|

Sunday,
July 3
Destruction Bay, YT to Watson Lake, YT
436 miles
We stumble into the restaurant at 7 AM and George and May are on
duty. We're in awe. George makes us ham and eggs just as he had
promised to do the night before and May serves us. It takes a
serious amount of coffee to get us jump started and May keeps it
coming. We say our fond goodbyes and head out on the Alaska Highway.
We travel through vast valley spaces of untouched forests
interrupted only by the occasional abandoned cabin, boarded up gas station, and
out-of-business restaurant. We wonder what people do to earn a living in
this remote area but then we've wondered that many times during
previous rides through remote rural areas in the lower 48 states.
We are told that
we'll finally find decent roads East of Whitehorse and we do. The roads are
on firm ground and the terrain changes as well from tundra and taiga
to fir forests. And then, just as we are thinking that we might
finally get a dry day on this trip, it rains. Oh well.
We stop for
lunch at a place called Johnson's Crossing, a little resort in the
Yukon Territory, and we get a real surprise. A guy comes rolling in
on a Honda Super Cub 50. His name is Nordy and he's from Japan. We
ask where he's heading and he replies, "Prudhoe Bay", which is on
the Arctic Ocean, at the end of a 500 mile gravel road. We ask where he started from and he replies, "The
southern tip of South America, six months ago." Ok, we're not
worthy! Here we are on these big, powerful sport touring machines,
all impressed with what we're doing, and he comes Nordy on his tiny
two stroke. The fairing on his bike is covered with decals and well
wishes made with a Sharpie that he's collected along the way. Simply
amazing!
It's our second
day of travel on the Alaska Highway and we are deep in the middle of
serious nowhere. This road is the only way in or out of this region and the side
roads that branch off of it dead end beyond nowhere. The Alcan is
frequented by RVs and motorcycles and little else: various Harleys,
lots of BMW GS dual sports, Honda Gold Wings w/ trailers, sidecar
and trike rigs and lots of two-up riding. As we meet other riders at
gas stations, we often compare the grime levels we've achieved while
we share information about the road ahead or behind.
We roll into
Watson Lake and pull into a gas station. As we fill up, we notice a
fair number of mosquitoes paying attention to us, more than any
other place on our trip. We swat them, hop on our bikes and head out
of town to the big provincial campground. We follow a gravel road
to the shore of Watson Lake. It is utterly devoid of
campers and rangers and we pick the most primo site in the place. We're
puzzled as to why such a nice place is abandoned as we dismount and begin unpacking our camping gear.
But it only takes three minutes to figure it out as we are mobbed by ravenous mosquitoes. It makes Skookumchuck
seem like a pleasant family picnic in comparison. We hastily vote to
vacate the place and head back into
town to look for a motel.
We find rooms in the 3rd motel we try in Watson Lake and wow, what a
fleabag! It looks and smells like it caters to nothing but lumberjacks
and truckers but it's better than being eaten alive in the woods.
Hell, there are even mosquitoes inside the restaurant itself! After
supper, we walk over to the Sign Post Forest which was started by some
homesick guy who was a worker on the Alaska Highway during World War
II. He nailed a sign with the name of his town on a post and others
followed suit. There are now signs from all over the world and the
site covers multiple acres in the center of town. Pretty cool.
Click here for Day Thirteen: Braving
the wilds of British Columbia
Click here to return to the
Alaska Adventure ride summary. |
| (Click images to enlarge) |









 |