The time had come to head to Anchorage to pick up Janelle, our youngest daughter. She has always wanted to see Alaska, and Mom and Dad being there (in an RV with an available over-the-cab-bed) was too much for her to resist.
We had to drive the 180 miles from Glennallen westward to Anchorage along the Glenn Highway (I put a map at the bottom of this blog post for reference). This road has got to be one of the more beautiful highways in Alaska.




Upon our arrival in Anchorage, we checked into a nondescript campground (basically a parking lot with electric, water and sewer hookups for $70 a night) and “refreshed” the RV (dump tanks, get water). We hit up the grocery store and stocked up for the week.
Janelle’s flight was scheduled to arrive at 11:20 pm.


Janelle was retrieved safely shortly before midnight. At this point in time, it was 4:00 am to her. We went back to the RV and she immediately went to bed. It had been a VERY long day.


At this point, we had to decide where to go. We had two destinations planned for Janelle’s visit…Denali National Park to the north and Seward to the south. But which to do first? We HAD planned to go to Seward (Kenai Fjords National Park boat tour) and then Denali, but James checked the Seward marine forecast and there were 14 foot seas and gale force winds. PIVOT! We decided to go to Denali first.
We headed out of Anchorage to Talkeetna for a night…our Denali reservations didn’t start till the next day. Talkeetna had been mentioned in a number of fiction novels I had read. I knew pilots flew out of there for interior destinations, but that was the extend of my knowledge.

The sight of large buses with the names of cruise lines on them was our first clue that Talkeetna was not going to be some sleepy little town. The town used to be sleepy, but it has turned into a quirky tourist town. Want to ride behind a sled dog? Want to take a flightseeing tour? Want to float down a river? Want to buy a souvenir? Want to have an overpriced meal? Check, check and check. Talkeetna is your kind of town.

But all in all, we are not tourist town types of people and we were underwhelmed. Although I did find one store I enjoyed.



Talkeetna was a “Meh” for us. I am sure others absolutely love this touristy town. Not us. The next morning (and the next blog post) we were headed for Denali National Park.
One more thing…James just pointed out that it’s been 1 month and 4900 miles since we left New Mexico.

How beautiful! Glad Janelle made it safely (Hi, Janelle!) And thanks for the maps – it does help to ground your travels.
[And yarn shops near the quilt shop? I know quiviut yarn comes from Alaska somewhere.)]
I was reading about quiviut yarn. It comes from muskox. No, I haven’t seen any in stores, but I’ll keep my eyes open. I am betting it has to be expensive. Chasing down a muskox can’t be easy.
Beautiful pictures!
I remember having to darken the bedrooms to “trick” your brain into thinking it is bedtime!!
Love reading about your travels in Alaska!
Yup…gotta fool the brain! Glad you are enjoying our “stories!”