As my age gets closer to the half century mark, I realize my memories are starting to fade. It is time to put down some of my adventures in print before they are lost forever. I also had my old slides digitized. So, pardon the poor quality of the pictures. Some are a bit more faded than others. Anyway, enjoy the story.
This adventure happened back in 1990. A friend and I decided it would be a good idea to drive from Iowa to Alaska. I found out that a girl I knew in junior high, Trisha, moved from Iowa to Anchorage her freshman year of high school. 6 years later, her best friend, Lisa, moves to Boulder to go to college at the same time I moved to Boulder to do the same. Lisa and I meet and realize we have a mutual friend, Trisha. Amazed at the small world we live in, she invites me to come up sometime and visit. It was an offer I couldn't refuse.
Reason #2 to go, they recently opened up the Dalton Highway to the public. We could make it north of the Arctic Circle!! The pipeline access road was now a public highway.
It didn't take much convincing to recruit my best friend, Collin, to join me in this adventure. We had traveled together on much smaller and less ambitions trips. We had biked across Iowa 3 times on RAGBRAI. Why couldn't we make this happen. So full of youthful energy and exuberance, and low on funds, we started our planning. It was January. We would leave at the end of July. Give ourselves the summer to save up some cash. And at age 20, how much did we really need.
Our vehicle would be a 1984 Toyota Celica with 90,000 miles on it. It was a Toyota, what could go wrong. We had grand plans to put a slight lift on it, skid plates, driving lights... Just like the rally cars of the day. Well, as the summer wore on, and the funds never really accumulated, that all stayed exactly like it was, a great dream. The only modification we did get done was a full size spare. (Remember "youthful energy and exuberance" can easily get distracted by chasing girls and having fun over the summer.).
Planning and routing did get further along. We picked up the Milepost, contacted the Alaska Board of Tourism, got as many AAA books and maps as they had. That pretty much exhausted most of the resources we could find. The library had one or two books that were of limited use. There was no internet. There was no GPS to buy. Good enough for us. (Back to the "youthful energy an exuberance").
Packing day was here. We started with the essentials: tent, sleeping bags, Coleman dual fuel, small stash of canned chili, tuna fish, ramen, case of Coke, bucket of home-made chocolate chip cookies, peanut butter, and bread. Oh, and 2 boxes of Ding Dongs. We kept packing the back of the car with more things, but decreasing in need. When the level of stuff started to block the view out the back window, it was time to stop.
This adventure happened back in 1990. A friend and I decided it would be a good idea to drive from Iowa to Alaska. I found out that a girl I knew in junior high, Trisha, moved from Iowa to Anchorage her freshman year of high school. 6 years later, her best friend, Lisa, moves to Boulder to go to college at the same time I moved to Boulder to do the same. Lisa and I meet and realize we have a mutual friend, Trisha. Amazed at the small world we live in, she invites me to come up sometime and visit. It was an offer I couldn't refuse.
Reason #2 to go, they recently opened up the Dalton Highway to the public. We could make it north of the Arctic Circle!! The pipeline access road was now a public highway.
It didn't take much convincing to recruit my best friend, Collin, to join me in this adventure. We had traveled together on much smaller and less ambitions trips. We had biked across Iowa 3 times on RAGBRAI. Why couldn't we make this happen. So full of youthful energy and exuberance, and low on funds, we started our planning. It was January. We would leave at the end of July. Give ourselves the summer to save up some cash. And at age 20, how much did we really need.
Our vehicle would be a 1984 Toyota Celica with 90,000 miles on it. It was a Toyota, what could go wrong. We had grand plans to put a slight lift on it, skid plates, driving lights... Just like the rally cars of the day. Well, as the summer wore on, and the funds never really accumulated, that all stayed exactly like it was, a great dream. The only modification we did get done was a full size spare. (Remember "youthful energy and exuberance" can easily get distracted by chasing girls and having fun over the summer.).
Planning and routing did get further along. We picked up the Milepost, contacted the Alaska Board of Tourism, got as many AAA books and maps as they had. That pretty much exhausted most of the resources we could find. The library had one or two books that were of limited use. There was no internet. There was no GPS to buy. Good enough for us. (Back to the "youthful energy an exuberance").
Packing day was here. We started with the essentials: tent, sleeping bags, Coleman dual fuel, small stash of canned chili, tuna fish, ramen, case of Coke, bucket of home-made chocolate chip cookies, peanut butter, and bread. Oh, and 2 boxes of Ding Dongs. We kept packing the back of the car with more things, but decreasing in need. When the level of stuff started to block the view out the back window, it was time to stop.