Early in the morning we were departing the ship and piling into a tender to take us to shore. A rock fall a few days earlier had rendered our pier unsafe so we had a short boat ride to the dock. In fact a few weeks after our stop in Juneau a glacier in the mountains above Juneau had let loose a torrent of water which flooded the town. A few days later a rockfall in Ketchikan had rained down on the town killing one and injuring a number more. Alaska is the most earthquake prone zone in the world with anywhere from 50-100 earthquakes a day. Most cannot be felt and only measured on a seismograph but I'm sure with all that shaking going on this type of instability is common place.
We were heading out on a 6 hour excursion which would take us by bus into the Yukon territory and then board a train back to Skagway, then board another bus for lunch in Liarsville, followed by a musical production and some panning for gold. Then it was off to the Red Onion Saloon and a visit to the brothel (no longer in business).
We were tired just thinking about it.
A shot of our train waiting to take us back to Skagway. The trains in this area run on narrow gauge track which at 3.5 feet is about 1 foot narrower than standard gauge.
The ride up on the bus was pretty uneventful other than the sighting of a black bear just off the highway.
It took some time for me to get this shot as I waited for other tourists to clear out. I headed back to the bus just as they were about to send a search party out for me.
The border of Yukon and Alaska. A little test. What does NWMP stand for? A hint for my American readers. They were the precursor to the red surge suited police force that followed. I wonder if the NWMP always got their man?
The old bridge. Obviously no longer in service.
I stood out on the platform between cars to get these shots and only came in to warm up,
The cooks for our outdoor meal in Liarsville. Liarsville was a tent city during the gold rush and got its name because of all the tall tales told by the prospectors when they came back to civilization from working their claims.
Shades of deliverance. If you're under 50 you may not get that reference.
A few of the reconstructed places of business from the gold rush era.
Gold rush era graveyard. circa 1900.
Snow blower
By the time the tour bus got to the Red Onion Saloon many of us just wanted to get back to the ship. We skipped the brothel history lesson and headed back to the ship.
Home at last.