Gold seekers leaving Skagway for the Yukon in1898 had to carry 1200 pounds of supplies up Chilcoot Pass before they were allowed into Canada.
We left with a full tank of gas and about a week’s worth of food.
A nice place for lunch…homemade soup, bread and cinnamon buns.
Photo stops at…
The smallest desert in the world
Emerald Lake
Why it’s green
The former trainstop community of Robinson
The only current resident
Camping at Walmart in Whitehorse. Ron and Tommy & Olga went on the Alaska Highway from here, while Beth, Carol, and I took the Klondike Hwy.
Storefront murals in downtown Whitehorse
The SS Klondike which traveled between Whitehorse and Dawson City in the Gold Rush days.
Stopped to see new spring babies at the Wildlife Refuge
Mule deer and day-old fawn
Mountain goats
Musk Ox
Baby Musk Ox
One month old moose found abandoned
Camping in a gov’t. park. Beth came face to face with a grizzly in the morning. He walked away fortunately.
Some rough patches of road….note the crack in my windshield.
Five fingers rapids. Dangerous passage for riverboats.
Close up view after the steps/trail down to them.
The only one stirring in Carmacks Sunday morning was this scrawny red fox and some dogs that chased him away.
A side trip to the tiny town of Mayo which thrived when silver was discovered north of there in Keno.
Where to go for ice cream in Mayo.
Free community campground on the river. Wild roses everywhere.
The Russians called this forest Taiga, meaning “drunken forest”. The black spruce trees have shallow roots and grow atop the permafrost. As the surface thaws, the roots lose their hold causing the trees to become tipsy.
Arctic Butterfly….something Checkerboard
Yukon Swallowtail
Dragonfly
Didn’t get the mosquitoes…
Now we are in Dawson City….a well preserved historic gold-rush town with lots to see, More on that next time.