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21  Forums / Bikepacking / Trailer for fatbike/packraft film on: November 03, 2013, 07:46:00 PM
Trailer for upcoming film 'Hunting for Monsters'. We shot this film last summer on a bike/raft traverse from Cook Inlet to Bristol Bay Alaska.

https://vimeo.com/78481279

Best watched loud.

-Bjørn
22  Forums / Bikepacking / Re: Alaska: Cook Inlet to Bristol Bay trip report on: August 17, 2013, 11:23:07 AM
Short time lapse video: https://vimeo.com/72555071
23  Forums / Bikepacking / Re: Alaska: Cook Inlet to Bristol Bay trip report on: August 16, 2013, 07:57:13 PM
Nice fleet wisaunders.
24  Forums / Bikepacking / Alaska: Cook Inlet to Bristol Bay trip report on: August 12, 2013, 12:15:27 PM
Cook Inlet to Bristol Bay trip report

In late July my buddy Brent and I set out to fat bike/packraft the Iliamna portage from Cook Inlet to Bristol Bay. We began our trip with a free ride across CI on the Helenka B. landing craft, captained by Bruce Flanigan. Access to Williams Port in Iliamna Bay is possible only during spring tides. In July this gave us a window of tides around the 22-25th. We ended up crossing the inlet on the evening of the 24th and arrived around 5:00 AM on the 25th.

The trip across Cook Inlet was beautiful and calm and the company was great, so neither Brent or I slept during the crossing. Once we disembarked from the boat we waited for the light and began riding the well maintained dirt road over the coast mountains to Lake Iliamna. This 17 mile road is perhaps the prettiest road in Alaska. The portage has been in use by Alaska Natives for millennia and is currently maintained by the William's family, who for three generations have operated their shipping/transport business.

After a brief visit with the William's we inflated our rafts and began working our way West along the North shore of Alaska's largest lake. Our goal was to bike as much as possible and after a night of sleep the cycling began. Until we reached Iliamna village we often had to be creative in our route selection, often going inland or swimming with our bikes to avoid using the rafts. Once past Iliamna/Newhalen (villages) however the cycling became straight forward beach or tundra trail riding. It took us 7 days to reach the Kvichak River.

While we were traversing the lake the daytime temperatures were in the 70s but when we began paddling down the river the weather changed and continued to deteriorate the further down river we went. The Kvichak is intertidal very far upriver and Bristol Bay has very large tidal exchanges. This in conjunction with gale force headwinds and bottomless mud made the second chapter of our trip much more difficult than the first. We paddled 6 hours, nonstop, at one point to make 4 miles of progress. It would seem logical to wait for better conditions, but the land had absolutely nothing to offer, other than mud and grass growing in mud, so we kept going.

It ended up requiring 4 solid days of paddling the Kvichak River from Igiugig Village to reach Pederson Point, where we were able to ride a dirt road to Naknek. I had grossly underestimated the river and wished we had brought a tide book.

We met many great and inspiring people on the trip and were invited to use shelter cabins and stay with people more than once. This is an area of the state that is in remarkable transition. If Pebble Mine is permitted this whole route will be transformed and I am incredibly thankful to have seen it, as it is and has been. Another bonus of this route at this time of the year is the availability of sockeye salmon. We were able to coax them out of the streams and into our dinner with our very primitive means.

All told the trip took us 11 days from Cook Inlet to King Salmon where we flew back to Anchorage from. I have yet to calculate how much distance we covered on the bikes verses the rafts but I believe that we rode over 80% of the North shore of the lake.

This is an amazing route that I would recommend to anyone looking for a wilderness route through a large and diverse swath of the Alaska.

Photos here: http://mjolnirofbjorn.blogspot.com/2013/08/cook-inlet-to-bristol-bay.html

Screenshots of maps here: http://mjolnirofbjorn.blogspot.com/2013/08/cook-inlet-to-bristol-bay.html

Bjørn
25  Forums / Bikepacking / Beach to glacier bike/raft slideshow on: June 01, 2013, 10:02:03 AM
Winter died hard this year in Alaska but summer has finally come. A crew of us decided to take advantage of the warm weather by doing a two night bike/raft adventure around Kachemak Bay. There is a little bit of everything on this route.

HD slideshow here: https://vimeo.com/67333194

Bjørn
26  Forums / Bikepacking / Re: Black Artery of Alaska, bike tour video on: February 15, 2013, 11:10:49 AM
I could not recommend this trip enough. There are so many distinct zones that you pass through; three mountain ranges and the logistics are pretty straight forward.
It was easy for us to travel light because we sent food ahead at one location. Other than that there are roadside services. So much wildlife, dirt and paved and in general courteous drivers. 

Bjørn
27  Forums / Bikepacking / Black Artery of Alaska, bike tour video on: February 13, 2013, 02:24:27 PM
Last summer I did a north to south tour of Alaska on a route we termed, the Black Artery of Alaska.

Here is a short video of the trip.

