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Had a good /out/ time in Alaska recently. Primarily hiked all over Denali National Park, did some glacier walks, camped, used bear spray on a person (thanks ghetto camp sites!), saw some bears, some bear poop from a bear that recently ate a cub (too close to our campsite), LARP'd with a knife the whole time, saw some dino footprints. Overall, 10/10 would recommend. All pics taken with a phone because the camera is way too bulky.
Anonymous
Walked on this bad boy. It shifted under us - spooky feeling and sound.
Anonymous
View from the top of Mt. Cathedral - small mountain at ~5k feet elev. Still breathtaking though.
Anonymous
Dino footprint. Then went to the "dinosaur dancefloor" where there are dozens if not more of those footprints. Pretty incredible and sophisticated for a hoax (dinos).
Anonymous
>>2187901 >>2187902 >>2187906 Beautiful country. Glacier especially looks cool, and the camera on your phone has good portrayal of depth unlike most phone cameras thanks to wide FOV.
>>2187909 The footprints are a hoax or do you think dinosaurs are a hoax kek
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>2187901 Why are you traveling with the delta variant sweeping across the country?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>2187940 This is what I want to know too. Well OP?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>2187901 Tell us about the bearspray!
Anonymous
ive lived in alaska for my whole life and ive never gone out to see the beatiful shit all around, im just a wage cuck in anchorage, when i retire im gonna go all around the state and check out what ive been missing
Anonymous
>>2187920 >>2187923 kek obv dinos are real you boomers
Different glacier. Did not walk on this one.
Anonymous
>>2187906 Another view from the top of this mountain. The pond there is still and crystalline - it's beautiful and a perfect place for a swim way up high. Just have to watch for bears - lots of bear poop on the way up.
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>2188150 >>2188151 very nice OC anon, bump to save thread
Anonymous
This is black ice and moraine - the glacier, over its long history, trapped a ton of sediment within itself. As it melts, it starts to release it and it becomes very fine silly mud that can sometimes be non-newtonian. The black ice slowly turns into blue and then white ice. At some point you realize you've been walking on ice for an hour.
Anonymous