The starting point of the ALCAN highway to Fort Nelson

We got out of the campground before 9 am to fill the fuel tank with  $109.9 per liter diesel, which translates to about $3.15 US.  I believe the cheapest fuel we found in the States on the way was $3.12, so Costco Canada has its act together.

We stopped and took a few pics in Dawson Creek, as we didn’t have anything listed to see there, so we got on the ALCAN and headed toward Alaska!   We thought we would stay at Charlie Lake Provincial Park just north of Fort St. John,  if there was availability when we arrived.  There was,  so that evening we enjoyed a very wooded British Columbia Provincial park.   There were no hookups in the campground.  We did see a few strategically placed water spigots on the park road so you would be able to fill your tanks if needed, and there was a dump-station there too.

 

 

It was a no-hookup site and heavily forested so the solar wasn’t going to do much for us.   It was going to be a live off the batteries and charge them as we drove the next morning to Fort Nelson, about a 220-mile drive.

I had a little time after the rain stopped to get my rock guard front bar mounted on the receiver on the back of the coach that evening.

We shoved off the next morning with the hopes of staying in Fort Nelson that night.   The road was real smooth, similar to all the other roads we had been on in Canada till we hit Kilometer Marker (KM) 170.   After that the road jostled us the rest of the way to Fort Nelson.   Also, not long after KM 170, we saw a bear run across the road way in front of us.  The next couple hundred miles had us see 4 more bears alongside the road.  Other than that there wasn’t anything else to see except the scenery.   We made it into Fort Nelson a little after 1 pm.  Turns out we were back in Pacific Time when we entered BC, so it was earlier than expected.

I had called Triple G Hideaway Campground from Charlie Lake that morning and they said they would fit us in, no problem.   When we arrived, the place was almost empty.  By 9 pm it was almost full.  Nice little park right on the Alcan.  Luckily we were placed 3 rows from the rear and couldn’t hear any road noise that night.   When we walked over to the town’s small museum, the front rows of sites had plenty of road noise.  But I bet traffic isn’t probably much of an issue once it gets dark.   Sunrise it 4:01 am and sunset is 10:20, over 18 hours of sunlight.  Less than 6 hours of night time here.

We stayed at the 3 G for a couple of nights.  Finding these campgrounds with good WiFi in what is essentially the wilderness is pretty nice.  Living on 256 Kbps is more like dial-up than you think.  Even though the fastest dial-up I remember was 56 Kbps, the websites you looked at had a minuscule amount of graphics back then and practically no one had a digital camera .  If they did, the photos were 100 kilobytes,  not 4 megabytes each.   And no one pulled down 1 Gigabyte video files so their significant other could watch her soap opera.

I checked out the 4 local fuel stations to determine the easiest egress to top off before we really get into the back yonder and fuel gets close to double the cost till you get to Whitehorse in the Yukon.   We might be able to make it to Whitehorse with the fuel we have but that would be cutting it really close on range.  And I heard from a local that used to truck fuel to Whitehorse, there are 7 large grades between here and Whitehorse and about 600 miles of road to get there.

Yesterday afternoon we walked over to the Fort Nelson Heritage Museum.   Quite a bit of stuff to look at, from old cars and machinery to huge generators that used to power the town.   It was quite a collection, even old communication equipment.  I really like what appeared to be a telephone test rig that looked like a piece of furniture.   I think it was $7 C.  It was a blast from the past!   Glad we walked over there.  If you are ever in Fort Nelson looking for something to do,  you could spend hours looking at things.

 

 

 

A few days in Grande Prairie, Canada

Driving from Grande Cache to Grande Prairie was an easy drive.  We passed lots of oil drilling or fracking sites, I mean a lot of them.   And all the traffic on the road seemed to be trucks servicing all the sites.   It again rained most of the day; and when we pulled into the Grande Prairie Rotary Campground, it was still raining.  We got checked in and drove to our site, which was a pull-in and fronted on the Bear River.   We had lots of trees covering most of the view, as you could see out the windshield’s webcam; but it was fairly level and the utilities were on the correct side for pulling in forward into the site.

We got all set up and I headed out for a growler fill at Grain Bin Brewery and then over to Costco to check out the access for diesel when we leave.  $109.9 per liter is the lowest I see anywhere in Canada today.   Works out to roughly $3.20 US per gallon.   Anyway, I filled up the toad while reconnoitering.

I noticed an Elks Lodge on the map and I was wondering about that as I thought they were only in the US.   More on that later.

A few days back we had our propane leak detector go on the fritz, so I had to disconnect it.  While here in GP, I scoped out an RV parts place called McGregors.  They actually had the exact one I needed and of course it was exactly double the cost for the same model online.  As we are traveling, buying it online would be problematic due to not having exact set plans for where we planned to be.   I picked up the expensive detector and hooked it up this morning.   The light is green, supposed to mean it’s not detecting any leaking propane.   Propane smell is pretty distinctive, so I am not sure why I really need one.