Black Artery of Alaska, bike tour


Bjørn
28  Forums / Winter bikepacking / Re: Kuskokwim Alaska trip report on: October 05, 2012, 09:00:56 PM
I'm sure I will go back sometime, but it may not be this year. That trip was my third to that region and I am looking forward to exploring some other regions of Alaska by fatbike this winter. I would love to make it out to the more coastal YK villages and see the Bering Sea there. Wind is such a big issue but sometimes you get lucky. Never know until you go. Thanks for the kind words.
Bjørn
29  Forums / Bikepacking / Slide show of Alaska tour on: September 03, 2012, 12:50:59 PM
I just returned from a north to south Alaska bike tour that we termed the Black Artery of Alaska because we were following the Trans-Alaska Pipeline from source to terminus.
Instead of a trip write-up I opted for letting the photos and captions tell an incomplete story and let imaginations fill in the blanks.

Slideshow can be found here: http://www.groundtruthtrekking.org/slideshows/black-artery-of-alaska-2/

Bjørn
30  Forums / Bikepacking / Help make film on: May 18, 2012, 03:04:51 PM
Donlin Gold is a massive open pit mine proposal in Western Alaska. It is considered one of the largest undeveloped gold deposits in the world. Part of the plan for this remote mine is to create a 320 mile long natural gas pipeline along the iconic Iditarod trail.

For a year and a half my partner have been working on a documentary about this mine. We live in south central Alaska and have done three human powered expeditions to the region to learn more about this project and it's implications for Alaskans, now and in the future.

We used fat bikes and packrafts to traverse 1,000 miles of Alaskan wilderness.

Now we are trying to produce this film and we need help. We have started a kickstarter campaign to raise funds for the final production. Please take a minute to watch the trailer, share it with friends and if possible consider a donation.

Please help us tell this important and timely story.

Thank you.

Bjørn Olson

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1977207210/where-the-heck-is-donlin
31  Forums / Routes / Kuskokwim Alaska trip report on: April 05, 2012, 03:16:07 PM
This spring my partner Kim McNett and I flew from Anchorage to the village of Aniak on the Kuskokwim River and rode a trail on the river to Bethel. This was only half of our original trip plan, but what we rode was great and highly recommended to anyone looking for a remote fat bike tour within a culturally rich region of Alaska.

Our route choice was based around a film project Kim and I have been working on for over a year. The project in a nut shell has been a human powered "ground truthing" mission to learn about Donlin Gold and find out from people within the region what they think about one of the worlds largest gold deposits being developed into an open pit mine within this subsistence rich and remote region of the state.

Aniak is a medium size village (population 570) and is the middle river hub. People fly into Aniak and either take smaller Cessna airplanes or snow-machines to their up or down river home village. For us it was the beginning of our route that was to take us down river 150 miles to Bethel and beyond to the Bering Sea coast to visit coastal Yupik Eskimo communities.

The first 40 miles of river trail were hard packed and fast. We made it to Kalskag Village in 6 hours. The next stretch to Tuluksak however was not as heavily traveled and we had to work harder during this 50 mile stretch to make miles. Grossly deflated tires and low gearing was required. This has been a record snow year in Alaska and we were very unsure at the out set of our trip if we would be able to bike at all. Even with a somewhat punchy trail we were thankful to be riding and not pushing or pulling our bikes in our roll up sleds with snowshoes.

Once into Tuluksak we checked the forecast and read of an imminent blizzard. From Tuluksak to Bethel there is a plowed ice "road"  that can be driven on by cars and trucks. We decided to take this easier albeit less scenic route in order to make hast ahead of the storm. With inflated tires and pushing hard on our big ring we made it to town a few hours before the wind and snow.

And just like that winter was over. When the storm passed the skies cleared and daytime temperatures shot into the 30s and lower 40s. We waited for days hoping that conditions would return, but they never did. Sloppy wet trails with patches of open water were the new norm and we had no stomach for it. It was hard to believe that the week before we had been camping in negative 30 and day time temperatures were 0.

Although we did not make it to the Bering Sea we still had a great trip and time. We met new friends and reconnected with old ones. We ate fresh moose that a buddy had recently
shot on the Yukon, went to a traditional Yupik drum and dance festival and had a great three and a half day bike tour under clear sunny Alaskan skies. My friends son from Bethel summed up winter fat bike expeditions well when he said, " you get what you get, and you don't get upset." Wise words for a six year old.

Bjørn
32  Forums / Winter bikepacking / Kuskokwim Alaska trip report on: April 05, 2012, 01:45:21 PM
This spring my partner Kim McNett and I flew from Anchorage to the village of Aniak on the Kuskokwim River and rode a trail on the river to Bethel. This was only half of our original trip plan, but what we rode was great and highly recommended to anyone looking for a remote fat bike tour within a culturally rich region of Alaska.

Our route choice was based around a film project Kim and I have been working on for over a year. The project in a nut shell has been a human powered "ground truthing" mission to learn about Donlin Gold and find out from people within the region what they think about one of the worlds largest gold deposits being developed into an open pit mine within this subsistence rich and remote region of the state.

