by an ATM to pick up Canadian money. Luckily, this was no problem as Parks Canada/Parcs Canada takes Visa for park entrance fees and campground fees.

Our campsite was just outside of Waterton town. Unlike American national parks, Canadian national parks have towns inside of them with homes, restaurants, and other stores. We walked to a nearby restaurant called Wieners of Waterton that sold tasty hot dogs, sausages, and poutine. Afterward, we made a quick loop of the town. We found a WiFi hotspot near the playground and Valerie purchased our plane tickets home.

Glacier National Park (RV day 5 : Thu May 22)

In the morning, we called Bison Ford in Great Falls, but they were too busy to take a look at our RV today (or even tomorrow). They recommended that we call Ford dealerships in nearby towns.  So, we called Courtesy Ford in Conrad, MT. They were kind enough to squeeze us in between 11:00 and 12:00 to take a look at the RV. The miracle workers at Courtesy Ford were able to fix the AC in about 1.5 hours (for free under warranty). Huzzah!

Today’s sightseeing stop was St. Mary and the east side of Glacier National Park. Even though the St. Mary Visitor Center wasn’t scheduled to open for 2 days, USNPS rangers helped us plot a course for tomorrow’s drive to the Canadian border, answered our park-related questions, and demonstrated the proper use of bear spray. We hiked along a trail near the old ranger station in St. Mary.

Our campsite was KOA in St. Mary. I would not recommend this campground.