While we are on the road, we are always looking for good Mexican food, and to find one of the better taco shops we’ve tasted here in GP was nothing short of amazing.   El Norteno was the bomb!  And so was its sister taco stand, El Sureno’s.   They made their own corn tortillas right in front of you and added great ingredients.     Both places were located in food courts, one in a sports complex / leisure center and the other inside the Farmers Market.   Very different locations, but well worth the visit if you love great tacos!   We think we are experts due to living 20 miles north of Tijuana.

I made a Costco supply run on Friday and a Safeway supply run on Saturday afternoon.  We are now stocked up for hitting the actual Alaska-Canada Highway tomorrow.   We assume big grocery stores may be few and far between for the next few weeks.

After stowing all the supplies, I decided to head over to the Elks Lodge to see what was happening there.   We have stayed at a few lodges on our trek, so I was curious about there being one in Canada.   Turns out it’s not part of the American organization and there isn’t a social club inside.   So afterward I went on the hunt for a place to go to dinner.

We found The Keg Steakhouse, which was outstanding.  I didn’t know it was a chain when we arrived, but the hostess told us a little about the place.   We ordered their specialty, the prime rib, which was pretty good.   To our surprise, prior to the entree, the manager stopped by and delivered a complimentary shrimp cocktail.   It had the largest shrimp I’d seen since visiting Sydney back in the 1980’s.  She told us that since we were first-timers, we received the shrimp compliments of the Keg.   The meal was excellent.  We will be back… Too bad there isn’t one in California.

We are all filled up with water, will dump the tanks in the morning and head on over to Costco to fill up with diesel fuel.   We last filled in Shelby, Montana, prior to hitting the Canadian Border.

Drive to Grande Cache then on to Grande Prairie

We left Jasper around 10 am for a leisurely drive to the Municipal Campground in Grande Cache.   Highway 16 east was a pretty nice ride, driving alongside a river most of the way to our turnoff on Highway 40 north.

After the turn onto 40, the drive was no longer leisurely as I was dodging potholes for the first 10 miles.  After that the road got a lot better until the construction areas began.   I think they are in the process of widening that road and it appears the first thing they do is clear-cut the trees and bring in logging trucks to haul them away.

I noticed something odd whilst driving that road.  For many miles there was what looked like orange Inter-duct lying on the ground close to the edge of the trees.   Inter-duct is what fiber is normally run thru.   I am pretty sure that is what was inside it because every mile or so there was a utility box it connected to.   This went on for maybe 50-70 miles.   I guess they are running fiber to the towns along that highway.  The odd part is I have never seen it just laid on the ground.  Back home it’s usually buried.  I guess they were just in a hurry and later they will get around to burying it.

There were a bunch of construction zones along the way, and they slow you down to 50 kph, which is about 30 mph, a very slow speed, especially when there is no construction in sight for miles before and after the workers.   One of the work zones was very interesting.   They were piling dirt/gravel down the middle of this two-lane highway and ahead about a half mile away was a line of dump trucks in the right lane waiting to drop more.  I assumed I was to wait for the cars in the southbound lane to clear and then take that side of the road, but I was waved to go and take the right lane.  It was a mud bath for the RV and especially for Kathy’s car being pulled behind.

It wasn’t far from the mud bath till we arrived in Grande Cache.  Nice small town surrounded by mountains.   We located the campground and backed into our site, but the only way I could level the coach was with the front tires about a foot off the ground.   We moved over a couple spots to a much more level spot and notified the office.

One thing that pisses me off is a place that advertises they have WiFi only to get there and it doesn’t work at the campsites.   This place wrote on the paperwork that it only works in sites near the office… And there weren’t any chairs in the office if someone did need to use it there.  We survived with our 25 KB hotspot.  (We ran out of high-speed data in Canada about the 3rd day after crossing the border. )  Can’t wait till we can get to Alaska where our unlimited hotspots will work again!

Here is Dusty sleeping during our drive to Grande Cache

 

Jasper National Park

The first thing we noticed in Jasper was the vast swaths of dead pine trees on the mountainsides.   We are boondocking at a Parks Canada Overflow campground.  No services except pit toilets and fairly level gravel back-in lots with picnic tables.   It’s been raining off and on quite a bit, so the solar had been slow to charge the batteries.   The first afternoon there, we drove into the town and found the visitor center for a map of places to see.   It’s a nice small town built on the side of a small hill with a railroad station and track bordering the southern edge, and just south of that is Highway 16.   We drove up to Pyramid Lake,  not sure why it’s called that as it’s not shaped like one.   After having a snack there for lunch, we drove back down to the town where I thought we would walk around; but the rain really started coming down hard, so that was sort of a bust.   So we headed down the parkway to Athabasca Falls by way of 93A, which is the old highway.

We drove probably 30 km to the falls, and they were utterly spectacular!   There was so much water trying to get thru, it was like watching chaos, or what one would imagine chaos to look like!   The pictures don’t do it justice.  I tried to take some short videos of it.  I will attempt to post them here.   It started raining on us again, so we headed back toward the car and drove north back to Jasper.

