Alaska
--
The Hulahula--
Exploring the High Arctic by Raft and on Foot
Detailed
Itinerary
Day
0-Aug 16: Hometown-Fairbanks
Leave Hometown and arrive in Fairbanks. Take local
taxis to hotel. After dinner, we'll have a brief orientation session
at 6:00 PM at hotel. (Final determination of hotel will be mailed
out in trip addendum). Overnight in hotel.
Day 1-Aug 17: Fairbanks - Arctic Village - Hulahula
At approximately 8:30 AM we will fly to Arctic Village
on a charter flight across sedge ponds, meandering rivers, and
tundra. Once in Arctic Village, we will transfer our gear to our
bush planes and fly over the Romanzof Mountains to the upper Hulahula
River. We'll land on a gravel bar along the river and unload our
planes. From above, the limitless expanse of the tundra's colors
all flow together, anonymous, barren, and concealing the subtle
beauty that will only be revealed when we walk on the land below.
Hours after landing, we will begin to gain a sense of the
serenity of this magical land and the teeming life that is beginning
to flourish around us. Our camp will be approximately ten miles
north of the Arctic Divide.
As
we peer around us, we'll find that there is plenty of color to
be discovered. Lichens are splashed against the rocks and the soft ground surrounding us is filled with small plants (tundra) that are beginning to exuberantly show their fall colors.
Day
2-11; Aug 18-27: Rafting and Hiking the Hula Hula
Since we have a tremendous amount of daylight each day, our schedule
will be leisurely and flexible. After paddling each day on this
swift river, we'll take extraordinary rambles in search for the
denizens of landscape the caribou, other Arctic mammals, birdlife,
and wildflowers. The scenery is spectacular and the river valley
provides countless possiblilites for hiking to the high ridges.
En route, we will have opportunities to fish for arctic char and
grayling (bring your fishing gear).
Since
one of our goals is the observation and photographing of wildlife,
we will take advantage of our layover days and daylight
and saunter across the landscape to avail ourselves
of wildlife-viewing possibilities. We will not be governed by
our clocks, but by the patterns of the animals we choose to observe.
This trip is really designed so that we may behave as if we were
the Inuit, the people who have inhabited this area for thousands
of year. From our camp, we will wander off like hunter-gatherers and then return to the comforts of our nomadic structures.
Day 12-Aug 28: River Take-out on the Arctic Plain- Arctic Village - Fairbanks
We'll camp where we are going to get picked up by our bush planes and then either fly to Kaktovik and then to Fairbanks or back through Arctic Village. We'll return to our hotel and go out on the town
to celebrate our successful outing in the Arctic. (No host dinner)
Aug 29: Fairbanks to Hometown
Transfer to airport for flights home.
Special
Travel Note:
Safety is the most important factor in operating any
trip and our pilots will not attempt to fly us out if the weather
is either socked in or turbulent. We encourage you to spend an extra
day or two in Fairbanks in the event that our flights out of the
ANWR are delayed. We will provide a list of hotel
and B & B possiblities for your lodging in Fairbanks. We urge all participants to arrange their schedules
after the trip in such a fashion as to accommodate any delays that
might occur in flying out of the Refuge.
GENERAL
INFORMATION
COSTS
AND RESERVATIONS
LAND
COST: $4695 per person (5-8 members) (Includes $1800
charter bush plane flights)
LAND
COST INCLUDES:
*all ground and air transportation beginning and ending in
Fairbanks
*all meals in camp beginning with dinner on Day 1 and ending with
lunch on Day 12
*leadership
*group commissary.
LAND
COST DOES NOT INCLUDE:
*Airfare from hometown to Fairbanks and return
*Accommodations in Fairbanks the night prior to the trip and at trip's end.
*Excess baggage charges (Fairbanks-Arctic Village-Fairbanks) on
personal gear
*Airport transfers
*Alaska sport fishing license: Resident Annual Sport Fishing License, $24;
Nonresident sport fishing license: 7-day, $55; 14-day, $80.
State of Alaska Licensing Fees
*airport taxes (if any)
*gratuities to guides
*items of a personal nature such as alcoholic beverages, soft
drinks, excess charges, or insurance of any kind.
AIR
TICKETING
Our
staff is experienced in advising which flights are best for your
departure and we would be happy to pass that information onto you.
REGISTRATION
A completed Reservation Form including The Release
and Assumption of Risk and a $1000 deposit per person is required
to book space on the trip. A second deposit of $1200 is due four
months before departure. Final payment of land cost and airfare
is due 90 days before departure.
TRAVEL LOGISTICS
One may either fly to Fairbanks, take a train from
Anchorage, or drive. You are responsible for getting to Fairbanks.
Although James Henry River Journeys does not do air ticketing,
we will help facilitate your air and travel arrangements. More
detailed travel logistics are mailed out upon registration.
LODGING IN FAIRBANKS
We will send you a a recommended hotel/B&B to stay at prior and after the trip. Please contact our office and let us know when and how you
will be meeting us after your travel arrangements have been made.
THE OUTFITTER
The trip will be conducted by James Henry River Journeys
who has a special use permit to operate natural history and photographic,
river and walking trips in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
James Henry River Journeys is an equal opportunity service provider.
James Henry River Journeys has been conducting trips in the Arctic
since 1977 and in British Columbia and Alaska in general since
1974. James Henry River Journeys is also a National Park Service Concessionaire in Glacier Bay Nat'l Park and Preserve. James Henry River Journeys has also been an outfitter for
the National Geographic Society in the Arctic.
