Thursday, January 10, 2013

Sunrises and Sunsets on the Colville


My little pocket camera is nothing fancy, just a simple point and shoot, but this fall we had so many fantastic sunrises and sunsets even I was compelled to capture some of them on film.  I will start with a few of my favorite sunrise shots, then give you an assortment in an album.  Then a few sunset photos. The shots were taken in October 2012.  We had a very late freeze-up this past fall, so open water gave fantastic reflections.  IMG_6141

















Looking East across the Colville River, East Channel.

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Sunsets 2012 (looking west over our lake)  




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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Teena’s Flying Adventures - part 2


On July 18, 2012, I was visiting my son Aaron in Wasilla and it was a beautiful, sunny day so he took me flying up the Knik River as far as the glacier.  I’ve been up there before in small planes and even a small, bubble-fronted helicopter and it is always a spectacular flight with incredible views.  Colville 7-18-2012_in Palmer_Aaron House&Flight 031Aaron was flying a Cessna 182 out of the Palmer airport.

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We headed straight up the valley toward the glacier.  There are usually moose to see and many ATV trails winding back and forth across the valley floor.  The side valleys with creeks tumbling down narrow gorges and mountainside vegetation was gorgeous!  I love seeing it this time of year.  What a beautiful world in which we live! Reaching the glacier is always breathtaking. The lake made from the melting ice is swimming with melting icebergs that have “calved” off the rugged glacier face. The massive river of  ice is so jagged, with huge fissures and pinnacles, that traversing it on foot would be impossible.  Looking up the glacier, I can see that it is actually two glaciers coming out of two different valleys and melding into one as it slowly pushes along.  Aaron followed one valley a ways higher up, and then we turned around and headed back down the Knik River toward Palmer.




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Coming out of the upper Knik valley back to Palmer:
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A Second Flight Up the Knik Valley.

 

On the same day as my flight with Aaron, I was fortunate to get to fly along with my friend Bruce, who works at the Palmer airport, as he took another person up to see the glacier…giving me two gorgeous flights in one day up the Knik Valley.  We even flew up the Metal River Valley several miles too – a river that  enters the Knik River near the glacier on the north side.  Bruce loves to fly low, so we got some really good close-ups of the terrain.  I like to call it “counting the butterflies.”
                                                                                                             
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Bruce’s little Piper Pacer.



                                    











The main reason I was along on this flight was because Bruce was to drop me off at the Birchwood runway before returning to the Palmer Airport.  There I was picked up and returned to the family I was staying with in Eagle River.  See pictures below of that.     
                                            
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Following the Knik River toward
Cook Inlet. Palmer and Wasilla off to our right. 




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Palmer.       
















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Park’s Highway      






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Birchwood Runway   









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Teena and Bruce at Birchwood Airport















What a wonderful day!

Monday, January 7, 2013

Teena’s Flying Adventures 2012


I love flying and for many years, even though my husband is a pilot and operated an air taxi for many years, I still rarely got to fly.  Not being a pilot myself, I was always the one to stay home and take care of everything at home, including kids, animals, guests at the lodge, and everything in-between.TwoPlanes1194 Below is a picture of our two planes used on the Colville for many years: The Piper Super Cub and the Cessna 206. The cub remains on Tundra tires, but the C-206 uses both wheels and floats depending on seasons.

This past summer was the first time I’d gotten to fly in the Cessna 206 in many years. Jay flew the 206 floatplane to the Colville from Fairbanks to pick up his daughter Melody and me to take us back to Fairbanks after Melody’s special time with G-ma & G-pa. 
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It was a gorgeous, clear day in mid-July when we took off from the 206-TakeOff 07-12-12Colville 
Homestead Lake and headed south.

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TAKE-OFF











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TUNDRA and small Lakes
                                                                                                                                                                                                                               
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Fly-over
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Looking back across the Colville River.





