Athabasca Falls

We ended up driving back to the campground around 5 pm; and when I got there, I noticed the batteries were only back to 88% of full.   I brought out the solar suitcase I built and hooked it up to see if we could get them back to at least 95% before the sun went behind the mountains.    Maybe 45 minutes after I set them up, it got windy and started to rain hard.  I figured we were done with the battery charging; but when I went over to the door to make sure the panel tie-downs were working, I noticed a small patch of blue sky over the mountaintop.   To my surprise, the rain stopped a few minutes later and the sun again started shining very bright.    A couple hours later our batteries were back to 100%.    That was way better than expected.   After the sun went behind the mountain to our west, I went outside and stored the suitcase back on the shelf I built just for them in the basement.

It’s been really cold since we left Lake Louise a couple days ago, and as I mentioned, this campground only allows two-day stays.  We are leaving in the morning to drive up to Grande Cache.

 

Columbia Ice Fields

Driving up the Ice Fields Parkway was another incredible scenic journey.  The Canadian Rockies shouldn’t be missed.   The parkway itself has been one of the smoothest roads I’ve ever been on.   Smooth is nice when you are driving your house on it.   There was only one large grade on it and it was maybe 20 km prior to our destination that day,  the Discovery Center at the Columbia Ice Fields.   We had no cell service the whole way up the road to the ice field and beyond.  We got that back once we were about 5 miles from the town of Jasper at the other end of the parkway.

I wanted to take one of those monster trucks out onto the glacier.   We got into the RV parking lot around 1 pm,  and after a struggle to level the coach, I hiked in the freezing wind over to the center to purchase tickets for the excursion.   They were booked up till 3:30, so I bought tickets for the 3:45 tour.   $100 Canadian each.   I went back to the coach for some lunch and a bit O blogging. (offline, no internet at all except in the building some 500 meters away, and I forgot to ask for the password)

The RV parking lot allows for overnight camping with a fee you put into a slot in a pole near the top of the lot. The parking is no where near level, so be prepared for major leveling process to get level as this is an “absorption fridge killer” slope.   The wind on that lot was probably gusting at 40 mph.   We had planned to camp overnight there, but between the precarious footings and the wind gusts, I was doubting I really wanted to stay the night there.

I was amazed at the output of my solar panel while parked there.  I guess it was so cold and the lack of pollution in the air and possibly the altitude had me producing 575 watts from 640 watts of panels.   I think I was pretty amazed at 525 watts last fall, but 50 more watts of power in the real world just amazes me.

We headed up the hill around 3 pm for our tour that started boarding at 3:30. We had plenty of time to get WiFi connected and sync up our email and texts during the wait.   Kathy got to peruse the gift shop while I called around to find a campsite for the night.   I found no sure things.  More on that later.

Our boarding time arrived and we got on a tour bus that drives you the kilometer or so over to the ice crawlers.  It was a quick 4 minutes and the bus driver said it would be the best 4 minutes of our lives.  It really didn’t live up to that,  but the ice crawlers sure did!

We got dropped off in front of our crawler and Shane, our driver for the tour, introduced himself.  He was a pretty funny guy, but I think a lot of the other tourists didn’t always get his jokes.  He was from Nova Scotia, so his humor needed a few seconds to sink in.

The crawler is a 30-ton beast with 6-wheel drive and large tractor looking tires.   It is truly a crawler, as I think he said the top speed was 10 mph.   We started climbing right out of the lot, and then we stopped at the top of a really steep hill.  From our vantage point, it looked like a cliff.   There was a tension in the air as he stopped to engage the 6-wheel drive.   Then we started down the 32-degree grade.   I’ve been on steep grades back in my dirt bike days, but this was over the top when inside what is really a large 56-seat bus!

After getting to the bottom (probably took 2 minutes to get to the bottom) we drove thru a large tire-washing puddle.   They don’t want to bring muddy tires onto the glacier, so they divert some of the glacier melt onto the road to clean the tires.   After about 20 minutes in the crawler, we were at the destination on the Athabasca Glacier.  It was really cold and windy up there.   Since we had never been on a glacier before, it was pretty cool.  It really wasn’t that slippery either.  So I went around taking pics and got Shane to take a few of us.   You can see him in one of the selfie shots.

 

 

 

We stayed on the Glacier for 30 minutes, and just prior to leaving, it started to snow on us.   It’s June, right?   That meant it got even colder, so I skedaddled back in the crawler quickly.  One poor guy was really unprepared and was wearing sandals and a sweatshirt.  The temp was in the 20s with the wind chill factor!

When we got back to the transfer point, we got on the shuttle bus that was to take us to the glass overlook a few miles up the highway.   We, and most others, chose not to get off the shuttle bus in the blustery weather at the glass walkway.   Instead, we took it back to the center and walked back to the RV, closed it back up, and headed on down the road to find a less steep and windy place to sleep.

We drove toward Jasper and tried Wapiti Campground, but they were full.  It was quite a chore to get back out of that campground.   Thankfully that ranger in the kiosk told us about Snare River Campground overflow.   We programmed that in our GPS and took off to find that.   By now it was 8 pm and as we got to the turnoff, I stopped in the left-turn lane to see a train trestle without any height sign.   I didn’t want to temp fate, and we sat there for a few minutes and a car came thru it, so we could tell it was pretty tall.   We drove under it very slowly in case we were mistaken.

