Tag Archives: vacation

Tiny Alaska and Lily's . . . "palace"

At Pioneer Park in Fairbanks, Alaska, there is a large riverboat-turned-diorama museum. The different sets chronicle the different kinds of towns that have speckled Alaska throughout the ages. I loved the visualisations of what these towns looked like at different times in history, depending on the people group that founded them.

I love dioramas. I fantasized about being a diorama-maker. I mean, who puts together all those tiny trees? Is there a special tree-making machine somewhere? Or does an actual person glue the branches on one by one? And did that person have to be committed to a mental institution after gluing approximately 5 million branches on approximately half a million tiny trees? And is this person’s name Berthelmina?

Poor Berthelmina.

There’s just something fascinating about a world tinier than a doll house. Look at the cute little U.S. Mail building! Look at the cute little pile of logs!

The adorable pile of luggage! The be-hatted folks of yore! The delightful green shirtwaist!

And then you start wondering about the little people themselves–like, who is this woman?

Why is she leaving the hospital alone? Did she just come from visiting an ailing patient? Or is she a kindly young woman in the flower of her youth who goes to read to the moribund, but will shortly be swept off her feet by a rakish logger (who watches her go in and out every day around 2pm, totally besotted) and taken away into the wilderness for a romantic, rustic life trapping animals and loading up a cellar with preserves for the long winter?

I want to load up the cellar with preserves for the long winter!

Anyway, I wandered around, bent over so that I could see the sets at eye-level and really get into things. Look at that cute train! I breathed. And that cute river! And that cute bear!

And this cute little communal grouping of cabins . . . !

Wait a minute . . . Who is this ‘Lily,’ and what exactly is going on here?

Hey . . . this ain’t no quaint grouping of cute little cabins!

What the heck I did in Alaska

Though I’ve shared tidbits here and there, a more lengthy and detailed recap of our Alaska trip is due. Since I was having trouble figuring out where to start, I came up with the brilliant idea of taking the before-I-left list of things to do that I shared with you guys and explaining what I did and did not do. What I accomplished, and where I slacked off. And of course, what I thought during these events every second of every day.

And every nanosecond of every second.

You know, the usual. Let’s go!

1) Take as many pictures of Heidi and James as I possibly can.

I would have liked to get more good shots of Heidi–but little James was fully documented.

His excited hooting is my favorite thing.

The camera loves him–though he really looks so much cuter in person. Something gets lost in translation going from real-live baby to flat image.

And Heidi is an amazing mother.

A perfect combination of on-task, relaxed, caring, involved with her baby but not to the exclusion of her friends. Active, in shape, and (ehem) tinier than I am, the wench.

She has, in the words of Oswald Chambers, a ‘strong, calm sanity’ about her that I am praying to have if I’m ever a mother.

2) Schmooch baby James on an hourly basis. No, not ‘smooch’–’schmooch.’ Two very different things. Baby James was thoroughly schmooched. I also, if you didn’t catch this post, ate his feet. Many times over.

3) Visit the town of North Pole, home of the aforesaid Santa Claus. Yup! We hit up this town the Saturday before we left. Small anecdote: there was a big sign by the reindeer that said “Do NOT feed the reindeer! They are on a special diet.” An entire family-full of people was completely disregarding the sign and feeding them who knows what kind of weeds that they were violently pulling up by the fistfull.

Part of me wanted to march right over and wag my finger at them. “Hey! Look at the sign! These reindeers are on a special diet, man! Respect the rules!”

Then I meditated on the violence of their weed-pulling and decided it wasn’t worth even the small possibility of getting into a throw-down fight with a traveling family.

So instead, we headed into the baby store.

Whoa–did I just say “baby store”? I meant Christmas store. I must have a certain something on the brain.

Or . . . perhaps nothing on the brain, as this classic ‘spaced out’ expression indicates in the pictures above.

And I’d like to point out my favorite way of holding James, documented right here. I call it the ‘patent-pending one-armed yoga baby hold.’ And I will create some kind of franchise emporium based on this technique, because that’s how comfortable it is.

4) Bathe in the hot springs? We didn’t end up going to the hot springs–but we did consider experiencing a blast of cold air instead . . .

. . . until we realized you had to buy a T-shirt. And dangit if I didn’t want to buy a T-shirt.

5) Eat salmon. Or something. Possibly on a dinner boat experience. Not only did we eat salmon at the Salmon Bake in Pioneer Park, but I rode a salmon. Thassright.

I rode that salmon long and hard.

And does it look to anyone else like my face reverted to my 9-year old self? Mom, can I get off this thing already? Hunh?

6) Do this excursion thingy that involves panning for gold.

We drove about 20 minutes out of Fairbanks and hopped on a train-tour of an old gold-mining operation, serenaded by an Alaskan guitar and fiddle-playin’ man who told us stories of his heyday on the stage with Johnny Cash.

