Tuesday June 17, 2014 This is the mushy part of the journal so it might be a good time for you to go grab a bag of popcorn. I'd dated Terry for two years, engaged for one and been married for 35. After the first or second date I knew I wanted to spent the rest of my life with her, by my side forever and ever. I always felt like I could be myself whenever I was around her. She was friendly, fun, warm and giving . Over the years she wrapped herself tightly around my heart. And she was perfect for the guy who had a traveling bone that just wouldn't quit. We traveled coast to coast, all fifty states and multiple foreign countries. She was the perfect companion. During our breakfast of sausage, quiche, fried potatoes and fruit covered French toast we visited with Mike and Sue. It was easy to see the love they had for one another. Mike had invested himself fully in Sue's dreams and they had blossomed into something incredibly beautiful. It was a striking reminder that I too had a special someone who was giving enough to invest in my crazy dreams and wanderings. Someone special who would crawl 150 feet through a drain pipe to help me grab a geocache or swat mosquitoes for two hours so I could get a photo of a train crossing a bridge. We thanked Mike and Sue for their gracious hospitality and then headed south. We made stops at a reindeer farm, the Mears Memorial Bridge at Nenana, numerous geocaches and every beautiful spot along the route. As we entered Denali National Park a chaotic collection of cars were pulled off at odd angles along both sides of the road. Yup, moose! The calf was munching some plants a mere three feet from the road. What a great welcome to Denali! How could it get any better than this? Yup, we heard a train whistle! We did a quick U-turn and caught the appropriately named "Spirit of Moose Pass" SD70MAC #4003 at the railroad crossing.
We encountered three Alaska Railroad passenger cars ten miles north of the park entrance at the Denali Park Hotel. These Pullman railcars were originally World War II troop sleepers. [Clarifiction note from Casey Durand: "Big windows are troop sleepers and small windows are kitchen cars."]. One of the cars serves as their lobby and the other two as employee housing units. We also stopped at the railroad overpass at Healy to grab a dark, rainy, "camera shake as I shot out of the car window" photo of the Healy Express (HEX) Daily. James Ogden explains, "The HEX operates with only Holland America and Princess cars, no Alaska Railroad passenger cars. Passengers are loaded in Anchorage, and the train makes stops in Talkeetna and Denali Park. Typically only Princess passengers use the Talkeetna stop, as Princess Cruises has a lodge about 45 minutes away. There are no passengers on the train north of Denali Park. After disembarking everyone, the on board staff and train crew take the train another 45 minutes north, to Healy. The on board staff gets off there, and the train crew wyes the train. If necessary, they also perform any switching required to get the train ready for the southbound trip the next day. The train crew stays in a hotel in Healy." We arrived at the Hotel Nord Haven at 10:30 PM amidst an annoying drizzling rain. We ate our subs as we downloaded photos, worked on our journals and grazed through Facebook.
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