About 5 km down that small road was the Snaring River Campground and we turned in.   That wasn’t where the overflow was and I had to disconnect the car to be able to get out of that campground.   This was getting to be a long day!   Turns out the overflow for Snaring River was about 300 meters down the road on the other side of the Snaring River.    The bridge we needed to cross didn’t look so good.   It appeared to be covered in asphalt over a wooden deck,  and lots of the asphalt was missing, showing the splintered and possibly rotten wood underneath.    We got across.  (I think Kathy waited till I was all the way across before she drove the car over, as she didn’t feel the need to plummet into the fast moving and probably very cold water.)

We drove into the campground, paid our $15 and drove thru this huge campground with 3 other campers in it.  The place had 300+ sites, all with compacted gravel parking and each had a picnic table.  There were no other hookups.   Later we found a few large water tanks, but they appeared to be gravity fed, so we weren’t going to fill the RV tanks with that.

An elk grazed thru the sites in the evenings.. We got in there close to 9 pm.   The place only allows two-day stays, which I had never experienced before, especially considering there were at least 298 unoccupied sites available.   Of course, there was a train track a few hundred feet from us, but no train whistles were to be heard.   No grade crossing within ear shot I guess.

 

 

 

Lake Louise

As I mentioned in the prior post, we arrived in Lake Louise without reservations.    As we drove toward the first campground around 11 am, the sign said,  “Campground full.”   But it was the type of sign someone would need to physically walk to and change the placard.   I was hoping they were too lazy or it was always left that way.  Turns out my hopes came true.  They had lots of open sites.   People were coming in till after 8 pm that evening and I don’t think it ever actually filled up.

The gal at the check-in kiosk mentioned there has been a grizzly in the camp often this year with a few cubs, but that she was “friendly.”   Whatever that means?   We never saw them for my disappointment, and to Kathy’s delight.

Now, the reason this campground probably isn’t top on anyone’s list is the trains!   They seem to come by every hour or just slightly more often.   The westbound trains blew their horns just a moment before passing behind our coach.  The tracks were about 150′ from the back of us.   The eastbound trains blew their horns on the other side of the grade crossing, so it was much further away and almost pleasant.

We weren’t really sure we wanted to stay the two days I signed up for once we experienced the trains, so we decided to see as much as we could that afternoon just in case.

When we got to Lake Louise, the parking lots by the lake were full; so we waited till around 5 pm to take the drive up so we didn’t have to take the shuttle bus.   There was a steady stream of cars coming down the mountain as we drove up to the lake. There was no parking issue when we arrived, so we walked over to the lake, and it was surprising how much ice was still on the lake.  There were also quite a few tall snow banks scattered about for June 1st.   The elevation was less than 6,000′, so that latitude makes a big difference.   I know there isn’t snow at 6,000′ in San Diego now.

We walked around for a little bit, but I didn’t head out the path along the lake toward the mountain that evening.  Kathy walked down a ways and reported that the water color was magnificently teal after you got past the area with the slush and ice.   We headed back to the coach to listen for more trains that evening. They didn’t disappoint us; there were plenty of them!  The next morning I realized once my head hit the pillow, I didn’t hear one of them.   I’m pretty sure they didn’t stop running so we could sleep.

We got an early start this morning and headed up toward Lake Moraine, but its lot was already closed and they wouldn’t let us make the turn toward it; so we headed up the hill, back to Lake Louise.   Parking was a bit of an issue, so I let  Kathy off at the Chateau to look around inside, and Dusty and I went off to find a parking spot.  It took a bit of circling, but I finally got one and we headed off for a walk around the lake.   It was a gorgeous day to walk out to the other end of the lake.  I was even more surprised today as the ice on the lake was about 1/2 the size it had been last night.   Probably due to the different angle of the light today, the color of the lake was an incredible teal blue.   It got even prettier the further out on the path we walked.   I’m not sure how far the walk was, but it seemed a lot further on the walk back.

 

 

By the time we got back to the car, we were famished and we were going to head back to the RV to fix some lunch; but on the way down the hill, I spotted a patio with umbrellas at the Deer Lodge.  So we traveled down the hill a bit till I could find a place to turn around.   When we pulled into their parking lot, a guy with a clipboard came out to greet us.  He said we could park if we purchased a $20 gift card.  Skeptic me wondered if it was a scam, but he made it clear that it prevented anyone from using their lot to walk up to the lake.

We gave him the $20, parked and headed over to the restaurant patio.   We had a delightful lunch there.  We had something I’ve never had before, they put blueberry jam on the bison burgers.  I tried it and it was really good.   I was thinking that was odd, but that I would try anything once.. and it paid off.   And I was happy that the gift card worked when the check came..  🙂

After that fill-up, we headed out to find the Gondola.  It is on a mountain on the other side of the Trans Canada Highway..   We drove up to the the lodge, bought our tickets, and walked over to the ski lift to get on one.  (Note:  If you get there in the last hour they run, they give a big discount on the price of the tickets.  That was a pleasant surprise!)