 

Our route took us overland until we met the Itkillik River, followed that until hopping over to the Anaktuvuk River,  which we followed through Anaktuvuk Pass and

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Colville 7-12-2012_to FAI 049 over the village of Anaktuvuk Pass. 













At this point, the north-flowing waters of the Anaktuvuk River fade out and the south-flowing headwaters of the John River start.Colville 7-12-2012_to FAI 053 


















We followed the John River through the beautiful mountain valleys until we broke out near
Bettles,
Colville 7-12-2012_to FAI 063 where the John River joins the Koyukuk River.  From here the Brooks Range slipped behind and the flats, and hills rolled by on the way to the Colville 7-12-2012_to FAI 077











Yukon River crossing. We flew over the mighty Yukon just east of the Haul Road bridge.




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Our route took us over much forest-fire damaged terrain that was bursting in amazing colors. There were purple shadows mixed with reds, oranges, and greens, and, Oh, how the fireweed covered the hills like pink blankets over sleeping bodies. 

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We passed occasional rain squalls, but visibility remained great and as we neared Fairbanks, the skies were clear again.

Melody is a flying trouper. 








THANKS Colville 7-12-2012_to FAI 029Pilot Jay.






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On the floatpond in Fairbanks. 
Colville 7-12-2012_to FAI 105I am always so amazed by the lush green and tall growth.  Although the tundra has a beauty all its own, it is wonderful to experience the trees and abundant growth of interior Alaska in summer.






















I have shared only a fraction of the many photos I took on the flight to Fairbanks. I’ve decided to split my flying experiences up from Summer 2012, so another installment on a different flight will follow soon. Stay tuned.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

The Colville Kids Summer 2012


During this past summer, Jim and I were able to have our three oldest grand-children with us for several different times in July and in August.  It was our first time having them here on the Colville without a parent. Colville 7-5-2012 015Jay brought them north in our Cessna 206 on floats, which was a momentous occasion in itself, since Jay had been looking forward to flying his dad's plane back to the Colville on floats for several years.  Although he has had his pilot’s license for several years and even had the C-206 on floats in 2011, this was the first summer he was able to fly it north on floats.









                                                                                                                                                                                                         Shortly after arriving, the kids had fun roaming around and seeing everything since their last trip north a year ago.
Colville 7-5-2012_Natasha,Melody,ElishaAs soon as weather permitted we were off on a boating adventure.  Grandma drove the boat out and Dad piloted back, with stops on Teena Creek, and at the old sod house at the mouth of the Miluveach River, just off the Colville River.  It was a chilly day, so we needed a big fire at lunch time.











See albums below.





 


There was always lots to do, even when indoors, especially  Legos and board games:    Playing with Dad’s old Lego toys was Elisha’s favorite indoor pass-time. Colville 7-6-2012 003























Everyone’s favorite board-game was Generals:
Colville 7-7-2012 019Elisha got so good at it that Grandma never got to win anymore.


















After Jay returned to Fairbanks with Natasha and Elisha, then Melody got to stay for an extra week on her own with G-ma & G-Pa.  She had a great time.



A week later Jay made a quick flight north and picked me (Teena) and Melody up to fly us back to Fairbanks.  It was a beautiful flight, which I’ll tell more about on another post.
Then in mid-August, Natasha and Elisha returned to the Colville for their special time with G-m and G-pa.  Favorite outdoor activities were playing “dogs” in the doghouse, canoeing, bouncing on the “bouncy balls” (old buoys), and pretend battles with old home-made warrior sticks.




One day Elisha got stuck in the mud on a walk across a sandbar…Oh, My, Thankgoodness Grandma was able to carry him back to the riverbank and then retrieve his boots. Colville grandkids Aug 2012 015 Elisha learned that some mud is like quicksand and as long as you keep walking quickly, you don’t sink in, but if you stop and gawk around, you sink.







When it was time for the two kids to return home, this time Grandma had to accompany them back to Fairbanks by commercial jet via Barrow and Anchorage.



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While the kids were visiting the Colville “homestead”, Grandma made each of them a snowshirt or “kuspik”.