The bus was filled and we were in amazement at the "advanced maturity" of some of the participants. If I were to feel any pangs of fear I sure as heck wasn't about to let anyone know, not if "they" could do it. Well, our being impressed was quickly deflated when the driver announced that the first stop (first stop?) would be for the zipline excursion group. The remaining bus riders would be heading for the very mild mannered wilderness safari hike. Ah ha! THAT explained everything. As we exited, those left behind waved with bewildered looks on their faces as if to say, "Why? Why would you intentionally cascade 140 feet above the forrest floor attached to two small cables by nothing more than a harness?" I did, however, appreciate the blessing by a little old lady from Pasadena in the back seat.
From here we had to load into this very cool all-terrain vehicle, the likes of which I had never seen before. The good news was there were plenty of window seats, all wide open, providing plenty of fresh air. The bad news was every seat was a window seat, all wide open and if we flipped over we would all be ejected into the fresh air through these very same windows. Not to worry, we made it to our destination at the top unscathed.
After we geared up we each made a 20 foot practice run 10 feet above the ground. Piece of cake. We were all ready to roll. I zipped out over the forrest first. Exhilarating! No fear, just fun! After I landed on the platform I looked back and realized that we were a man down. One of the wiser of our elite troop had made the prudent decision to opt-out of the day's event. It happens... there's a message sent from the brain to the body and it's screaming "What, are you crazy? Abort!"
Here's what it looked like as we moved from platform to platform at 20-30 mph over 7 different ziplines...
And 3 very long aerial bridges...
The views were amazing as we looked out over the Tongass National Forrest, searching for bear feeding on salmon that made the long journey upstream, more four-legged woodsy wildlife creatures and a variety of feathered friends soaring above us.
At the end the day, after we all relinquished our gear (if I had more time I definitely would have gone again!), each member of our group was awarded a medal for completing the expedition. Becky & Stef should have each received a second one for their amazing feat of courage! What a thrill for all of us to do it together. It was an incredible experience in a beautiful location making for yet another once-in-a-lifetime Alaskan memory. Priceless.


