"I'm going to speak my mind because I have nothing to lose."--S.I. Hayakawa
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Sunday, March 31, 2013

The Nice Day for a Drive Journals, Ch. 3, Hurricane Gulch

(Yes, you've read these introductory paragraphs before, but in a different context.  Read on.)


Late Friday afternoon, nearing 5:30, and I’m on the phone with the Alaska State Police dispatcher, taking notes about a man who died after falling from Hurricane Gulch bridge on the Alaska railroad, a fall of almost 300 feet.  I’m a reporter for KFQD radio station, busy getting local news written and wrapped up for the 6 o’clock newscast.

Then, breaking news changes everything. 

The day was Good Friday, March 27, 1964, at 5:36 in the afternoon, and the largest earthquake ever recorded in North America shook the bejesus out of us for five and a half minutes, reaching a magnitude of 9.2.   Today it ranks second to a 1960 earthquake of 9.5 magnitude in Chile in a list of worst earthquakes recorded in the world.





I think about that day and that unfortunate man who fell to his death every time I cross steel arch Hurricane Gulch highway bridge on the Parks Highway.   At 558 long, it’s half the length of the bridge over the Susitna River South near Talkeetna, but it’s a jaw-dropping 254 feet above Hurricane Creek below.  There are 40 bridges to cross on the highway between Anchorage and Fairbanks, and this is the most spectacular by far.



You can't see the bottom of the gulch in this shot, but is does justice to the steepness.

Standing on the bridge (a big no-no) looking down, and you still can't see the bottom.

Looking downstream, trying to get the bottom of the Gulch and the Alaska range mountains in the same shot, and not succeeding.


The highway trestle, from which the man fell, is almost 300 feet above the lowest point.

http://www.alaskarails.org/historical/nore/3/01.jpg
This photo is of the 1921 construction of the railroad trestle over Hurricane Gulch.


Hurricane Gulch sneaks up on the unwary driver who isn’t expecting a massive slice in the land as he passes the Talkeetna mountain range on the east.   Most likely the driver’s attention is ahead and to the left, searching for glances of Mount Denali.

For those in the know, however, there are large parking lots on each end of the bridge for those who must try to photograph the bridge and the steepness of the Gulch.   It’s almost an impossible task to get both the bridge and creek below in the view at the same time.







File:Hurricane Gulch, Parks Highway, Alaska.jpg
Photo from Wikimedia Commons, (C) Arthur D. Chapman and Audrey Bendus



Byway Standard Map

You'll see Hurricane Gulch marked on the map.   Follow the red line from the bottom upwards.  It's just above the Denali View North campground and wayside.   How many highway maps across the US mark a bridge location?

1 comment:

  1. I WANT TO SAY IT IS MILEPOST 174 .. THE TIMES I HAVE DRIVEN ACROSS IT .. SMILES .. CAP ..

    ReplyDelete