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Category contains 10 blog entries contributed to teamblogs

You Are Not a Passenger - Alaska Photo of the Month - April 18, 2012

Posted by dan
dan
Owner of Alaska Alpine Adventures.
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on Thursday, 19 April 2012
in Alaska Backpacking

 

Denali National Park - Tokositna Glacier

Alaska is BIG!  Not only is it the largest state in the union (even if you cut Alaska in half, Texas would remain the 3rd largest!), it's also the most magnificent.  Some of what really sets Alaska apart from any other place North America is the incredible wildlife  diversity, the vast quantity of protected public land, and the shear magnitude of its landscapes.  And nowhere is the emotional and physical significance of the Alaskan landscape better represented than in Denali National Park.

I took this shot of our longtime guests Mark & Joan Strobel as we were backpacking across the massive Tokositna Glacier on the south side of Denali in 2010.  It took us 6+ hours to make our way through the labyrinth of moraine piles and melt-water creeks that define Alaska's low elevation valley glaciers.  Honestly though, we could have probably completed the crossing in less time had we not often found ourselves occupied in silent stillness digesting stunning views of McKinley, Hunter, Huntington, and the "lesser" peaks of the Alaska Range.  This was one of those days where emotional power of the landscape completely transcends the physical challenge of moving through it.
Thanks again for following Alaska Alpine Adventures.  Look for us on Facebook or on Twitter- @AlaskaGurus.  We've been more diligent about posting current happenings and trip videos on these social media platforms, so if you can't wait for the next photo of them month, then check us out there.  You can also visit our Alaska Gurus Blog for past photos of the month and other AK rants.  As always, we promise not to inundate your email boxes with anything other than a monthly Alaska pick-me-up!
Dan Oberlatz - Owner/Guide

Alaska Alpine Adventures, LLC
1-877-525-2577
www.AlaskaAlpineAdventures.com


 

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Alaska Photo of the Month - February 2012

Posted by dan
dan
Owner of Alaska Alpine Adventures.
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on Wednesday, 15 February 2012
in Alaska Backpacking


In December I introduced you to Mark Stevens in a 2010 photo taken at Dick Proenneke's log cabin on Twin Lakes, deep in the heart of Lake Clark National Park.

I immediately received a whole host of questions posed like "what kind of adventure trips have you guys done together in last 10 years?"

So here's a starter!

In late August of 2009, Mark and I embarked on an ambitious 12-day backpacking/mountaineering/packrafting traverse of the remote Revelation Mountains in western Alaska.  As the venerable David Roberts wrote in the American Alpine Journal account of his 1966 expedition into this area, the Revelations "...are so remote that they may not even be visible from inhabited land." As soon as our bush pilot bounced down on the gravel bar of the Lyman Fork of the Big River, I knew that this, my third expedition into the range, would end up one of my best Alaska trips yet.

Our route would take us into the gut of the northern portion of the range -  up the Lyman Fork Glacier, over a steep pass, down onto the Fish Creek Glacier, across another glaciated pass, down and off the rather spooky Hartman Glacier, and into the stunning tundra country of Sled Pass. We'd then inflate our lightweight packrafts for an uncertain descent of the Stony River, eventually reaching our bush-plane pick up on a gravel bar 40-miles downstream.

I took this shot at the very top of pass one and our third camp of the trip. 50+ years of climate change had significantly altered the surrounding landscape, thus rendering our 1954 topographic maps almost useless. Our first indication was the glacier on the east side of our pass (beyond the left side of the photo) had pulled back some 300 vertical feet - leaving in its stagnant wake a dangerous 40 degree slope of unconsolidated boulders perched upon the upper icy slopes of the Fish Creek Glacier.

Rather than tackle this uncertain descent 1000' down through dark shadows and onto the Fish Creek Glacier late in the day and physically exhausted, we opted to pitch camp. While I normally try and avoid camping at at the apex of any col like this (think exposure to wind & weather), on this night all was kind and the location was too spectacular to turn down!  The next morning we descended the sketchy slope in bright sunshine, left pass one behind, and embraced the full commitment of our traverse through the inner sanctum of the Revelation Mountains.

Thanks again for following Alaska Alpine Adventures.  Look for us on Facebook or on Twitter- @AlaskaGurus.  We've been more diligent about posting current happenings and trip videos on these social media platforms, so if you can't wait for the next photo of them month, then check us out there.  You can also visit our Alaska Gurus Blog for past photos of the month and other AK rants.  As always, we promise not to inundate your email boxes with anything other than a monthly Alaska pick-me-up!   

Dan Oberlatz - Owner/Guide
Alaska Alpine Adventures, LLC
1-877-525-2577
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Alaska Photo of the Month: January 12, 2012

Posted by dan
dan
Owner of Alaska Alpine Adventures.
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on Thursday, 12 January 2012
in Alaska Backpacking

Is 3 in-a-row a record?  Anyone?

So let's begin the new year with a shot from summer in Gates of the Arctic National Park. Even though our Alaska days are now growing longer by the hour and we're having a spectacular winter, we all long for the warmth of midnight arctic sunlight and yearn to shed a layer or two of winter garb.

