Gail and Jerry

HIEDI

HIEDI
HEIDI

Tsunami

Tsunami
Tsunami

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Day 53B - Valdez - August 21, 2011

The Britton's reporting:

                                    The day started with a very rare sighting, (hint: note the shades)


It wasn't sunny all day but at least partly sunny and NO RAIN!!!  We found a nice community church called Bayside.  As it turned out that Pastor Dan Bower was once the pastor at church in Livonia, MI.  We also met a nice young lady who was born and raised in Dearborn.   Her parents both graduated from MSU!!  Does it get any better?  Well, yes it could if our Wagon Master/Mistress Jerry and Gail, along with Heidi the Super Scout were here with us instead of battling severe depression in Anchorage.  We hope all their friends will call them to cheer them up.   Really, they're loaded with rollover minutes.

Back to Valdez, population 4353, founded in 1898,  whose major employer is the Alyeska Pipeline Service Company.  I guess those are the folks that maintain the pipeline and terminal.  That's the town across the bay.

                                                 Their rather large, small boat harbor 



The city of Valdez was badly shaken but not destroyed in the March 27, 1964 Good Friday EarthquakeLiquefaction of the glacial silt that formed the city's foundation led to a massive underwater landslide causing a section of the city's shoreline to break off and sink into the sea. 

Site of old Valdez


The underwater soil displacement caused a local tsunami 30 feet  high that traveled westward, away from the city and down Valdez Bay. Thirty-two men women and children were on the city's main freight dock to help with and watch the unloading of the SS Chena, a supply ship that came to Valdez regularly. All 32 people perished as the dock collapsed into the ocean with the violent landslide. There were no deaths within the town itself.



Residents continued to live there for an additional three years while a new site was being prepared on more stable ground four miles away. The new construction was under the supervision of the Army Corps of Engineers. Fifty-four houses and buildings were transported by truck to the new site, reestablishing the new city at its present location.

            The buildings they didn't move they burned.  About all that's left of old town are foundations.

          We decided to go take a look at Valdez Glacier and saw some interesting places along the way.


                              The airport.  How'd you like to shoot an approach in here at minimums?

                                                               A "man camp"?  Really?!?!

                                          We checked out another RV park and saw this fellow.

                                                    We made it out to the glacier and it's lake

                                                                  Complete with ice chunks

                                           Then we went critter hunting and found another eagle.

                                       What can be better then that?  How about a double eagle?


                                                We were watching this tanker coming in for oil

when we ran into a "bear jamb".

                                                      She was fishing with her two cubs


                                                   We sat and watched for about 15 minutes


                                               Pam wasn't so eager to try cozying up to this bear.

Finally, having seen eagles and bears fishing we headed back to camp.  But there was one more shot to be had on the way.

Tomorrow we are heading to Chitna to visit the Wrangell -St. Elias National Park and Preserve, entering a hold while we wait for our Wagon Master/Mistress and scout to catch up.  Does anyone else see the resemblance between JC and Ward Bond?

Day 50, 51, 52, 53 Cummins Shop Anchorage

                              Day 50...We arrived at Northwest Cummins at the appointed time, 8:00AM.

                         A nice young lady, who has family in Guthrie, OK, took the information and said they would send someone out. 10:15 a person comes out and looked in the engine compartment. Then he leaves and comes back with another person, and they look at the engine compartment. They leave and he comes back with another person and they look at the engine. 11:30 they tell me it is probably a head gasket (exactly what I told her at 8:00). OK move it to the end bay on the other side of  the building.

Now comes the shop foreman, nice guy, Cody. First they will drain the oil and remove the oil pan. Then pressure test the cooling system. Then they have to remove the bed and it's substructure to get to the engine.
By the time they got the oil pan off, I had the engine exposed (with some help from Lon, who showed up in the midst of the project to say good-bye). They were off to Valdez. Nothing they can do here.
                                                    The bed had to go somewhere.

By the end of the day, the valve cover and a lot of other stuff was off.

Day 51- Friday morning more stuff came off the top and the back. By the way, this is our bedroom!

Just before 5:00 they put this steel beam, attached to a forklift, on top of the head.

               Then attached the head to the beam and lifted it out with the forklift. 300+ pounds of head.
The mechanic said it is apparent the the problem is with #4 cylinder. Is that 4 from the front or from the back? They all look the same to me, except the pistons are at the top of the center 2. They will pressure test the head for a crack Monday morning. They don't work weekends.

Day 52  -  Now we wait. Saturday is another rainy day. The reason we have been behind on the blog is that there is no WiFi here at the shop. Did I tell you, we are living in a parking lot? Our Datastorm  satellite system will not find the "97W satellite" that we need here in Alaska. Even after many hours of trying at different locations. So we went to Best Buy and got an AT&T HotSpot. Now we are back in business, and a lot cheaper.
After the trip to the mall (where the girl at the liquor store was from Lawton, OK), we took Heidi for a walk by Ship Creek. Ship Creek runs through downtown Anchorage and is a very popular fishing hole. The Silver Salmon are running now.

There were people fishing everywhere, but they didn't know where the fish were.
We did. Heidi found them!

Day 53  -  Woke up Sunday morning and OMG the sun was shining! So we had to get out. We packed the cooler and headed out for Arctic Valley Rd. On the way we saw this truck with an Alaska brush guard (they call them moose guards up here). I'll bet Don Ransom wants one of these.

The "Valley" road was on a military base, Ft Richardson, and actually was a mountain road. Half way up you could see Anchorage from above.

Anchorage is in the center. The Cook Inlet  is beyond. The Turnagain Arm is the water to the left. The Knik Arm is the water to the right. click to enlarge(if you really give a ----)

At the top of the mountain, end of the road, was a ski area. There were people everywhere picking berries. (you probably can't see them unless you click twice)

Then the road down.
 
And tomorrow we should have a diagnosis. Maybe.

Day 52B - Valdez - August 20. 2011

                                                                     Lon reports from

                                 It rained all night, all morning, all afternoon.  At least it wasn't snow......


           We went exploring and found the Valdez Museum where there were a few interesting exhibits

                               Like this Fresnel lens that was used to guard Prince William Sound


                                                 and this extinct North Pacific Fur Fish


                                                              We went to the ferry pier

                                   and found the rain didn't dampen the true fisherman's passion.

When Pam ran into Smokey in S. Dakota, he told her to look up his cousin in Valdez.  Wouldn't you know that she found her.

The park we are in and they have quite a few boats and people who are just there to fish for salmon and halibut.

                                                            Even the gypsies were here.

We were invited to our section's of the park Pot Luck dinner, with the main entree being slow smoked pork tenderloin and chicken.  It was yummy!


                                 Although the rain had abated by dinner time, they held it in the shed.

They had this old 1st generation Arctic Cat snow machine in there, powered by a 8hp, Tecumseh, 4 cycle engine.

                                                              Then we went for a drive

                                                    and caught this baldy through the fog.


                           We saw thousands of sea gulls in this one area so we investigated.

                           They were feeding on the thousands of salmon dying to get upstream.

                                                              I think the sea gulls won.
At the end of the road is where the oil flowing through the Alaska pipeline from Prudhoe Bay ends up to be loaded on tankers.

    Tomorrow we're going to give Valdez one more chance for clearer skies before heading out for Tok.