Sometimes, you’ve got to
go with plan B, even when you don’t.
On an Alaska Inside
Passage cruise a few years ago, I saw a lighthouse on the coast of the Queen
Charlotte Strait. It was so picturesque,
I thought I’d like to go back there and see it once again. My thought was to drive the eastern edge of
Vancouver Island to the point near Port Hardy where I could view the light –
and everything else in between. Since it
is a mild marine climate, I didn’t think it too much of a risk to do this in early
winter. Who cares if there is a little
rain anyway, eh?
As I planned the drive, I
discovered that the lighthouse is not accessible by land after all. I believe the only way would be boat or
possibly a chartered floatplane – or land plane just to see it, not visit. You probably cannot visit it anyway since it
is a government installation. But I was
wedded to the idea of this road trip, so I continued with the plan regardless.
The plan was to fly to
Seattle, rent a car, and drive to Port Angeles to ferry across the Straits of
Juan de Fuca, visit Victoria for a day, then drive Canada 1 and highway 19 (a
highway the locals call “the Malahat”) north to Port Hardy the following day. After an overnight in that vicinity, I’d
drive back south to Sydney, B.C. and catch the Sydney-Anacortes WSF ferry back
to Washington and Seattle, before returning home to the desert. Total trip time about 5 days. This looked good on paper. Note: while pre-planning tightly and to the
Nth degree can be a good thing, it
can also reside in the vicinity of stress and “things gone south.”
On arrival in Seattle late
in the evening of 12/5, I elected to take the more direct route across the
sound, rather than drive around the end, destination Bremerton. I needed to be
at the ferry terminal in Port Angeles by a few minutes after 7 AM the next
morning. Since my flight didn’t land
until almost midnight, getting to a Bremerton hotel in as little time as
possible was of some importance if I was going to be rested the next day. In the end, driving around would have been
the better choice; taking the ferry unexpectedly doubled the time, because of the waiting
time at the terminal and then a mid-route stop at Vashon Island – and the time
that required. It was after 2:00 AM before I got in the rack at the Flagship
Inn in Bremerton.
In any event, I got moving
at 5:15 am for the 1.5 hour drive to Port Angeles. It was cold and wet – and along the way there
was light snow. The roads were in good
shape though. I think the snow was melting
within seconds of its fall. There was black
ice on the parking lot at the ferry terminal in Port Angeles, which I
discovered simultaneously with the bonus discovery that my smooth-soled walking
shoes are useless on an icy surface.
Fortunately, I bounced rather than crashed.
Leaving Port Angeles |
Upon arrival at Victoria
and driving off the Black Ball Ferry Line’s MV Cojo, I pulled up to the Customs
booth. The Customs official asked my plans,
etc. and after learning that I wanted to drive north to Port Hardy, informed me
that I needed chains or M+S tires on that road after November 1st. I didn’t have chains of course – I don’t
think you’re permitted to put them on a rental car anyway. And I didn’t think I had snow tires on the
car either. This was a rather revolting
development that I hadn’t anticipated or considered. The Customs lady suggested I stop a couple
blocks away at the Tourist Information office and see what my options were.
The air temperature was
about 31 degrees F. I drove around the
harbor to the Tourist Bureau and after parking along the street, attempted to
negotiate my way down the ice-coated sidewalk to their office. I probably presented a fairly comical sight –
and I am certain that people who live in places where ice is common have
special shoes that make walking a safer proposition than I experienced at that
moment. I much resembled a hog on
ice. I made it without falling down
again, just the same.
I confirmed the chains or
snow tires requirement with the Tourist Bureau people. They suggested I check
with the local National rental car agency about swapping the car for one with the proper
tires, and they helped me locate the nearest office – which turned out to be
the wrong company but the staff there helped me get to the correct one (Enterprise, Alamo’s
parent company). While I couldn’t see
the information on the tires, it turned out they were in fact mud and snow
tires, so I thought at that point my plan was still on. But the “elephant in the room” was an
approaching storm that was predicted for that evening.
I decided to spend the
remainder of the day driving west along the Strait to Port Renfrew to see the
coastline in that direction. There’s a road's-end limit
to how far you can go – but I didn’t even make it that far. I got about half that distance, to Juan de
Fuca Provincial Park. It was about the
size of a highway rest area (at least in terms of vehicular access). I found an A&W Root Beer stand in Sooke,
and had lunch and a root beer in a frosty mug!
Juan de Fuca Provincial Park |
The Cozy James Bay Inn |
Expecting the storm to hit
overnight, I cancelled my plans for the drive north to Port Hardy. I worried I’d get up there and wouldn’t get
back in time to catch the ferry to Anacortes (if the roads were bad, or if the traffic was slow). I cancelled the hotel and moved
the return ferry reservation up one day.
Had I had one extra day and had I not planned everything so tightly
time-wise, I could have done the trip as planned – but I didn’t know that yet. (Actually, even the original plan would have been OK, but that was even less certain at the time I had to make a decision - a little extra wiggle-room on time frames would have made the choices easier.)
After a good night’s sleep in a comfortable bed, and a little portable heater provided by the hotel staff that took the chill out of the air <love>, I discovered that while it had remained very cold, the storm had not arrived. It was now predicted to hit that next night. I toyed with the idea of changing everything back and risking it, but was still somewhat concerned about the traffic on the return, if not the road conditions. So I didn’t do it.
After a good night’s sleep in a comfortable bed, and a little portable heater provided by the hotel staff that took the chill out of the air <love>, I discovered that while it had remained very cold, the storm had not arrived. It was now predicted to hit that next night. I toyed with the idea of changing everything back and risking it, but was still somewhat concerned about the traffic on the return, if not the road conditions. So I didn’t do it.
MV Elwha calls at Sydney, BC |
My new hotel reservation was
in Bellingham, and I had several options for the next day’s adventure. That storm was still supposed to arrive
overnight. I thought about the air
museum at Boeing Field, a ride up the Space Needle, a trip to the beach out on
the central Washington coast, or a drive up Mt Baker Highway if the weather
held. It did.
Nooksack Creek - Mt Baker Highway |
Mt Baker Highway |
I had turned my rental
vehicle back in that evening, as the hotel had a shuttle and I had no further
plans for sight-seeing. I had a steak
dinner, and turned in early. My flight left for home
the next day at noon.
In the end, the predicted
storm was never a factor. Had I not
planned everything so tightly time-wise, I wouldn’t have been pressured to make peremptory choices about changing plans and reservations. All I needed was an extra day to play with,
and less pre-planning and I wouldn’t have been so uneasy about going with the
original idea. I’ll go back as I still
want to see that road. But next time I’ll
better know how to get it done, assuming I remember the lessons I learned.
Keep it between the fence posts!
Keep it between the fence posts!