It was pretty hot inside the gondola.   In less than a few minutes, I was wishing we had taken a chair lift up.   They had one gondola, then two chairs, then the next gondola on the cable traversing the mountainside.   To my surprise, Kathy appears to be more afraid of heights than I am while on the way up and said she wouldn’t go on the chairs on the way down like I was going to do!

Once at the top of the mountain, the view was spectacular.   Lake Louise off in the distance surrounded by the Rocky Mountains made the whole adventure much, much better.   There was a very brisk wind up there and the gondola heat was starting to seem a lot more appealing the longer we loitered up there.  We did take the chair lift down and it was an even more beautiful, unobstructed view!

We took the chairs back down to the lodge.   Once down we drove back to the RV to pick up Dusty for the drive to Moraine Lake.  By the time we got to the turnoff, it was open but they wouldn’t allow us to make a left onto the road.  So we had to drive up to a roadside picnic area to turn around, then we were able to head up the hill to this other lake.

Once there, we parked and walked out toward the lake.  It was a similar color to Louise, but no where near as pretty.  I guess the Moraine part should have clued us in.   It was cool to walk around, there was a large “beach” area with rocks and driftwood strewn about.   There was also a large hill of boulders that folks were doing scrambles on to get to the top.

We headed on down the hill after about an hour wandering around the lake so we could listen to the trains for the evening while we enjoyed beer and wine sitting outside of the campsite.   A couple that was traveling back to Palmer, Alaska, stopped by for a chat.  They had just picked up a new Rpod trailer in Minnesota and were bringing it home to Alaska.   It was interesting to talk with them about living in Alaska.   He was a hospital administrator and his wife a teacher.   They had lived in Fairbanks for a number of years, till they got tired of the heat and cold there so they move to Anchorage as it’s a much more temperate climate than Fairbanks.  Things I never knew..

We were going to pack up and head out in the morning for the Columbia Ice Fields in the morning so we bid them adieu and headed inside to get ready.

 

 

 

Banff

Kathy wanted to get to Banff as quickly as possible to sightsee, so we left Calgary a day early.   That morning I called Parks Canada and was able to procure two nights in Tunnel Mountain II campground.   I was hoping for three nights, but since the sun stays up until almost 10:30 here, we could probably fit in everything we wanted to see by starting as soon as we got set up in the campground.

On our way into the campground we spotted a clone of our bus using the dump station.  I assumed they were on their way out, thinking that it would be interesting to talk to them about their bus.   There is a saying in the RV world that no one knows your RV better than someone else that has the same thing. To my surprise they weren’t leaving and ended up parking about 50′ behind us.  I had to go over and see them after one of our ventures out and about.

The town of Banff was about 5 minutes down the small road.   It’s beautiful but very touristy.  It was so nice it got me wondering if there was an ordinance to keep your exterior wood polished.  There are a lot of cars in the small town, so the going can be painfully slow.   Also, if you stick the nose of your car an inch into the crosswalk, you get a lot of angry stares from the passersby.

We went out for pizza the first night at a small place on Bear Street.   Pizza was Ok.  Can’t really expect too much in a tourist town.   After that I wanted to go for drinks at the big hotel in town.  It really looks like a castle and it’s huge!  But parking for nonguests was pretty lacking, so we left to look for Bow Falls.   We found it just a few minutes away.    They have a lot of water here with all the snow melt from the mountains that ring the town, so all the rivers are running full tilt.   Snapped a few pics of the falls and headed down the road to see what was there.

After a few minutes we came to a bridge where a gate was being installed, but seeing the arm hadn’t been put up yet, we took a drive out there.   I went along a 27-hole golf course that went for miles along this small roadway.   By this time it was close to 9 pm and we saw a few golfers playing the fairways.   Some of them would have a very long walk back to the clubhouse, and I bet most of it was going to be in the dark.  Hopefully they have their bear spray!  We saw 2 very large elk in the meadows, but no bears, luckily for those golfers!

The road turned out to be a loop.   We then drove around the town a bit more and ended up on a road on the other side of Bow Falls and up above it.  There was a large platform we climbed up to with Dusty pulling Kathy up the stairs.  Very nice view of that large castle-like hotel and the falls below.

By this time it was close to dusk and we headed back to the bus.   You cannot believe how dirty the bus is.  All the rain and subsequent mud has it looking like we were back in Quartzsite again.

The next morning we headed out early looking for a car wash, which we never did find.  Although we did find one we could have driven the bus thru; but it was supposed to rain some more, so I decided to wait a bit longer.    We headed out of town toward Vista Lake and found the overlook where we ate a picnic lunch and then headed out to find Johnson Canyon (JC).

On the other side of the Trans Canada highway was the Bow Valley Parkway.    On the way toward JC, we stopped at a small campground called Castle X .  It appears to be named that for the large mountain above it that looks like a fortress.

Not far past there where the parkway ended due to lots of road construction we found the parking lots for Johnson Canyon.   So far Canada parks allow pets on all the trails.  Way different than America’s National Parks, where if they are tolerated at all, it will only be on one or two designated trails.