LEADERSHIP
The Hulahula River expedition will be led by James
Katz, director of James Henry River Journeys and his veteran crew.
James has been leading wilderness trips for 40 years and has been
leading trips to British Columbia and Alaska since 1974. He has
also outfitted trips for the National Geographic Society in the
Brooks Range and has been on assignment as a nature photographer
for the Geographic in Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve.
James was a photo instructor for UC Santa Cruz Extension and
UC Berkeley Extensions for 25 years.
SPECIAL
THEMES AND INSTRUCTORS: Please
refer to our Expedition Schedule and to our Final Trip Addendum
for leader assignments. Please note that leaders are often lined
up for a specific trip one year in advance and sometimes we have
to make substitutions. Final Addendum is sent to trip participants
one month before departure.
WILDERNESS EXPERIENCE, CAMPING LOGISTICS,
QUALIFICATIONS, AND PERSONAL CHALLENGES
All trip members must be in excellent health and average-good
physical condition. The river rafting is mildly strenuous and hiking
is optional. One can hike as hard as one likes on this trip.
While day hiking, we will be walking over sedge tussocks, gravel
bars, and perhaps crossing small streams. Individuals will need
only carry a light day pack while hiking. The group will be entirely
self-sufficient. We will take all of our provisions with us from
Fairbanks.
As
guides, and trip leaders, we consider ourselves equal and active
participants willing to share our experience, knowledge, and skills.
Encountering the elements often brings about a sense of spiritual
and physical elation that draws people together. This shared rapture
is an integral part of the personal adventure. We welcome anyone
who is 16 years or older (although a very solid and fit 15 year-old
would do well) and wants to partake in the spirit of wilderness
living and travel.
We
have attempted to schedule our trip a little later in the season in order to avoid the higher density of rafting groups that go earlier in the year. By going later in the summer, we also avoid the high concentration of mosquito populations that proliferate in late June through July. We stand a terrific chance of observing a variety
of arctic animals as we travel downstream and while hiking on our layover
days. By traveling in the high Arctic, we have long periods of daylight and a flexible itinerary.
The
final itinerary will ultimately be determined by conditions as they
exist on the trip. Final determination of this itinerary is made
by the trip leader. Though in past years our Arctic trips have
ended exactly as scheduled, we urge you to leave your return plans
flexible by a few days in event of any unforeseen delays. In other
words, don't schedule your heaviest appointments for the day after
you are to return from Fairbanks. We could be delayed.
CLIMATE
AND WEATHER
This ANWR trip has been planned
to coincide with reliable water levels with channels not blocked by aufeis clarity of the streambed, lack of mosquitoes,and fine fishing opportunities. It is also a delightful time to witness
the fall color cahnge on the tundra. The Arctic is essentially a desert
with regard to precipitation. There is seldom more than 6 inches
of precipitation for a year. Days tend to be clear and sunny,
with temperatures seldom falling below 50 degrees. However, all
participants must be prepared for wind, rain, and snow with temperatures
in the 30's and 40's and below freezing at night. In short, the climate is arctic, and participants
must be adequately equipped.
FOOD
Although weight and volume are a consideration in packing
for any Brooks Range trip, you will be amazed at how gourmet
our meals are in such a remote environment. Known for our moveable
wilderness gourmet feasts, international camp cookery will fill
the whetted appetite. See Meals.
MEDICAL AND SAFETY INFORMATION
Good health and average-good physical condition are prerequisites
for this trip. See details see Medical
and Health.
EQUIPMENT: WHAT JAMES HENRY RIVER JOURNEYS
PROVIDES
We provide all river rafting equipment (life jackets,
paddles, first aid), and commissary. See What
Equipment JHRJ Provides and what kind
of boats are utilized.
PERSONAL
EQUIPMENT
Wool clothing/and or fleece garments, completely waterproof
raingear, good hiking boots and above the calf rubber boots are
necessary for a truly enjoyable experience. Tents, sleeping bags,
pads, rain gear, rubber boots, and day packs are to be provided
by participants. We have Northface VE-25's
available on a rental basis to trip participants.
PHOTOGRAPHY
The location of the ANWR offers the visual aesthete
one of the most remarkable photographic experiences in the world.
During the course of our journey, there will be no shortage of available light. Light may be polarized at midday
and shadows are of surrealistic length. The light has a glassy,
dilute quality that bathes the land in a palette of soft pastels.
Objects on the landscape are being continually sidelit and backlit,
creating rich three-dimensional shapes. Shifting cloud patterns
and clouds roll by, creating dramatic lighting effects.
The possibilities of ground level photography are without equal;
blueberries, cranberries, dwarf birch, reindeer lichen, and the
endless array of multi-hued rocks resplendent with circular lichens
of orange and blue hues. If we are fortunate, we will have the
opportunity to stalk Dall sheep and caribou. We might also get
the opportunity to see and photograph Barren Land Grizzly, Arctic foxes, musk oxen,
and perhaps a wolf.
FISHING
Fishing is very good at this time of year for Grayling
and Arctic Char. Licenses are required.
(See Pre-departure supplement furnished upon enrollment).
CANCELLATIONS AND REFUNDS
(See Cancellations-Terms and
Conditions)
INSURANCE
(See Insurance-Terms and Conditions)
©2011. All Rights Reserved.
James Henry River Journeys.
Photos by ©Tom Meckfessel: Clavey Paddlesports
To read more about our Special-Interest Trips on this river, go
to
Hula Hula Special Trips.
Return to Hula Hula Trip Profile.