Then, a bunch of interns on summer vacation from college showed us how to pan:

There’s a lot of swirling and swiveling, and it’s all based on the principle that gold is really, really heavy. Heavier than the water and stones and dirt, so as you add water to the pan and swish it about, the gold will sink to the bottom.

Then you ‘wash out’ the top layer of soil/pebbles/stones, fill the pan with more water, and repeat the process. Until you’re left with this:

A bunch of little flecks and, if you’re lucky, a nugget. You can tell you’ve got a nugget because it will make a ‘plunk’ sound when you drop it onto the pan.

At the end of the excursion, everyone receives a bag full of dirt and is guaranteed–guaranteed, mind you–that they will find gold. If you don’t, you get a new bag.

James even got his own bag, the proceeds of which will go towards his college fund. Since he was strangely unable to replicate the gold panning motions with his tiny fat hands and rubber-band wrists, we agreed to pan it for him. But you owe us, kid!

He seemed grateful enough, I guess.

We made about $12-13 each in tiny gold flecks–sadly, not enough to counteract the cost of the $30 tickets. Then again, if you made more than you paid, I suppose things would stop making sense on some kind of fundamental capitalist level.

7) Become a gold-panning millionaire and share my largesse with you by inviting you to my new Gourmet Spa Space Station on Pluto.

Well, this didn’t exactly happen. I considered making off with this man’s gold . . .

. . . but then I realized I was all but stranded on the mountainside, wouldn’t know where to run, and ultimately didn’t want to give James the idea that thievery is in any way cool.

I know the little guy really looks up to me, see.

I guess that Spa Space Station will just have to wait a few more years.

8) Hike around the National Park of Denali.

No hiking–but lotsa driving.

We kept trying to identify Mt. McKinley. “Oooh, I think that’s Mt. Mckinley!” I would cry. “Hey! Look–Mt. McKinley!” my husband would interject half an hour later. Then after another 15 minutes, we’d spot it again. And again. It just kept cropping up!

It turns out we never did see Mt. McKinley on that drive, as we discovered at a rest stop that showed a 3-D montage of the mountains and proved exactly how far away we were from that highest of peaks.

Ironically, we finally saw Mt. McKinley back in Fairbanks, and from that distance it was unmistakable, looming over all other mountains and hills.

Can you see it there against the skyline? Let’s move a little closer . . .

. . . now can you see it?

Impressive, eh? Especially considering that, in Fairbanks, we were around 160 miles away. I couldn’t take my eyes off of it.

9) Cook up a storm.

This didn’t exactly happen–I got sucked into Heidi’s lovely rhythm of making simple, delicious meals (instead of the sometimes complicated endeavors I can be drawn to). It felt so good to take it easy in the kitchen! I think I might be addicted. And while we’re talking about food, I must showcase the sandwich that my husband prepared for our Anchorage roadtrip:

I can’t look at that thing without laughing.

10) Spend two nights in Anchorage with my man, which entails a 6 hour drive through an incredibly beautiful part of the country.

My favorite part of this trip was not Anchorage itself, but the laughter and talking and sharing that happened along the way with my husband.

He’s just my favorite person in the world. There is no one else I’d rather spend time with, laugh with, and experience new things with.

We ambled along, pulling to the side of the road to take pictures, stopping for coffee and beef jerky, talking, and reading Harry Potter out loud.

Even if he doesn’t have a concept of slicing cheese into sandwich-appropriate-sized pieces–he’s still the best.

I also have to say that–and my husband agrees–despite its utilitarian-ness as a city, Anchorage hosts one of the best museums we’ve ever been to.

It was a combination art museum, children’s museum with hands-on experiements, natural history, and history museum. It had everything, from dioramas to video to science to majestic paintings. There were life-sized replicas of Alaskan dwelling places through time and across cultures, complete with wax figures and everything. I love a museum with some good wax figures. If you’re ever in Anchorage, don’t miss it! Especially because there’s this cool video thingy in the children’s section that records you jumping, and plays it back in reeeeeaaaaallllly slow motion . . .

. . . look, I’m flying!

There he goes!

11) Are you ready? Not blog. Mission accompli. And honestly, I’m glad to be back, and to be writing again. During our first few days back, when I was dead-tired, I asked myself “Why am I even blogging? Why would I ever want to do such a thing?”

Then again, that’s what I ask myself about everything when I’m tired. Why am I cooking? Why am I in a band? Why am I doing that photo shoot? Why am I alive?

As soon as my energy returns, I remember: because it’s fun!

And to close us out, here are a couple shots of the pipeline:

It’s an Alaska classic.

And don’t be thinking that this recap is the end–you’ll be hearing more about Alaska before the fall is over, I can tell you that. Like it or not. Whether you’re there or you’re square. Come hell or high water. Something about the biscuit train.

Wait . . . the biscuit train?

Not even I know where I got that one from.

Whatever.