russellviii in Salt Lake City is visiting 42 places including…

United States > Alaska

Glacier Bay National Park & Preserve

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russellviii has written 2 entries about this place

The Margerie Glacier  — 1 year ago

To me, the highlight of our visit to Glacier Bay National Park was the Margerie Glacier. The Margerie Glacier is a wall of ice about 250 feet tall and about a mile wide. Large chunks of this glacier are constantly “calving” or breaking off. Our ship pulled up alongside the glacier and we were able to watch many pieces calve.

First you hear a large “CRAAAACK” eminating from somewhere on the glacier. Seconds later you will see a chunk of ice, sometimes large, sometimes small, fall from the glacier into the water. As the ice hits the water it sends out a wave, based on the mass of the ice. These waves are usually quite small, but on one occassion we witnessed a chunk of ice which was the full height of the glacier, and about 250 feet in width calve off from the front face. When it hit the water the wave was massive. The captain quickly turned the ship about so that the wave would hit us head-on and not from the side.

When the pieces of ice hit the water they start to roll. This comes about because they break up from a alarge piece of ice into smaller ones. As this happens the center of gravity of the new smaller pieces shifts, causing them to roll.

We sat and watched the glacier calve for a couple of hours. It was amazing to see. This was the highlight of the trip for me.

First Impressions of Glacier Bay  — 1 year ago

The scenery was unbelievable! As our ship sailed up the fjords I spent most of the day standing either at the balcony of my stateroom or on the ship’s main forward deck. My eyes were wide open. It was hard to believe the beautiful colors and the sheer grandeur of Glacier Bay National Park.

A park ranger that came on board gave us a narration of the areas through which we passed. The water was over 1000 feet deep. The mountains rose majestically from the water to unbelievable heights. Ice and snow were everywhere, especially at the upper elevations.

Thin ribbons could be seen extending from the ice and snow down the faces of the mountains. I had my binoculars with me. On closer examination I saw that these thin ribbons were actually waterfalls. They were everywhere. From the distance they first appeared to be small streams, but on closer inspection I could see that many of them were massive torrents.

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