
While driving the "On top of the World Highway" for some reason it
felt like you were on top of the world. |
DAWSON CITY
Sunday, July 2, 2006. We are in Dawson City and
it is so much fun. There is always something going on. The visitors
center has deals on site seeing. I would say this is a must to visit.
Love it here. Denis also has gold fever. He wants to spend his summers
here looking for gold. We also met up with our friends Judy and
Pierre. His brother Rejean and Sylvie were visiting with them. |

A view of Dawson City and Yukon River
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This was the Territory Building when Dawson was the Capitol. It is
now a Great Museum that gives a good idea why there was such a good
deposit of gold in the region.. I learnt to do "Gold Panning" here. |

This shows how people were living during the gold rush.
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This shows what people had after the gold rush.
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After the gold rush. |
You have to remember that Dawson City use to be the Territorial
Headquarter at one time. Now it is Whitehorse. So some of the building
are amazing.
Dawson City was 30,000 strong in its hay day now it's about 1,800.
They were almost a ghost town in the 60's... 600-800 pop. The pictures were sad. To
be so grand and then a near nothing. |

This was the Grand Palace powder room for their star lady performers. |

There are also some really neat stores here. They have not paved the
roads and the sidewalks wooden, just like the old days.
Denis feels that the streets were paved with gold in 1896. There is
gold in nearly all the stores but it is for sale, gold nuggets. |
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Because of the "Permafrost" you really have to know how to build a
house here. This is what happens when the frost melts away...
you sink! |

This is a log cabin that Robert Service wrote poems in, about the
Klondike Gold Rush. I have enjoyed reading them. |
On the
right and left is one of the fanciest post office's I have ever seen.
The boxes even have bevelled glass. |

This is the original post office built in 1901. It's beautiful.
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A picture of the original building.
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Parks Canada has spent a few dollars here to
restore and reproduce some of the history. I think it is all worth it.
There is a lot of history to tell here. For example: On the right is the Palace Grand Theatre,
a restored building, since the Permafrost destroyed the original one.
There was a lot of
entertaining and bellying-up to the bar with your poke of gold, and "Arizona Charlie" was the brains behind it. |
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I gambled $9 and won $94. I was so excited that I picked up all my
quarters and left. |

Carvings done on moose horns. |
Entertainment
at Diamond Tooth Gerties Gambling Hall. |
Right is: Ruby's Place. Opened as a boarding and laundry in 1903, the building was
taken over by Mathilde "Ruby" Scott in 1935. For 27 years, this former
Paris Madame operated a brothel here, finding a ready clientele in the
seasonal workers from the gold dredge camps. She operated with the
tacit approval of local officials until 1961.Ruby was charged with keeping a bawdy house
and closed as the last brothel in Canada.
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This is a model of dredge #4 that we had toured. These machines were put into rivers and creeks and it's job
was to remove all the gold from the gravel beds. This one was the
largest. I paid itself in the first month of operation and ran until
the mid 50's. |

This is one of 69 buckets on dredge #4. this chain of buckets
would run 24 hours a day and process all the gravel on topsoil of the
rivers and banks. Parks Canada is currently restoring this dredge.
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They have starling bird houses everywhere to feed off of the
mosquitoes. What a neat idea.
Now if you look at the background you will see that the earth has all
been dug up. The earth is all taken away until they get to the bedrock
area and that bedrock is feed into machines e.g. large screening and
sluicing machines.
The gold being 19 times heavier then gravel should be at the bottom of
the wash. But tons and tons of earth have to be wash to get a minimal
amount of gold. These are the modern gold miners, called placer miners
and we were very fortunate to have met one such group. |

We met up with Richard and Luce last Fall on the Natchez Trace and
they are from Dawson. They gave us a really good tour of a modern gold
mine placer operation. In this picture is a shaker/sluice with
racks/rugs on which the gold is separated from the gravel. Look
closely... in this picture, is a bunch of gold under Denis' hand which
he is trying to grab.
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This is a Woolly Mammoth. No longer in existence. A lot of times
it is placer miners who uncover their remains. A lot of them have been
given to the museums but there is so much that a lot get bought up and
are beautifully carved.
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Here we have a brain of a Woolly Mammoth. The picture does not really
show the enormous size of the animal.
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Denis is holding part of a tusk.
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Here I am trying my hands at panning with no luck.
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 The Placer gold enterprise we visited is in real need of a heavy
equipment mechanic. It's a serious going concern and for the right
person it offers a great opportunity to be part of an operation that's
been a leader its industry and plans on being for years to come.
You have to want to live in Dawson City, but let me tell you,
everyone here is from everywhere else, and all the folks we talked to
would never move away. The owners themselves are from the Sudbury and
northern Ontario area.
Favron Enterprises Ltd
PO Box 529 - Dawson City, Yukon - Y0B 1G0
Family owned and operated Placer Mining Company looking for
employees. Hard working individuals are needed to fill positions
available in the shop and for field work. Welders, Mechanics,
Operators, Laborers, and Carpenters are all welcome to apply, at any
experience level. Training available for all positions.
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This is a very, very, very good days pan. A once in a life time catch.
With a little help from his friends, Denis was able to leave Dawson
city with a small "poke" of gold. We are very grateful to the
wonderful people we met in Dawson as they helped make this part of our
journey memorable. |
Monday, July 10, 2006. We are now at Five Mile
Campground (CG). This is a municipal CG that is only 2 miles from the
town of Mayo. The town of Mayo is a government base for central Yukon.
There is a nice swimming lake here an a lot of the towns people come
here to swim but so far they are very respectful of the campers and
leave early so as not to disturb us and we get a really good nights
sleep but the Ravens are quite amorous and act a roosters in the early
mourning. From here we have travelled up to
the city of Keno, this city now houses 15 residence but it's
population use to be 800. Keno was incorporated in 1902 making this a
city. |