We decided to do the short hike to the Lower Falls in Johnson Canyon.   It was a beautiful hike, about 1/2 mile in each direction, the temperature a nice 25c.

I think the Canadians were trying to pull a fast one on us Americans.   There was a sign for the falls that said it was 1/2 a mile…  and 1,500 meters to the Canucks.   1,600 meters is a mile..  I hadn’t looked at the meter sign till we hiked what I thought was half a mile and a passing ranger said we were  halfway to the falls.

It was a nice walk in the woods but mostly uphill heading to the falls.    When the canyon got narrow, they had built a walkway cantilevered into the cliff walls.   Again,  much, much nicer than anything I have ever seen in our national parks.

The falls did not disappoint.  They were awesome.  There was even a small cave that led right up next to the falling water.   It was a very low cave and I was glad I was wearing a hat as I bashed my head on the rocks.  Had I not had on the hat, I am pretty sure I would have been bleeding..

The hike back was mostly downhill, so it went quite a bit quicker; and at the end of the trail was a small ice cream stand which I was told we must stop for.   I think the ice cream negated the calories we had just expended.

After that we went over to check out the Banff Gondola.   We followed a large tour bus with a big sign on the back that said “Student Driver.”  I think it was real as we watched him drive over an orange cone making the turn onto the road leading to the gondola parking.

I headed into the building to see if the dog could come with us as we read he could, but the guy at the ticket booth said that changed late last year.   No more pets.   So I didn’t give them my $120 and we left.

Just then it started raining again.  So even if they would have let the pup on, it may not have been so much fun in the cold rain at the top of the mountain.   The sign had said it was 9c at the summit.

We headed on back to the coach, and on the way Kathy spotted some really nice wood carvings, so we had to stop and take a few of those pics.  We also spotted this unusually named street in Banff.  😉

After a bit I noticed the folks with our same coach were home and we walked over to introduce ourselves.   We met Roger and Helen, who had owned theirs about a year longer than we had owned ours and they were full-time living in theirs for at least the last year and a half.  Their home base is in Florida, so they were quite a bit further from home than we were.   They had a lot of great stories and Roger clued me into a few things that they’d experienced on their bus that we hadn’t experienced  “yet”.   We talked for hours until it was dark.  As we were probably leaving in the morning, we exchanged cards.

Since only two nights were available when I called the morning of getting there, I decided to ask if there was another night available at the kiosk on the way back into the campground.   Nothing, but said to come back at 8 am to see if there was more available then.   There wasn’t.  I had thought we would stay an extra day so that we would get to Lake Louise on Sunday morning instead of Saturday, thinking that Sunday is usually a better day to find a campsite at a crowded place.

Saturday morning we set out on our long trip of 57 km to Lake Louise sans any reservations as the only close campground was a first-come, first-serve.   No reservations can be made at that Parks Canada campground until after June 15th.

We had our fingers crossed the whole way there.

 

 

to Calgary and beyond..

From Milk River we drove to Claresholm and stayed for one night.   It was a really nice community park in the middle of the small town.   Lush mowed grass all around,  a couple baseball diamonds and 22 RV sites.   It was Memorial Day in the States, but this little gem was practically empty.   The town provided the WiFi there, so it was pretty good till it dropped around 5 pm then showed back up at 8 pm.  I guess the AP’s needed a reboot or something.  Anyway, I was planning on staying there for a couple nights, but Kathy had a different idea.  She wanted to get to somewhere we could sightsee.  So the next morning we drove the couple hours to Calgary and are currently staying in a big grass field across the street from the Grey Eagle Casino.   We are boondocking in a pretty large field.  Lots of grass and practically no one here either.   Last night there was one 5th wheel trailer sans truck and two minivans.  This morning we woke up, only 1 minivan left and a Nissan SUV of some sort.   After touring the city, the other minivan is gone, so just the SUV and the trailer are here.

The first morning there, we drove downtown to check out the sky tower and Stephen Avenue.  Parking in downtown Calgary near Stephen Avenue is difficult.  We eventually got a space on the street only a block south and a block from the sky tower. The tower didn’t allow pets, so they weren’t getting our $36 entrance fee.  So we walked over to Stephen Avenue.  It is a few blocks long and mostly blocked off to cars. Oddly it’s not all blocked off though. One of the blocks in the middle had a car pass by us.

We arrived right at lunch hour and the street was packed with office workers heading out for lunch. There are lots of restaurants on both sides of the street and almost everyone had an outdoor patio.  Each one we passed had no empty tables and the food looked delicious!

We found this nice large park at the eastern terminus of the street.  There were lots of kids wading into the huge water feature/fountain.   After all, it was 25 degrees celsius  and everyone was walking around like it was mid summer.   One gal I talked to said we had just missed a snow storm.  (I’m thankful for that!!)

