Saturday, December 28, 2013

Winter Experience - Turnagain Arm Ice Flow

Here's a quick clip of the tide running out in Turnagain Arm Alaska; it's filled with ice chunks.  This is early December and it hasn't been cold for very long, yet.  The ice pieces are too small to call icebergs but it's still a great show of mother nature's power.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Winter Hiking - Spitting in the Winter (Hiking the Homer Spit)

Ice flow on the east side of the Spit


Stats

Distance:  Up to you                       Difficulty: Easy                              Time:  Up to you

Summary

The Spit is a Homer landmark.  It is exactly what its name says, a spit of land reaching into Kachemak Bay.  In summer, the spit is best know for the fishing charters, shopping, and fish packing.  In the winter, the spit belongs to strollers, photographers, and dog walkers.

Opinion

In winter, this is still one of our favorite hikes.  

Friday, December 20, 2013

Winter Experience - Ice Falls on Turnagain Arm

Ice Falls

Each year, as the cold sets in, the landscape in Alaska shifts from green to white.  One of the most dramatic shits occur when the seeps and small waterfalls freeze.  

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Hiking - Portage Glacier Trail (all the way to the beach)


Stats

Distance:  4.7 miles                  Difficulty: Strenuous                                Time:  5 hrs

Summary

We chose to try the Portage Glacier Trail on 10 Jul 2013.  The hike goes up a nearly continuous inclined for a 750 ft elevation change, then back down (more gently) the full 750 ft to reach the portage glacier lake.  We found the hike on the National Park Service map (NPS Portage Glacier Trail).  This page is useful, but someone dated, see The Hike section of this post for updated information.

Opinion

This is a fabulous hike!  But we wouldn’t recommend it to anyone who is not at least reasonably fit.  The highlights of the hike include

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Experience - Viewing Baby Moose

One of the cutest things in Alaska is a baby moose.  But standing very close-by is the most dangerous animal in Alaska; its mom.  Moose moms can weigh-in at as much as 1200 lbs.  Moose in Alaska usually give birth to twins and, at least in Homer, they are usually born from mid-May to early June.  Moose moms have babies every two years.  A few weeks before they give birth, the mother moose chases off her two year old(s); usually by then she only has one calf left.  So in April and May there are often a lot of confused and unhappy teenaged moose running around.

Moose give birth in a place they feel safe.  This used to mean in the middle of a pond or bog, but now that location is often in the middle of someone’s yard, a town park, or even (according to one story) a Walmart parking lot. 

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Experience - View from Skyline Overlook

If you’re in Homer and have 20 minutes to spare or can afford a short detour on the way out of town, the scenic overlook on Skyline is a great choice.

A quick five-minute drive from town and three steps out of the car will bring you to one the best views in Homer.  Head up either East Hill or West Hill road until they merge with Skyline.  If you chose West Hill Rd, turn right; if you chose East Hill Rd turn left.  About a quarter mile from the intersection of Skyline Dr and East Hill Rd you'll find a pull off on the south side of the road (next a small antenna farm).  That pullout gives the best high-altitude view in Homer.  From this spot you have a fabulous 180-degree view of Kachemak Bay, the Homer Spit, and the Chugach Range.

We especially like the days where Homer is socked in with low clouds and the pullout is clear.  The entire valley and bay are covered in white cotton balls--often with peekaboo views of the spit, the coast, or the ocean--and the mountains across the bay stick up pass the clouds.  They have the feel of untouched wildness.


If you’re leaving town, you can follow Skyline Dr west along several miles until it intersects with Diamond Ridge Rd.  Diamond Ridge Rd intersects with Sterling Highway and it's a right turn to Soldotna, Seward, and Anchorage.  This route bypasses Homer proper and follows the ridgeline for several miles.