
The Denali Highway is seen in
summer.
Denali Highway
(Alaska Route 8) is a lightly-traveled, mostly
gravel highway in the U.S. state of
Alaska
. It leads from Paxson
on the
Richardson Highway to Cantwell
on the
Parks Highway.
Opened in
1957, it was the first road access to Denali National
Park
(then known as Mount McKinley National
Park). Since 1971, primary park access has been via the
Parks Highway, which incorporated a section of the Denali Highway
from Cantwell to the present-day park entrance. The Denali Highway
is in length.
Conditions
The highway is now little used and poorly maintained, and closed to
all traffic from October to mid-May each year. Only the easternmost
and westernmost are paved; whether the remainder should be paved as
well is a continual source of debate.
Washboarding and extreme dust are common, the
recommended speed limit is .
The route
Traveling west, the Denali Highway leaves the Richardson Highway
(Alaska Route 4) at Paxson, and climbs steeply up into the
foothills of the central Alaska Range. The first , to Tangle Lakes,
are paved.
Along its length, the highway passes through
three of the principal river drainages in Interior Alaska: the
Copper River drainage, the Tanana/Yukon
drainage and
the Susitna
drainage. Along the way, in good weather, there are
stunning views of the peaks and glaciers of the central Alaska
Range, including Mount
Hayes
(13,700 ft), Mount Hess
(11,940 ft) and Mount
Deborah
(12,688 ft). At MP 15, from the pullout on the south
side of the road, in clear weather you can see the Wrangell
Mountains
, the Chugach
Mountains and the Alaska
Range.
The first winds through the
Amphitheater Mountains, cresting at
Maclaren Summit, at the second highest road in Alaska. The road
then drops down to the
Maclaren River
Valley with fine views north to
Maclaren Glacier.
After crossing the
Maclaren River, the road winds through the geologically mysterious
Crazy Notch and then along the toe of the Denali Clearwater
Mountains to the Susitna
River
. After crossing the Susitna River the road
extends across the glaciers outwash plains to the Nenana River
, and then down the Nenana River to Cantwell on the
George Parks Highway (Alaska
#3).
Services
There are
developed campgrounds at Tangle Lakes
(MP 22) and Brushkana Creek (MP 104), but there are
dozens of pullouts where you can camp on public lands.
Services are scant along this road. Tangle River Inn (MP 20),
Maclaren Lodge (MP 42) Alpine Creek lodge (MP68) which is open year
round and Gracious House (MP 82) offer minor repairs and tire
repairs and usually have fuel. Both offer rental cabins, as does
Denali Highway Cabins (MP 0).
Recreation
The
Tangle Lakes constitute the headwaters of the Delta River
, a popular destination for canoeists as it is the launch point of the Delta River
Canoe Trail
.The Denali Highway is an important birding
destination. It offers road access to alpine terrain - not that
common in Alaska - and, in the brief birding season there, good
viewing of a number of alpine breeders, including Arctic Warbler,
Smith's Longspur, Long-tailed Jaeger, Whimbrel, Surfbird, Lapland
Longspur, Horned Lark, Short-eared Owl, Wandering Tattler,
Gyrfalcon and much more. A walk north along BLM's Maclaren Summit
Trail (MP 39) can be very productive. There are also
trumpeter swans and various other waterfowl
in the lakes and ponds along the route.
Fishing for grayling and lake trout is decent, if not spectacular,
in any of the clear water (i.e., unglaciated) streams.
Because the area is hunted heavily, larger mammals are much less
common than in Denali National Park, but moose, grizzly bear, and
caribou are fairly common. The many lakes along the road are also a
destination for duck hunting in the fall.
Most of the land along the highway is publicly owned. There are
several BLM-maintained trails, and dozens of informal trails. This
is a stretch of wild Alaska that is pretty much unspoiled,
relatively accessible and beautiful.
Gallery
See also
Further reading
- United States. Bureau of Land Management. Glennallen Field
Office. (2007). Denali Highway: points of interest [BLM
Recreation Guide BLM/AK/GI-88/023+8351+050, Rev. 07]. Glennallen,
AK: author.
External links
References
- The
Milepost 59th edition (2007) ISBN 1-892154-21-8 page 497