Thursday, September 5, 2013

Ketchikan

It drizzled a bit at our first stop, but Ketchikan is a temperate rainforest, so we couldn't complain. 


The river was jam packed with salmon that had been waiting for the rain to raise the river enough for them to get upstream to spawn, and the roads and wooden walkways were packed with tourists from at least 4 different cruise ships.





We saw two bald eagles!  Joel saw the first one as it landed in a tree, and we watched it preen its tail feathers.


The other one was perched on a marina lamppost:


After Ketchikan the ship passed through a feeding ground for humpbacks, and we saw many individual whales and mother-baby pairs as the sun set.





Tracy Arm Fjord and Sawyer Glacier

The next day we got up at 5:30 AM because the ship was going to reach the entrance to Tracy Arm Fjord around 5:45 AM.  From then until 10 AM that morning the ship slowly made its way up the fjord to the Sawyer Glacier and back out again to the Inside Passage.  


The fjord was stunning in the morning sun.



The naturalist on board for the week narrated over the sound system anytime the ship passed though an area of interest, like the humpback whale feeding area and the fjord.  I liked her yellow hat.


I knew glaciers were big, but I had not realized just how big they really are.  It is so hard to tell in pictures.  They are really really really huge!  And just like people told me, the ancient, compressed ice is so BLUE!



I had a very hard time getting a sense of scale of the mountains and glaciers we were seeing.  Half-way out of Tracy Arm we passed another Princess ship that was identical to ours.  The ship is at least 17 stories above the water, and that helped me some.



This was our favorite pool - adults only, heated, and just down the steps from our favorite (and usually empty) hot tubs.


Juneau and Mendenhall Glacier

In Juneau we went on a canoeing excursion that took us as close as we could safely get (about 200 yds.) to the face of the Mendenhall Glacier.




To help with scale, the Mendenhall glacier is a mile and a half wide where it meets the water.


We did not see any big calving, but the splash on the right side of the ice cave was from a "small" chunk that conveniently fell off just before I pressed the shutter button.






The glacier had a significant calving event about a week before we were there, so there were several large icebergs in the river that we circled, and one of them calved while were there.  It sounded like thunder, and when we paddled to look at what broke off the interior blue was splendid.


Then of course the guides get the tourists wet under the waterfall spray...



On the way walking back to the ship we followed another bald eagle as it flew from perch to perch along the docks and finally swooped to catch a fish!



Joel CAWed at it, of course, which perked its curiosity at the unusual tourist.






Skagway

Skagway was our least favorite spot because it felt so completely touristy, but it was still beautiful.




We took a tour bus up to White Pass Summit to see the mountains and stood in line with the other tourists to have our photo taken at the Welcome to Alaska sign. 


Mountain goats!



To me, the views leaving Skagway were even more beautiful:


On the way out we passed Davidson glacier:


And Rainbow glacier:


Unfortunately the sun was setting right behind them so it was difficult to see the details too well.  Glacier Bay is just behind the mountains but was not on our itinerary.




Victoria

 After Skagway we had two days at sea and an evening in Victoria.


We walked passed the docks of "house boats," 



to the historic legislative buildings,


had drinks at a pub,


and enjoyed the Empress Hotel by moonlight.