I took this photo last August as our team rounded the corner of upper Arrigetch Creek and caught our first glimpse of the famed Arrigetch Peaks.  We spent the next 6-days hiking
on a carpet of autumn-drenched tundra past the peaks and through the valleys pictured.  The fact that we enjoyed 11-straight days of perfect weather did nothing less than gild the entire experience.  Our adventure into the Arrigetch and down the Alatna River was, as one of our guests so aptly described it, purely "transformative!"  

As you begin to think about your summer vacation plans, I'll let this particular guest sum up his experience traveling with Alaska Alpine Adventures.


"The word I keep coming back to is "pivotal."  There was something about the physical exertion, the mental challenge, the mind-blowing Alaska landscape, the natural serenity - it all just combined to have a very positive and transformative effect on me.  I now find myself wanting to seek out similar trips and embrace similar challenges.  And this trip is staying with me far more than most trips I've ever done, almost like some tangible asset that is now mine and mine alone, having been conveyed to me by the experience itself."

With praise like that, why not try and repeat the magic?  So, we're going back to the Arrigetch Peaks region this coming August on two different trips.  The first is a is our amazing 12-day combination backpacking & kayaking (suitable for novice paddlers) adventure going from August 8-19, 2012. The second is a 10-day pure backpacking trip going from August 18-27, 2012. Space is now very limted on both of these guaranteed trips.
Thanks again for following Alaska Alpine Adventures.  Look for us on Facebook or on Twitter -@AlaskaGurus. We've been more diligent about posting current happenings and trip videos
on these social media platforms, so if you can't wait for the next photo of them month, then check us out there.  You can also visit our Alaska Gurus Blog for past photos of the month and other AK rants.  As always, we promise not to inundate your email boxes with anything
other than a monthly Alaska pick-me-up!  
Dan Oberlatz
Alaska Alpine Adventures, LLC
1-877-525-2577
www.AlaskaAlpineAdventures.com

 

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Alaska Photo of the Month: December 2011

Posted by dan
dan
Owner of Alaska Alpine Adventures.
User is currently offline
on Thursday, 15 December 2011
in Alaska Backpacking
You Are Not A Passenger - Alaska Photo of the Month: December 14, 2011


I won't say "I'm on a roll here" because in addition to excuses and procrastination, I'm also prone to exaggeration. So I'll simply preface this photo of the month with a simple Happy Holidays!

I'm way past overdue introducing you all to Mark Stevens. This past August Mark, pictured here at Dick Proenneke's cabin on Upper Twin Lake in Lake Clark National Park in 2010, completed his 11th expedition over 10 consecutive years with Alaska Alpine Adventures. And it's my honor to say I've been with him for 10 of 11 of those trips.

In August Mark and I completed what we believe to be the first summer-time traverse of the Neacola Mountains in Lake Clark National Park. Our route was 87 miles long, involved 55 miles of roped-up glacier travel, 7 glaciated passes, river crossings, some steep & scary terrain, and two rappels to get over our final pass. But in classic Oberlatz/Stevens fashion we completed the route in style - light (64 lbs going out), fast (11-days of travel), and with ample Kentucky Bourbon and fine cigars to make every finished day complete.

Mark owns a highly acclaimed deli & catering business in Louisville, KY called Stevens & Stevens. Guests of his catered events have included Queen Elizabeth and Laura Bush among others and his deli on Bardstown Road is on everyone's Louisville hit list. When it comes to food, Mark's game is always on. But he's more than an amazing chef and accomplished explorer, he's also an incredible family man and a person who has been an important mentor to me over the last decade.

Over the next few months, I'll be sharing a few photos from my trips with Mark through the years. And as the images periodically end up in your in-box, you'll be able to put in context the amount of commitment, dedication, training, and passion for Alaska that it takes to pull these adventures off year-in and year-out; not to mention the cumulative experience it takes in this type of terrain to execute these trips safely.

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Alaska Photo of the Month - March 2011

Posted by dan
dan
Owner of Alaska Alpine Adventures.
User is currently offline
on Friday, 04 March 2011
in Alaska Backpacking

You Are Not A Passenger - Alaska Photo of the Month: March 4, 2011

 

Happy 2011 Everyone!

Here's the 4th (and for those of you counting, I did miss a month or two!) from our exploratory trip into Denali National Park this past summer.

First things first - what comes to mind when you look at this photo? If you're thinking words like ominous, dark, wet, slippery, steep, loose, or just plain scary, then you certainly have good wilderness instinct! In fact, in reality, this slope was even more difficult and dangerous than the picture conveys.

After hiking up the extraordinarily rocky Kanikula glacier in a driving rain storm, we had to find a suitable place to exit the glacier on its west flank in order to continue our route to Bear Creek. Our only option turned out to be this 500' talus field that teetered uncomfortably close to the angle of repose - the steepest slope a pile of rocks will take before it collapses. Not only were the rocks dangerously loose, they were also incredibly slick with rain saturated lichen.

After we got to the top of the field, Aaron and I decided that we would never attempt this particular route in the Denali National Park again. What we were calling Denali "unexplored" had, in brief period of a couple of hours, become Denali "unrepeated!" All future backpacking trips into Denali would avoid the miserable Kanikula Glacier valley.

If you are thinking about joining us on a guided backpacking or hiking trip in Denali this summer, you might want to act quickly. Trips are filling fast - visit our confirmed trips pagefor details. And, as always, if you have any Alaska related questions whatsoever, feel free to drop me an email or give me a call. All the best to you and yours in 2011!
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