To give you an idea of scale, it takes almost as long to fly from Juneau to Anchorage as it does to fly from Baltimore to Orlando, Florida. Once we arrived in Anchorage, we rented a car and drove south to Seward, which is located on the Kenai Peninsula (pronounced “keen-eye”). Looking at the map below, the body of land below and to the left of Anchorage is the Kenai Peninsula. Seward, indicated by the green arrow, is a town on the Kenai Peninsula. Just below and to the left of Seward is Kenai Fjords National Park, the real reason we came here in the first place.
One more map reference for you before I describe our day… the body of water directly below Anchorage that separates the city from the Kenai Peninsula is Turnagain Arm.
Now that my geography lesson is complete, I can continue…
We flew into Anchorage, rented a car, and headed south to Seward on the Seward Highway, which follows the shoreline of Turnagain Arm for quite a few miles. There are mountains all over the place. On a cliff beside the road we saw our first Dall sheep.
On the way to Seward, we stopped at Exit Glacier. There you can actually walk to the face of a glacier. The guidebooks forgot to mention that the half-mile trail would likely still be covered by snow.
Last but not least I have to mention the highlight of the day … we saw a Mama moose (cow) and two babies (twins!). Mike and I estimate they were about a week old.
NOTE: I am a day behind in my posts because our connection is really slow. Hopefully I’ll get today’s (Saturday) highlights posted, too.