Day 8 The Harwoods Arrive ~ Anchorage

                                                  Saturday 8/30/14

Dropped off the camper van and shuttled back to Anchorage with a couple from Germany.  You guessed it..the rain has stopped! In passing the owner said we were at the 'older' end of people renting camper vans, most people our age go for the motor homes. Their camper vans are usually rented by the 20-30 year olds! I am glad we were able to do this part of the trip this way ( still young at heart!) as it got us off the beaten path but I imagine we would want a few more 'comforts of home' in the future! Yup, we're getting old!
 The shuttle driver was one of the owners  (and the nephew of the shuttle driver who picked us up at the airport) Originally from New Jersey, he was stationed in Alaska while in the service, after leaving the service, he went to school in Virginia but returned to Alaska. His ex-wife  lasted in  Alaska just about a year. She gave him an ultimatum: Alaska or her. She now lives in the lower 48 and he still lives in Alaska. He currently works for ConocoPhillips  on a two week rotation in the the Colville River Unit. Referred to as Alpine, it is located in the Colville River Delta on Alaska’s Western North Slope, eight miles north of the Inupiat village of Nuiqsut and 50 miles west of Prudhoe Bay. It is the site of the 429-million-barrel Alpine oil field. Alpine is the fifth largest oil discovery on the North Slope and the first on Native-owned lands. Production started in late 2001.  The relationship with the community of Nuiqsut is such that the oil company using the land, considered to be the property of the native Nuiqsut residents (Inupiat Eskimos), pay dividends to residents in exchange for use of the land. For many native residents the dividends are the primary, or only, source of income.  Nuiqsut has a population of 400.  Alpine and Nuiqsut have  no permanent road connecting it to other North Slope infrastructure. Air travel provides the only year-round access.  Nuiqsut is accessible during the winter via an ice road and  was featured in a season four episode of the History television channel series Ice Road Truckers, when a convoy of truckers delivered supplies to the village. In the winter an ice road is also built to Alpine to move in supplies for the rest of the operating year. 
   There are about 500 people working in Alpine. In addition to working two weeks on and two weeks off, there are two 12 hours shifts  and you share a room (and a bed!) in the Dormitories  with someone working the opposite shift.  You have your own sheets or sleeping bag in your closet which you bring out when your shift ends. And on your 2 weeks off , there are 2 other people sharing that room and bed!
              
The Harwoods have arrived!!
             We were dropped off at Midnight Sun Car Rental , picked up a mini-van (Thank heavens it was a Dodge! We never would have heard the end of it ...Terry is a mechanic at a Dodge Chrysler Jeep dealership in Rochester NY)  Then off to pick up Kim and Terry at the airport!
Lunch at the Peanut Farm
 
  Everyone was hungry! We had a nice lunch at the Peanut Farm on the deck overlooking  Campbell Creek. The Harwoods broke the weather curse! It was sunny, warm and beautiful.                          

After lunch, we met up with Kim and Terry's niece Diana and kids Kean and Eli at Kincaid Park. (Diana's husband  Russ, Terry's nephew, was off on his first day of caribou hunting at  Lake Louise..not sure when we will meet up with him since we leave for Seward on Monday.) Kincaid Park is a 1,516 acre  municipal park. The park is bounded on the south by Turnagain Arm, on the west by Knik Arm, and on the north by Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport.    We hiked one of the many trails in search of a moose for Kim! We did not see a moose but the scenery was gorgeous. We had a great time, especially with Kean,4 years old, who informed us his name was Tomato Soup! Such energy. . . we had a hard time keeping up with him!
Looking across the Cook Inlet at Fire Island Windfarm. Those are Mountains in the background, not clouds!


Anchorage is Alaska's most populous city and contains more than 40 percent (300,000) of the state's total population; among the 50 states, only New York has a higher percentage of residents who live in its most populous city.

After getting settled in at Creekwood Motel, we thought we might find a place for some munchies and a drink.  The clerk at the motel suggested Moose's Tooth Pub and Pizzeria. (named after Moose's Tooth, a rock peak on the east side of the Ruth Gorge in the Central Alaska Range, 15 miles southeast of Mount McKinley) Since this place was also recommended to me by Chelsea Hanford that's where we headed! (Chelsea is from Old Forge and has spent 2 years teaching in the remote Alaskan Village of Nondalton. With a population of 164, it is located 225 miles southwest of Anchorage. There is no road access but the community is reached by private air service from King Salmon, Dillingham and Anchorage.)  The place was packed!!  We decided not to wait and  ventured further.  We found a log cabin neighborhood pub named "Reilly's" that looked inviting. Terry introduced Mike to "Smithwicks", an Irish  red ale. Kim and Terry's daughter Meg makes her own craft beers and Terry has become a beer connoisseur! The bartender/owner Jeanne was very friendly and welcoming. 

            
   

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