One
for Ten Cabin Fever in Haines
Alaska
by: Adam Longnecker
Mountains,
massive piles of rock and earth
shaped by glaciers, erosion, and
weather; can conjure feelings
of awe, enlightenment and fear
in people. For millions of years
weather systems have shed soft
crystals of snow on these massive
peaks, and now we stand as mere
specs in the history of these
giants, aloft on their high ridgelines.
As we descend a sensation secretes
from our brains pulsing throughout
our bodies as adrenaline, sculpting
our passion to return to the top
of these towering peaks over and
over again.
Pursuing their love for the
mountains, Jason Shutz, Bill
Buchbauer, Annie Fast, Chris
Ankeny and Tom Routh headed
for southeast Alaska in late
April Haines, Alaska to
be exact. Haines has been moderately
popular among the ski and snowboard
film crews for years, but still
contains plenty of pristine
wilderness only attainable by
glacier plane and split board.
The posse, made up of Montanans,
headed to Haines for an affordable
backcountry trip aboard Cessna
ski planes. They were armed
with split boards, mountaineering
gear, and winter camping equipment.
During the first two weeks of
April the group bagged a lot
of great sunny days up on the
glaciers, split boarding new
lines and eying up lines for
next year.
After a full day of Air Travel
from Montana I arrived in Haines,
Alaska aboard a single engine
Cessna. Haines is positioned
at the North end of Alaska's
Inside Passage and at the Northern
end of America's longest Fjord.
The town shares its border with
20 million acres of protected
wilderness: Glacier Bay National
Park is 25 miles by air, and
Canada's Kluane National Park
and Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial
Park are just up the road. A
Bald Eagle Preserve is also
just outside of Haines giving
the area an amazing collection
of dramatic scenery and plethora
of wildlife.
Day Two of my trip was like
99% of Alaska days: it rained.
The Montana posse that I came
to hook up with spent the day
recuperating from a 4-day backcountry
camping /split-boarding trip.
I sat and listened to spook
stories about new uncharted
areas with sketchy snow pack,
hairball plane flights onto
glaciers, and all the great
runs in between. Make no mistake;
no matter where you ride at
home, Alaska is bigger. Everything
in AK is big: the mountains,
the fish, the wildlife, the
trees, everything is just so
damn gigantic. The air was getting
cold and it was snowing on the
peaks; our conversations turned
to the next mission once the
sun broke again and the stoke
began to build among us.
The rain continued for the
next eight days with little
sign of the sun. Chris, Annie,
and Tom went home leaving Jason,
Bill, and I to wait for the
sun. Pool, darts, scrabble,
ping-pong, eating, reading,
beer, coffee, beer, coffee,
fishing, hiking, and hacky sack
became the motion of the days.
Cabin fever can invoke some
strangeness in people and after
eight days of rain and no riding;
the walls were closing in
I can't take it, I can't take
it. Freaking out and pounding
your head on the wall is no
way to deal with it, sowe ran
around in the rain for a few
hours. But that was a bad idea.
We ate again even through we'd
eaten an hour ago, and two hours
before that. We were beginning
to lose our minds and we only
had two days left; The northern
lights are out that evening
and it was clear would
it be clear in the morning?
That was the question.
We talked about just taking
some heli runs if the sun did
shine because your chances of
getting to fly in the heli in
moderate light is better than
it is in the ski planes. The
ski plane pilots need very clear
days in order to see the ever-changing
landscape that they are landing
on, where with a helicopter
you don't need a runway to take
off and land. Besides after
you land in a plane you usually
still have to hike up to the
top of your line. The drawback
was that there was only one
helicopter operating in town
and there were six groups wanting
to go out. We hoped that the
Men's Journal Adventure Team
which was there with a group
of ski racers and ski legends
would go for their main objective
a peak on the coast;
which would mean a lot less
of a cluster getting onto the
heli.
With the original plan for
some glacier plane trips into
Glacier Bay National Park for
split boarding and a winter
camp squashed by the weather,
and the chance to heli jaded
by the adventure boy team, the
drinking waged on and on. The
locals say that you can drink
it blue.
Well, after nine days of drinking,
the sun finally shone, and we
headed to the heli at 33 mile
for day ten, the last day in
Haines. Being on the not so
special list, we finally got
out at around 4:00pm for two
runs with our ultra-cool guide
Jim: the first was on "Deflowered"
and the second on "Hangover
Helper" short runs
in Alaska standards, but pretty
damn big anywhere else. The
snow was blower, lots of new
snow from the eight days of
precipitation and just enough
cold air to keep it light and
fluffy late in the day. All
of a sudden it was 7pm and we
had to haul ass to catch the
ferry. Cramming all of our stuff,
the three of us, and Jason's
dog Chewe into the helicopter
pilot's 1970's Subaru was a
bold task, but we got it done;
and off to Juneau we went to
catch the plane home.
After nine down days I was
leaving Alaska 1 for 10. Two
long powder runs in the bag
made for a relaxing ride to
Juneau on the ferry, and many
daydreams longing for more on
the plane ride home.
Alaska is a land of adventure.
You don't have to be loaded
to ride high powdery peaks in
Alaska; you just have to have
solid backcountry knowledge,
glacial travel experience, and
knowledge of the local mountains.
Three people can catch a ride
on a glacier plane (Drake Olson
/ Earth Center Adventures (
907- 723-9475) at one time and
depending how far you go into
the mountains, you can expect
to pay about $300 each for the
roundtrip in and out. Once you're
there you can explore via split
board for the day or camp out
for as long as you like; just
remember tent fever comes on
a lot quicker than cabin fever!
About The Author
Adam Longnecker, www.adamlongnecker.com,
is a professional snowboard
and skateboard coach. He travels
the globe in search of the ultimate
rush on his boards while enjoying
incredible sites and people
along the way. Expression through
stories and photos is his way
of sharing his ride with you.
This story may not be reprinted
or placed on the web without
prior consent of the author
in writing.
adamlongnecker@yahoo.com
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