Aniak is a medium size village (population 570) and is the middle river hub. People fly into Aniak and either take smaller Cessna airplanes or snow-machines to their up or down river home village. For us it was the beginning of our route that was to take us down river 150 miles to Bethel and beyond to the Bering Sea coast to visit coastal Yupik Eskimo communities.

The first 40 miles of river trail were hard packed and fast. We made it to Kalskag Village in 6 hours. The next stretch to Tuluksak however was not as heavily traveled and we had to work harder during this 50 mile stretch to make miles. Grossly deflated tires and low gearing was required. This has been a record snow year in Alaska and we were very unsure at the out set of our trip if we would be able to bike at all. Even with a somewhat punchy trail we were thankful to be riding and not pushing or pulling our bikes in our roll up sleds with snowshoes.

Once into Tuluksak we checked the forecast and read of an imminent blizzard. From Tuluksak to Bethel there is a plowed ice "road"  that can be driven on by cars and trucks. We decided to take this easier albeit less scenic route in order to make hast ahead of the storm. With inflated tires and pushing hard on our big ring we made it to town a few hours before the wind and snow.

And just like that winter was over. When the storm passed the skies cleared and daytime temperatures shot into the 30s and lower 40s. We waited for days hoping that conditions would return, but they never did. Sloppy wet trails with patches of open water were the new norm and we had no stomach for it. It was hard to believe that the week before we had been camping in negative 30 and day time temperatures were 0.

Although we did not make it to the Bering Sea we still had a great trip and time. We met new friends and reconnected with old ones. We ate fresh moose that a buddy had recently
shot on the Yukon, went to a traditional Yupik drum and dance festival and had a great three and a half day bike tour under clear sunny Alaskan skies. My friends son from Bethel summed up winter fat bike expeditions well when he said, " you get what you get, and you don't get upset." Wise words for a six year old.

Bjørn

For more information about our project visit: http://www.groundtruthtrekking.org/Journeys/Donlin.html
Or find us on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/fatbikebjorn
33  Forums / Bikepacking / Re: MicroAdventures on: March 02, 2012, 05:29:02 PM
Word. Not my style to self inflate. The second one was a mistake.
Thanks for the heads up.

Bjørn
34  Forums / Bikepacking / Ground Truth Trekking Blog on: February 28, 2012, 07:09:51 PM
My partner and I have a blog about our bikepacking/packrafting expeditions to learn about Alaska's natural resources.

http://www.groundtruthtrekking.org/Journeys/Donlin.html
35  Forums / Winter bikepacking / Re: Photos of Winter Rigs on: February 22, 2012, 07:40:48 PM
My partner and I are contributers to Ground Truth Trekking which is based on the belief that expeditions to see what's on the ground helps us learn about important issues. We combine that "ground truth" with "researched truth," using our scientific backgrounds along with our adventures to come up with something we hope will further the conversation about natural resource issues within Alaska in an entertaining and informative way.

We use fat bikes for winter and summer trips here in Alaska. Here are two links to slideshows of our bikes in action.
http://www.groundtruthtrekking.org/slideshows/Where-the-Heck-is-Donlin-Slide-Show/
http://www.groundtruthtrekking.org/slideshows/Bite-sized-adventures/
36  Forums / Bikepacking / Re: Bike/raftpacking documentary on: February 22, 2012, 07:24:28 PM
On the topic of "useless metals" this article about the value of gold by David Coil is worth a read.

http://www.groundtruthtrekking.org/Essays/ValueofGold.html
37  Forums / Bikepacking / Re: Bike/raftpacking documentary on: February 21, 2012, 10:36:44 PM
There are many great trips to be had with a fatbike and a packraft.
Stay tuned to Ground Truth Trekking for new articles and upcoming adventures.

http://www.groundtruthtrekking.org/slideshows/Bite-sized-adventures/

Bjørn
38  Forums / Bikepacking / Re: MicroAdventures on: February 16, 2012, 03:01:05 PM
Ground Truth Trekking has just started a new and ongoing slideshow titled "microadventures".
We will update this series regularly so be sure to return again.

http://www.groundtruthtrekking.org/slideshows/Bite-sized-adventures/


Bjørn
39  Forums / Bikepacking / Bike/raftpacking documentary on: February 16, 2012, 02:54:31 PM
Bjørn and Kim in partnership with Ground Truth Trekking are in the process of making a feature length documentary about an 850 mile expedition in Alaska to learn about Donlin Gold. Donlin Gold may become Alaska's largest open pit gold mine and these two wilderness adventures look into some of the social and environmental issues associated with open pit mines. With fat bikes, packrafts and a video camera they are out to start a dialogue not enough people are talking about.

Please enjoy the trailer and if you become inspired to learn more, please visit the website.

wthid1280L.mov


http://www.groundtruthtrekking.org/Journeys/Donlin.html
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