Mayo was once the shipping depot for the local silver mines. In this
picture you see sacks of silver concentrate waiting to be shipped.
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Just relaxing by our campfire. Look at the skinny but dense trees.
There is an area toward Keno called Thermokarst lakes where the
Permafrost has melted and the banks of the lakes collapse and trees
topple over. These have been named "drunken forest". |

We are on a summit, elevation 6600, just past Keno where there still
snow in the middle of July.
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There is still flower here, I am sure due to the long daylight hours. |

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The plants you see here is called horsetail. It is a beautiful reddish
color when at it's peak and sways with the wind. This plant is deadly
if eaten by pets or animals. It does not degrade and is like glass
which will cut-up your insides. |

So many beautiful log cabins. |

A lot of art and most about mining.
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Art even on sides of buildings.
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Thursday, July 13, 2006. We are staying at Frenchmen
Lake off Frenchmen Rd., off the Campbell Highway. It is such a nice 14
km.. canoe lake that we are in 7th. heaven. The campgrounds in the
Yukon is only $12 and they supply the firewood. The campgrounds are
very spacious. The people are nice and very helpful. |

This is the five-fingers rapids where the Steamships had to travel
through and the gold miners. |

View from our dock in the evening at midnight.
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Monday, July 17, 2006. We have enjoyed staying here
so much that we hate to leave. Denis keeps saying "can it get any
better" but we must. We have decided to start heading to B.C., we
should get to Whitehorse to-day and replenish on food and maybe a
haircut. I looked into a haircut in Dawson City but I refused to pay
$25 - $27 for a cut. $20 is my limit. |
Monday, July 17, 2006. We have decided to stay at Fox
Lake CG, just before Whitehorse. It is such a beautiful campground. So
far the Yukon has the most beautiful CG, especially for families,
someone has put a lot of thought into them except they do not have any
common dump sites or potable water. Up to now we have only been
comparing parks with Ontario Parks. We do not like the Ontario Parks
and the main reason being that reservations are allowed and I do not
think they are very large/privates sites like we have seen in the
Yukon. |
This
was our campground at Fox Lake, right on the water and mountain
view. As Denis says "can it get any better".
The Yukon Provincial Parks are $12.00 per night with no Sani-dumps
and sometimes water pumps. You have to go to a regular trailer park
and pay a fee to dump you black water and get potable water. We paid
$3.00 |

Emerald Lake along the way to Tagish Lake. The combination of Coral
and Lime create the emerald green coloring in the waters. |
Tuesday, July 18, 2006. We are now on our way towards
Watson Lake and then we will go into British Columbia (BC) on the
Cassiar Highway. Whitehorse - haircut= $35. I guess I will let my hair
grow for now. Well our plans have a way of changing. We met up with
our Quebec Connections, Pierre and Judy. They also were in
Whitehorse doing some maintenance before going on the road. With luck
we met and decided to go fishing with them in Tagish Lake. Pierre says
he is determined to get his trout. |
Wednesday, July 19, 2006. On the Atlin Rd. in Snafu
CG. |

The four of us decided the fish is not in Tagish Lake and we went to
Snafu Lake on the Atlin Rd. We will visit Atlin from there. |
Denis left his tackle box in the canoe at Snafu Lake
CG and someone stole it so he will have to slowly build it up again.
Now you know what to buy Denis for Christmas. |

On the road again. Were on the road again. Pierre why are you so
serious in your pictures. You have such exquisite taste in foods
I wish my dad would have been able to meet you. He loves to cook for
people and have them taste it. |

This is a view from the town of Atlin, beautiful, isn't it. Almost
makes you want to move here. It is the middle of July and it's only
about 17 or 18 degrees here. We are camped out 75 km. North of here
which is in Yukon but Atlin is in B.C. |
Friday, July 21, 2006. We head east towards Watson
Lake, Yukon and then down the Cassiar Highway into B.C. |
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