There was a bridge that had collapsed, so to get to the Tony Knowles Coastal Trail we had to detour through a neighborhood. The detour was marked, but not very well. Fortunately, the POC for this walk is on top of things, and has added written instructions for the detour to the walk instructions, so even a tourist ought to be able to figure it out.
The Tony Knowles Coastal Trail was great, as always. However, some of the bicyclists need to be a little more considerate and a little less reckless in their biking. Walkers need to remember to keep to the right side of the trail, as you can be passed on the left without warning. You may also encounter bikers coming towards you at a blind curve and you wouldn't want to be too far over to the left if that happens.
There were a lot of beautiful flowers today, both wildflowers and the garden variety. They looked especially pretty at the Oscar Anderson House (National Register of Historic Places).
Flowers at the Oscar Anderson House |
After the nasty seagull incident we arrived at the Anchorage Depot (National Register of Historic Places). The bathrooms at the railroad depot always appear at just the right time and are always nice and clean.
The Anchorage Depot |
Flowers at the Eisenhower Statehood Monument |
Downtown Market (summer weekends only) |
Left to right: Park Ranger with furs, tourists, reindeer sausage cart |
Flowers and mutant plants in front of Alaska Public Lands Information Center |
An ornamental cabbage in Town Square (Wyland mural in background) |
We made a little adjustment to the next leg of the walk. Instead of walking down busy, noisy, boring A Street, we walked down E Street to the Park Strip, then over to F Street.
This sculpture represents whale ribs |
South Addition house |
Then we headed back to E Street and down the hill to Valley of the Moon Park, where we connected with the Chester Creek Trail. There was a large group of Samoans celebrating a birthday, complete with a bounce house. I wanted to join in - it really looked like fun.
On the Chester Creek Trail we encountered Lidiya and stopped for a chat. She showed us some orange boletes (wild mushrooms) she had just found by the side of the trail.
Soon we were back at our car, and it was so nice out I almost didn't want to stop walking, but my feet know when I have done 10k, so that was the end of our walk.
During the walk, I said to Ken that it's too bad the route didn't go by the start point for the Anchorage Lightspeed Planet Walk, and it's too bad the walk didn't go down E or F or G Street instead of A Street. Upon returning home, I looked up my last blog entry for this same walk: July 18, 2012. I found that I had the same two comments after doing this walk almost exactly two years ago.
Walk Route: B-
Walk Instructions: B
Here are my comments from two years ago on the route:
1) A one half block detour from the Performing Arts Center takes you to the "Sun" at the beginning of the "Anchorage Lightspeed Planet Walk." http://anchorageplanetwalk.org/index.html
This is a very cool exhibit. The Anchorage Light Speed Planet Walk is a scale model of our solar system. Taking the walk, you experience the relative size of the planets and their distance from the Sun. The scale was chosen so that a leisurely walking pace mimics the speed of light. On this scale, each step equals the distance light travels in one second (300,000 kilometers or 186,000 miles). You will be able to see Mars in Elderberry Park and Jupiter on the Coastal Trail at Westchester Lagoon on the Coastal Trail Walk. If you do the Kincaid Park walk, you will see Pluto. Mercury, Venus and Earth are not far from the Coastal Trail Walk route (and perhaps are included in the Route for the Anchorage Historical Walk).2) I would rather walk down G Street from downtown, passing the Fire Island Rustic Bakeshop. The current routing down A Street exposes walkers to a lot of traffic and the occasional group of homeless individuals loitering along the way. The G Street route could cut over to E Street at 15th and follow E Street to the Chester Creek Trail.
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