So, NT, are you from that general area. I see that it is due North of Anchorage. You wouldn't, by any chance, know (not heard or know of) but really know a Mr. Paul Ritz would you? I believe it is around supper time there (I'm in the Memphis area and I've only managed to get through to Paul only once). Just wondered if you are from Anchorage originally and possibly knew the guy.
Anyway, thanks for the photos....hope to see a HEAPIN' mess of fish on a stringer soon enough.
~Red
NEVER MESS WITH AN
IRISH/SCOTT/ITALIAN CHEROKEE!
"A wise man is at the right hand but a fool is at the left." Ecclesiastes 10:2
"The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God" Psalms 53:1
You ever put the boat out right here?
talkeetna</strong> spur rd talkeetna ...">
NEVER MESS WITH AN
IRISH/SCOTT/ITALIAN CHEROKEE!
"A wise man is at the right hand but a fool is at the left." Ecclesiastes 10:2
"The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God" Psalms 53:1
Beautiful NT, man if I was still young enough I would love to live up there. But I don't think my body could handle all the work you need to do to live up there any longer.
Never look down on someone unless you are helping them up
Last edited by NightTrain; 05-08-2015 at 07:24 AM.
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Very good stuff, NT.
Does the water ever get high - and close to the cabin?
I think that's the shitter on the right, facing the cabin - with the vaulted roof? If so, looks world-class...for a shit-house.
“… the greatest detractor from high performance is fear: fear that you are not prepared, fear that you are in over your head, fear that you are not worthy, and ultimately, fear of failure. If you can eliminate that fear—not through arrogance or just wishing difficulties away, but through hard work and preparation—you will put yourself in an incredibly powerful position to take on the challenges you face" - Pete Carroll.
That looks like the subdivision - if that's where I think it is, then it's not really on the Talkeetna Spur, it's about 2 miles above the boat launch. It's all private property, so usually not. Occasionally we have put in there, but we've usually got several vehicles (or 10 plus on a 3-day weekend) so while it's handy to launch there, it's not cool to abuse someone's good nature by letting us use their launch and then fill up their area with trucks & cars. Using the public launch is what we normally do.
I think this was taken during the big flood a couple of years ago. If you look across into the trees, you can see the level is way up on those trees and can't even see the bank. At the height of that flood, there was about 3' between the bottom of the Rail Road Bridge (see pic #3 in this thread) and the water! It was a monster flood.
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Yes, the water does get close. The "100-year flood" that happened a couple of years ago that I was just talking about was the biggest in recorded history. The river was over the deck, and was 6" below the floor of the cabin. The floor is 5' off the ground, we built it purposefully that high for flooding. At the time, we figured we were 18" higher than any flood would ever reach, but then the big one happened! I was sure the cabin was a goner, but she survived no problem. We had friends fly over it and take pics for us after the flood peaked... what a relief to see it still there.
And, no, that's the sauna! lol
The shed is on the left, then the cabin, then the sauna on the right. You can see the stovepipe coming out of the wall on the right there.
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Living out there is a tremendous amount of work until you get set up. To live at the cabin, you have to prepare to be unable to get to town every fall and every spring while the river is freezing or breaking up and that takes about 5 weeks for each one, so you have to lay in a LOT of supplies. Or own an airplane... there's a huge gravel bar out front right now that would make a beautiful landing strip.
We have a diesel stove in the cabin for heat - I chopped enough wood as a kid to last me a lifetime and I'm not interested in doing it. Homie doesn't chop wood! Propane 4-burner stove with a purely mechanical thermostat for the oven (very hard to find anymore), propane lights, DC lights and AC lights (generator). Propane lights are extremely efficient and as a bonus put out a lot of heat... those are definitely the ticket for someone who wants to live out there.
No running water yet, but at some point we'll put a well in. As it stands now, we have a trail that runs about a quarter mile to a small stream that comes down to the river and we run the 3-wheeler & trailer with two 5-gallon water jugs.
If I wanted to live there, it would actually be pretty easy. I'd just have to stockpile diesel, food and gas. And ammo for the occasional moose that delivers himself to your doorstep... but the dumb ones have been pretty much eliminated from the local gene pool, if you know what I mean. We lived out there for most of the '80s.
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Yeah that water level's looking right up there.
“When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.” Edumnd Burke
I wish I would have had Lee filming as we ran downriver, especially where I screwed up and we skipped across the gravel bar to the other channel... that would have been an awesome clip. There were a few times that the channel I was running in was 8' wide and 3" deep, and more than a few times I had the boat at a 90 degree angle to make the upcoming switchback at 40 MPH... there's no room for error when it's this low!
Good times! I love the challenge and it gets me pumped up on a run like that.
My favorite line when we're about to embark on a run like this : "I feel I'm man enough to do this." It makes Sharon cringe every time.
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