 

 

I did get to stop and talk to the local constable.  I noticed he was packing a Glock and a taser that also looked similar to his Glock.  It appeared to me he was carrying two pistols.  He said they all (the police) carry guns in Canada and are allowed to carry them off duty, but not really.  He mentioned if you do carry it off duty, you will get into all sorts of trouble with the bosses.  Sort of odd, I bet if they stumble upon a robbery while off duty and don’t have their service weapon, they would also catch hell for not having it..  🙂

All the highways in Calgary are under major construction.  At least that is how it seems.  It’s a real mess.  I guess due to the weather it all must happen the few months of the year that it’s warm enough to work outside, but this is over the top.   We were planning on spending tomorrow at the Heritage Park Historical Village, but Kathy just read no pets allowed there either.  Darn, another $58 I am not able to add to the local economy.   Geez, but we liked the free camping.   I really like Calgary… just not all the road construction and detours that go with it.

After we came back to the RV, I decided to get started on the rock guard I am making that goes between the rear of the RV and the front of Kathy’s car we pull behind us.   For today I just painted the 6′ x 1″ square steel tubing, and after that dried I installed a rubber foot on each end so that when it’s mounted and I bang into it, I won’t tear my clothes or legs..   Next I have to drill 7 holes thru it to mount the large U bolt that will hold it to the hitch receiver and 5 eye bolts that will hold down the nylon mesh via many feet of bungee cord I brought.

Drilling the holes is going to be interesting as I don’t have a vice to hold the bar to drill thru it.   Now I am thinking I need to replace my drop receiver with a double receiver so I could mount a vice on the second receiver.   (maybe when we get home.)

I then moved on to hooking the Raspberry Pi (RPI) to the coach’s network so whenever the coach has internet, the RPI will be able to upload all the solar information gathered to the web portal.

Speaking of solar..  Today was really sunny and the roof-mounted panels created all the power to charge the battery to 100% by 7 pm.   Last night the sun didn’t go down here till around 9:40 pm.   If the sun never sets in Alaska, I guess it will keep charging all night.  Now wouldn’t that be really cool!

 

 

Helena MT and on to Milk River, Canada.

We were in Helena for 3 nights.   While there I visited the Lewis & Clark Brewery for a pretty tasty growler fill which came with a free pint!   I also found the most stocked hardware store I have ever seen the following day.  They had at least 5 long aisles filled with specialty hardware.  I had never seen that much in one place.  Reminded me of the McMaster Carr catalog in a store.   Lowe’s sometimes has about 20′ of those trays of special stuff.  This place had over a 150′ of them.   There was a bunch I had no idea what they were used for, and I am a “hardware guy”!

I was able to pick up all the remaining parts I needed to construct my rock guard for the drive to Alaska.  I previously had purchased the mesh and 50′ of bulk bungee cord, along with ends for them,  but not the hardware to hold it all to the rear of the RV and the front of the car, as I hadn’t totally figured out how to do that; but during the first night in Helena I figured out how to make it work.

We stayed at the Lewis & Clark Fairgrounds campground,  22 spaces with electric only.   There was water a few hundred yards away near the office building, so we filled the fresh water tank there prior to parking the rig.   What was odd is there wasn’t a dump station on the fairgrounds, so I started looking for one on the web and found three.  I checked them out in the car the day before leaving and only one would work for us to get in and out of without driving over curbs.   It was just on the other side of the 1-15, a few miles away, and it was our first stop on the way to Canada the next morning.

While in Helena we got to visit the locals’ laundromat.  Kathy got to hear the owner’s whole life story.   His dad owned the bar next door, which I popped my head into and it was truly a dive bar.   Right around even with the worst ones I had ever been in.   There was an odd painting on the wall inside the laundromat, so I had to take a pic.   Here it is:

 

Below are a few pics of the fairgrounds campground.

 

We got out of Helena before 10 am and proceeded north on Interstate 15 toward the Canadian Border.    Luckily the rain waited till we were finished filling the water tank and dumping the other tanks before it let loose on us.

It rained the whole day and only stopped once we crossed the border.   The crossing was interesting as they never asked about the dog or about food we were bringing in.   So throwing out all our fruit and produce was apparently not needed.   For lunch on the way we ate what was left in the fridge… not much..  but it still was a lot to eat.   Reheated a large potato and topped it with spaghetti sauce with meatballs and leftover hamburger meat and leftover chicken tenders.    It was actually pretty good, but the rest of the drive we had that over-stuffed feeling like you get at Thanksgiving.

At the border they only asked for Passports, the RV registration, if we had any alcohol, tobacco, cannabis or guns.    Nothing about food or pets.   He also asked where we were from, and really wanted to know how long we would be traveling in Canada.   He wanted specifics.

After the 8 minutes chatting with the Canadian border guard, we headed a bit further north to Milk River where I had spotted a campground on the map the previous evening.   When I had called, no one had answered.  When I got there, I understood why, really laid back place.  The office didn’t look like anyone had been in it for years.

We spent one night at Milk River, 8 Flags Campground. (I counted 9 flags!)  Right next to the not very busy highway,  ( a car about every 10 minutes) and of course there was a not very busy railroad track just on the other side of that highway.   I only heard a couple of trains go by the whole time there and no train horns were heard.   So a pretty good spot for the night.

