... the front window (thank goodness for a digital camera!). Especially spectacular were: Tonsina River, Worthington Glacier (the views constantly change as you drive), Thompson Pass, Bridal Veil Falls, Horsetail Falls, KeystoneCanyon ...
... cannot see the mountains behind the low clouds. We stopped at Worthington Glacier, but you could barely see it. At KeystoneCanyon we saw the unfinished railroad tunnel, and two large waterfalls: Bridal Veil and Horsetail. The waterfalls were ...
... we passed through alpine elevations at Thompson Pass, stopped at Worthington Glacier to see it up close and personal, and paused in KeystoneCanyon to see the Horsetail and Bridal Veil Falls. Arriving in the town of Valdez, we selected a campsite facing ...
... the RV before I just popped it in a low gear for the next 10 miles. After the truck let us pass, the road took us through KeystoneCanyon and many wonderful waterfalls. There are a few trails round here so we'll see it we take them in the few days we are ...
... found that epitome of Alaska that I'd come looking for. Dropping down the steep and very long descent from the pass, into KeystoneCanyon, I was held up for thirty minutes as the road through the heart of the canyon was being significantly rebuilt after ...
... cannot explain. It is not far off the highway so within 10 minutes you are walking beside it. We continued on the amazing Keystonecanyon with two beautiful waterfalls - Horsetail and Bridal veil and then the hand cut tunnel that was to be used for a ...
... pass with 360 degrees of snow-covered peaks (Thompson Pass), and a rocky river canyon with lacy waterfalls (KeystoneCanyon). We reached Valdez in late afternoon tired from rubber-necking and looking forward to a relaxing evening in a campground. ...
... nbsp; We have caught up with the end of the Trans-Alaska pipeline at this point. It ends at Valdez. We travelled through the KeystoneCanyon, stopping to take photos at the Bridal Veil Falls. When we hear the word Valdez, we immediately ...
... . Drove on toward Valdez through amazingly picturesque scenery with huge rugged mountains of the coastal Chugach range. Stopped at KeystoneCanyon and hiked portions of the Goat Trail and the Pack Trail to a stream crossing, then backtracked to the ...
... old Valdez demolished by the 1964 earthquake (the new town was rebuilt 4 miles away). And we drove through KeystoneCanyon, a narrow canyon with steep rock sides and lined with waterfalls. Bridal Falls and Horsetail Falls were the most ...