Castner Glacier and Ice cave, Alaska

in Pinmapplelast year

Long time no see Pinmapple!

cover photo

This will hopefully be one post of many from my trip to Alaska. I'm hoping to visit at least 3 land marks while I'm here.

mountain range

This weekend I took a drive 2 hours south of Fairbanks to Castner Creek. Stopping halfway to admire this incredible view (and stepping slightly too far off the path and falling into snow in the process).

IMG_20230501_224824.jpg

big rig mountain

This is potentially the most Alaskan picture I think I'll ever take. An 18 wheeler infront of a huge mountain. It was a very quiet road and we only stopped for 5 minutes so this was a very lucky shot!

IMG_20230501_193009.jpg

IMG_20230502_001244.jpg

We parked up at the creek opposite another another famous attraction, the trans Alaskan pipeline.

IMG_20230502_001412.jpg

Then it was roughly a 45 minute walk across deep snow to the cave. The path had been hardened by people compressing the snow, but if you strayed slightly off it, you'd sink at least 2' into the snow.

glacier entrance

Totally worth it though!
The chunks of ice on the ground were the size of boulders. I genuinely didn't think I'd ever see something like this outside of Antarctica.

IMG_20230501_194813.jpg

The ice "bridge/tunnel" looked like something from an alien world.

Tunnel exit

Sadly the tunnel collapsed last year during the ice melt so is much smaller than it used to, and this year its expected to collapse fully. While we were there there were a few loud bangs as ice along the edge started to fall.

IMG_20230501_202750.jpg

Continuing through the tunnel we entered the entrance of the ice cave.

IMG_20230501_221932.jpg

Rumor has it that the person that pulls this rock from the ice becomes the next King of England.

IMG_20230501_221849.jpg

The cave turned right and went deep into the hill, this is where my camera started struggling to take clear pictures as it became pitch black as soon as we turned the corner.

IMG_20230428_140327.jpg

The floor in the cave was a frozen river so smooth solid ice. One of our group had a nasty slip backwards and was saved by the hood on his jacket.

IMG_20230428_140319.jpg
The entire ceiling of the cave was ice crystals

IMG_20230502_132617.jpg

On the way back we stopped off at another view point and I finally got to snap one of the enormous ravens I keep seeing here. In the UK we have fairly large crows but these things are like dinosaurs in comparison!

IMG_20230502_174533.jpg

He even graced my landscape photo as a parting gift!

So far this has been my best experience here for not that much effort. A two hour drive and hour hike yielded some amazing views. I'll be driving in different directions out of Fairbanks in the hopes of finding more spots like this.

Pictures taken with Panasonic Lumix FZ1000 and a Oneplus 8 phone.

Sort:  

https://leofinance.io/threads/view/sammyhive/re-sammyhive-nl3duyrm
The rewards earned on this comment will go directly to the people ( sammyhive ) sharing the post on LeoThreads,LikeTu,dBuzz.

Wow!!
Great exploration.
I guess the temperature should be about -15°C to -30°C.

The cave looks scary with some part having sharp ice spike at the top while others with crystalline ice structure attached

Great photos by the way.

The temperatures here have swung from -12°c to 10°c in the span of a week.
It was a little cooler at the glacier but felt slightly above zero.

The cave was pretty scary because of the dark and slip hazard. We kept trying to scare each other by saying there could be a bear inside!

That tunnel is really spectacular, is it ice under some sort of a ridge? I couldn't work out how it's formed

In summer it seems like all the melted ice water from the mountains comes through there. It looks like the tunnel was cut by the flowing water passing under the glacier.

IMG_7562-1.webp
Photo from google

Wow this is the farthest place I've ever read on Hive, I think. The weather is so tough over there, but as you said, it's totally worthy. Thanks for showing us to those masterpieces of Mother Nature.

The second photo and the one with ice chunks are amazing! I admire that you manage to submit posts while you're still there. It always takes me a few months before I post something about my trips 😁

Thank you for sharing!

I have the same issue. I have photos from a trip over a year ago that I never wrote up.
I either write about it immediately or never 😂

Hiya, @LivingUKTaiwan here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Top 3 in Daily Travel Digest #1868.

Your post has been manually curated by the @pinmapple team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting other authors like yourself and us so we can keep the project going!

Become part of our travel community:

Congratulations, your post has been added to Pinmapple! 🎉🥳🍍

Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!

Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to Pinmapple
  • Click the get code button
  • Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post (Hive only)
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!

Thank you Pinmapple. I'll try and get you some pins placed in new remote locations.

I have never seen any Ice cave in my life and it's normal because I live in a tropical country where it's almost impossible to form Ice in outside.
All of the pictures were taken well and I liked all of them.
I am just thinking entering in the Ice cave in the evening time may can give a horrible feeling.

Thanks for sharing your experience.

Hi @cryptosneeze, what a fascinating world Alaska is, that tunnel and cave really look other-worldly! I would be very nervous going into the tunnel and cave with the ice melting.
Stunning scenery though, thank you for sharing that part of the world with us here in Hive, and congrats for making the top 3 :)