There was a sign on the office to boil water, so I didn’t hook that up.  I just connected up to the 30 amp shore power that didn’t have a visible circuit breaker.   I really needed to experiment with that power to see what exactly we can run in the coach at the same time when only connected to 30 amp shore power.   In the states we always seemed to have 50 amp power.  But we can’t do it here as we have no idea where the breaker is and if I guessed wrong, we would be unpowered till I could find someone that had access to the circuit breaker..   (Can we run the heat pump and the micro, toaster or coffee maker? )  I am guessing we can run two of them at the same time, if they are on different circuits; but I currently don’t know which circuits anything is on.

This campground only takes cash; so after finding a spot, I asked around where the nearest ATM was located.   Went there to get Canadian money as you could pay either 30 dollars Canadian or US.   Canadian money is only worth around 75% of US money, so it is a much better deal to use Canadian money.  ($30 Canadian is about $22.50 US)  And of course, most folks probably know this, but the best exchange rate you can get is  from an ATM.   Those money exchange places really take a big chunk of what you convert from cash.   And of course, when you get home, deposit the foreign cash in your bank for a similar very good exchange rate.  Last time, my bank wouldn’t take coins, only the paper cash I had when coming back from the Med Cruise.

The first ATM (and only one I thought there was nearby) said my card was invalid.  I thought I was going to have a real problem in Canada after seeing that message on the ATM screen as Google didn’t know of any banks nearby, and who knows, maybe my ATM card wouldn’t work anywhere in Canada…

I headed off to replace the produce and buy some meat to restock the fridge.   Milk River is a very small town, which means a very small market.   I guess they don’t eat a lot of veggies here in MR as the selection was lacking, and the meat selection was extremely lacking.   We will know more once we hit a larger town or city.   But the best part of going to the grocery store was they had an ATM inside.  You know the ones,  just a small kiosk.   Funny thing I found out, its fees were less than the bank’s ATM fees.  I always assumed those kiosks you find in a 7/11 or other places would really gouge you.   ($3 at the bank vs $2.50 at the kiosk)  So I was able to get cash and pay the campground in Canadian dollars.  Yeah!!   Their money looks really odd.  It’s got quite a bit of cellophane in it, so you can look thru part of their bills.   I guess it makes it more difficult to counterfeit.

The WiFi at our campground was almost nonexistent.   I could see a lot of AP’s from my roof mounted WiFi antenna , Mikrotik Metal AC Router (CPE), but not actually connect to any of them.

I must admit the Mikrotik has the most complicated interface I have ever seen.   Looks like something from the early ’90s.   My laptop could connect to one AP and it had very low power, but it was just enough access to look for the next campground.   None of the other devices could connect.  (iPad or iPhones.)  They couldn’t even see the SSID’s to try to connect.

That next morning we were off to Claresholm, Alberta, Canada

SLC to Helena MT

It was raining as we left Salt Lake City at 9 am Thursday morning.    As we go further out of town, the rain slowed and eventually stopped.   The rest of the northern drive was dry.   I like driving the bus when it’s dry!   Just prior to Dillon, MT, the wind really picked up.   Had to fuel up there, so it was a bit shocking how windy it was when standing out in it filling the tank.   I ended up filling up at the same Sinclair station we filled up last summer.   Back then it wasn’t on Gas Buddy so I added it.   Was glad to see it was still listed when I started to plan the next fill-up.  $3.12 per gallon,  almost reasonable for diesel.   I pumped in $400 worth.   We will top up the tank once we get closer to the Canadian border as I am seeing their prices are like California diesel costs.

We stopped overnight in Idaho Falls at an Elks Lodge for $10 a night with  50 amp power and water.    It seemed pretty nice until around midnight when we woke up to someone screaming (presumably into a phone) about a fight he had with his girlfriend,  and he was pacing the parking lot around us.  He finally walked away and I fell back to sleep, but Kathy stayed awake waiting for the nightclub across the street to empty at 2 am.  She told me there was a lot of yelling and cars screeching about.   There were houses right across the street also.  Not sure how those folks deal with all the noise late in the night.  (unless they are the ones drinking in the bar)   So far we have stayed at 2 Elks lodges.   Neither place were peaceful at night.

We headed out of Idaho Falls around 10 and drove the 250+ miles to Helena.   I called the fairgrounds and made reservations for a few nights just prior to heading out.   Now that we are here, $21 a night is a great deal.  It’s actually at the outskirts of the city but seems like we are in the middle of nowhere.  Trees and grass all around, extremely quiet place.   Dusty seems to really like this place.  No stickers in his paws so far.   In Montana it seems campgrounds near cities are few and far between.   I noticed this last year when looking for a spot in Missoula when visiting my Niece.

The ride to here was fairly uneventful except for the wind gusts in the mountains.   I think we saw at least 3 Continental Divide signs on the drive here from Idaho.  6000+ summits,  not too tall for the Rockies.   I remember driving to Denver a long time ago and the Eisenhower Tunnel on I-70 was close to 12,000 feet.   Mostly I just remember the Toyota I had was having a hard time getting enough oxygen to give me any power to climb to that point.   Thankfully it was mostly downhill after that.   I wonder what this diesel would act like at that elevation.

On to Canada…next Stop!