Onboard ship – Ketchikan, Alaska port of call
7:21 am
I made it through the night! When the ship was still in the calmer waters of the Inside Passage last night, the movement of the ship was side-to-side. It felt as if we were passing through another ship’s wake from starboard to port – a really, really big ship’s wake. When we got back to the stateroom after desserts I had to walk uphill to get to the veranda. And when I left the veranda to go to the bed, I walked uphill again.
After we turned out the lights, I dozed for quite a while, not really dropping off to sleep. As a result, I knew the moment we entered the Pacific Ocean. Suddenly the ship was rocking from front to back instead of side to side. Up one wave…down a wave….up….and down….and up…and down. Like laying flat on a teeter-totter that doesn’t ever stop.
But thankfully the motion just put me to sleep this time. I lay there actually enjoying it for a while and when I woke up, it was nearly light. Since dawn was at five-something this morning, I rolled over and went back to sleep. Steven’s now out doing his mile walk and I’m still being lazy.
We’ve turned south along the shore and although rain is in the forecast, the sun’s peeking out over the mountains. Took some pictures (of course).
9:11 pm
Amazing how many days of magic we’ve had here. Do we make it ourselves? Or does it follow us? Or is it all coincidence? I’ll leave the philosophizing for others and simply tell the story…
Went into Ketchikan today around 2:00 just after we docked. Steven and I had booked a horse-drawn trolley tour through the city (pop. 8000); we called home and talked to the kids before getting on the trolley. They’re doing fine. Since we didn’t know anything about Ketchikan, this tour seemed a good way to get an overview of the highlights, especially since it was only 45 minutes long.
Our tour guide (Wind) is a Tlingit of the Frog Clan and knew a lot about Ketchikan since he was born here. The city is actually on an island that is mostly rock with only about 6 inches to a foot of dirt on top. Same narrow staircases here going up, but the longest is “only” about 170 steps.
The coolest part of the tour was the information that the salmon had begun their run. All throughout Alaska everyone kept talking about how things would be once the salmon began their yearly trek up the rivers. The females lay their eggs upstream very near where they themselves were born. Then the males swim upstream against the current and up over the waterfalls to get to the eggs. They do their thing and then die shortly thereafter.
Well, in Ketchikan, the salmon are running now! Later in the afternoon we walked over to Creek Street and stood on the bridge that crosses the river. I have never seen so many fish in my life! The stream was only about 30-40 feet across and didn’t look all that deep, but it was filled with grey salmon in every inch. In fact, if you could walk on the fish, you could easily walk from one side to the other without any problem at all. Thousands of them all looking as if they were simply sitting in the water, but their fins were going back and forth for all they were worth, just to stay in place against the current.
Further up was a set of waterfalls and periodically you’d see one flip up…but in fact, that was one falling down. One who hadn’t made it on the first try. The smell of fish was in the air, but it wasn’t overwhelming at all. And yes, there were dead fish in the water, too. Males who had tried and literally given it their all, but who hadn’t succeeded.
Creek Street, Ketchikan is one of the oldest streets and still has most of the original buildings. The city’s not that old, having been part of the gold rush. This street is really a pedestrian walkway on pilings…and the shops are on pilings over the creek as well. I have to admit, we’re about shopped out, but found here real Alaskan shops rather than the tourist traps down by the wharf. Actually, this was the real wharf all those years ago, but since they have to blast rock out to put in houses, the unused rock was put down in the harbor, so the city’s actually moved out closer to sea over the years.
Anyway, we had fun wandering in and out, making a few small purchases and talking with people who live here all year round and are more interested in selling Ketchikan than trinkets. At the very end of the street was one last building with an art gallery of native art on the first floor and a bookshop on the second.
Now those of you who know me, know I can never pass up a bookshop. I’d been in several in Juneau, all independently owned, and had been a little disappointed in the offerings. But as I walked up the stairs there were two posters on the angled ceiling, one of the Paul Taylor dance company, the other of the Alvin Ailey dance company. I knew this was going to be special as I’ve taken master dance classes with both in my younger days.
Now the bookshop is in the attic of this building, and there’s a loft as well. Lots of nooks and crannies and wonderful books around every corner. Native art tucked in here and there and in general, just a lot of good vibrations. The Tlingit people are artisans and over the past few days we’ve become pretty good at identifying the various representations of the animals. There’s a sunburst that I’ve wanted for my room at the cabin, but couldn’t find one that I could afford. They range from carvings of thousands of dollars to prints of several hundred dollars. All out of my price range.
But here in the shop I found, believe it or not, a T-shirt in the exact burnt orange that would be perfect in that room. I decided to get it and turn it into a pillow. But you have to see the clerk to get one, since all that is out is a model. By this time Steven has caught up to me, having found the Tlingit symbol for “thank you” and “welcome”. He’s decided to get it to hang in the cabin’s front hallway as a way of welcoming people in. We go up to the clerk (who turns out to be the owner) and request the T-shirt and we get to talking about the cabin and what we’re doing.
She asks where our cabin is and is surprised when we say “New York” – she thought we were Alaskans! What a wonderful compliment! She then asks whereabouts in NY and when we tell her Plattsburg, just south of Naples, she grins and tells us she was born in Canandaigua! She lived there only five years though before moving to Rochester. She went to Mercy, at which point I confessed to being a Kearney kid.
Well, we had a great time swapping stories and talking about Alaska and the Finger Lakes and Rochester…when she happened to tell us her maiden name: Maggie Boyle. Steven said the only Boyle he knew was Barbara Boyle in Waterloo; they’d gone to St. Mary’s together. She got very excited at that point – Barbara is her cousin!
We talked for over 45 minutes and would have loved to stay longer. In fact, we would’ve gone to dinner together if we didn’t have a ship to catch. She told us if we missed the ship not to worry, we had a place to stay with her. We also told her the next time she comes back to Rochester to please let us know so we could at least have our dinner then. We’re going to try and find each other on Facebook.
I tell you, it absolutely made our day. We floated back to the ship and have grinned all evening. Kindred spirits finding each other so many miles from home!
By the way, we’ve gone from the tundra desert of the north to a rainforest! Ketchikan gets more rain than any other city in the US. They get a little snow in the winter, but no more than 65 inches total. A LOT calmer winter than Rochester’s. Wind told us (on our tour) that they never cancel a game for rain, but they do cancel for sunshine. No one comes to the games and who wants to play with the sun in your eyes? They had a “drought” earlier this year…there was no rain for 28 days in a row and they were worried.
Later:
Ate at the Rotterdam again last night. These fancy meals have added pounds, I’m sure. I’m definitely ready to get back to the Wii.
Also went to the Filipino Crew Show late last night. I think I mentioned before the crew is entirely Filipino and Indonesian. Apparently they switch off weeks with one nationality doing a show one week and the other on the opposite week. They started with the Philippines National Anthem and then sang some songs and did some traditional dances. It was a lot of fun.