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Mccarthy motherload mine tours
Mccarthy motherload mine tours













mccarthy motherload mine tours

Elias Alpine Guides offers hiking, backpacking & mountaineering expeditions and courses in Alaska's largest national park, Wrangell-St. It’s always sad to leave…but we’ll be back again.St. Afterwards, wander across the street to “The Potato” for a beer and a sandwich! Visit the Museum in McCarthy for some history of the region. The train rolled right up to the mine, picked up the ore and took it back down to Cordova along the Copper River. It’s nothing like the riotous scene 100 years ago when the mining enterprise was going on 24 hours a day. The Kennicott area today is quiet and peaceful. Other guided activities include raft trips on the rivers. I recommend getting a guide to explore the glacier itself. You can still find plenty of copper on the ground–but look out to get the million-dollar view! One hundred years ago, hundreds of men lived in the mining quarters to get the high-grade copper. Another popular hike is to go up in back of the lodge–3,800 feet up to Bonanza Mine. The weather was great and the group was big enough to make noise and scare off the bears. Our party opted for a hike out toward the Root Glacier. Elias Alpine Guides offers exclusive access to many of the refurbished buildings, including the leeching plant and the power plant and the manager’s office.īut you also can just explore on your own.

mccarthy motherload mine tours

There were five of us–so we filled up a table.Įxploring: Again, the building tour by St. And all parties sit within their own “bubble”. Now, all meals are prepared in the kitchen and served individually. Previously, all meals were served family-style and you passed around the plates. The good news is the food is really good. I got the omelet, but the pancakes and cinnamon rolls were POPULAR!ĭining: Since it was late in the season, there really weren’t any other dining options aside from the lodge. Because of COVID-19 protocols, all guests stayed in the newer rooms this summer. The rooms are bigger and all of them face the glacier valley. We’ve always stayed in the “Main Lodge”, which included the common dining room and shared baths.īut in 2015, the lodge completed the south addition, where all the rooms had private baths. Where we stayed: Kennicott Glacier Lodge. Once you get to the lodge, the view really opens up and you can see all the way across the valley to the mountains beyond. The Root Glacier is mostly covered with gravel. The view from the deck of Kennicott Glacier Lodge. You’ll see the glacier off to the left (Root Glacier) and the mountains off to the right. The ride up in the van follows an old railbed from McCarthy up to Kennicott, site of what used to be the world’s largest copper mine. It usually takes about a half an hour to arrive. Have the attendant at the parking lot call the lodge for a shuttle. Don’t bother with the pay phone at the bridge. Right at the end of the road, there’s a parking lot (free for lodge guests). There are a couple of carts for your luggage. It was 890 feet long and 90 feet high when completed in 1911. This all-wood trestle for the Copper Valley Railway originally required a half-million board feet of lumber. Further down the road is the Gilahina Trestle (Mile 29). It’s one lane…and you can see why they used to bungee-jump off the lower level of the bridge (don’t do it). The Kuskulana River Bridge (Mile 17.2) will take your breath away. There are many picturesque stops on the road–but I was too busy swerving to avoid a bear (REALLY). The railroad engineers blasted this notch in the mountain in Chitina a 110 years ago…and it’s wide enough just for one lane. Budget two hours for the 60-mile trip on the McCarthy Road. So we drove back–the road is in really good shape. The flight is fabulous–and it crossed the mighty Copper River before flying through some mountain passes and over some incredible glaciers! That didn’t work out this time since there were five of us traveling together and there already were other people on the books. Getting there: My favorite way to get back to Kennicott is to fly from Chitina with Wrangell Mountain Air. Also, the tour of the old mining buildings is really worth doing. My favorites are the glacier hike up on the Root Glacier (they have crampons and all the gear). Elias Alpine Guides, located across the street from the lodge on Main Street in Kennicott…which is five miles up the hill from McCarthy. Or, just call the lodge’s reservations number: (907)258-2350. Click through HERE to find the special DISCOUNT CODES for early-season discounts. Early-season visitors can save 20 percent on their room rates through June 30. Kennicott Glacier Lodge is reopening on May 29. So these are the most recent pictures we’ve got of the area. We stayed at Kennicott Glacier Lodge last fall on the last weekend they were open (Labor Day weekend).















Mccarthy motherload mine tours