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Hiking the Exit Glacier and the Harding Ice Field

A World Made of Ice

A single sheet of ice all the way to the horizon. This was the Harding Ice Field, a massive frozen wilderness that leads to multiple glaciers in the Kenai Fjords area. My sister and I stood there on the viewing promontory, just a large rock really, staring out into the vast white area before us. If you’ve seen Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back, we were on Hoth. A cold wind blew in our faces from the ice field, a fine mist of ice crystals assaulted us on that rocky outcrop.

From every direction, Snow surrounded us. There was snow, there was sky, and there was nothing else. Just below us, the Exit Glacier wound its way through the valley down towards Seward, Alaska. It was May, and in this place May is late winter. The rocks we stood on were the only solid ground we had felt in over two miles. The Park Service classifies this as a strenuous hike, and this was true, especially given how hard we had to fight the snow in May. Later in the season, once the trail is clear of snow, I suspect that this hike would be fairly mild, as the elevation gain is only about one thousand vertical feet per mile. But we were not here late in the season, and we cursed the snow as we made our way up from the valley.

A view of Westeros beyond the Wall… I mean this is where the Exit Glacier meets the Harding Ice Field. Note all of the crevasses on the glacier, a sign of how rapidly it moves.

On the Trail to the Harding Ice Field

About three hours earlier, we had set out from the trail head at the parking lot. Where we began, it was a wonderful, warm day. And then the trail began to climb, up and up through forest, then dense brush, and then over a ridge. And on that ridge the weather changed from seventy degrees to somewhere in the thirties and the trail vanished beneath hip deep snow. As it was late in the season, this snow was, ah, fickle. For a few hundred yards it would be perfect snow, firm enough to stand on but loose enough that we did not slip on it. And then, suddenly, one of us would break through and go into the snow up to our hip. And that process repeated for the second half of the four mile trail to the Harding Ice Field viewing point.

At a point, we simply stumbled our way up the trail, as we were so tired from post-holing through the snow. After losing the trail beneath a layer of snow, we had been following little pink surveyor’s flags, placed there by a park ranger to mark the trail. And then, up ahead of us, we saw a person, the first one we had seen all morning. It was the park ranger, and once we passed him, there were no more navigational flags.

We made it up to the viewing point before the Park Service did.

This is the ‘trail’ just after crossing the ridge. Directly behind us, it’s almost summer. Onward from here, the snow got pretty deep.

When we saw a few small shelters and signs, we knew we had reached the end of the trail. This was the observation point for the Ice Field. The view from this area was… other-worldly. The way the pure ice and snow stretched out before us. Three hundred square miles of ice. That’s about a quarter of the size of Rhode Island, and we stood there in awe of this. Formations like this once covered much of North America. And when they receded, they carved out valleys and moraines and lakes. They formed the Canadian Shield and gave shape to what we call the Rockies and Appalachians.

A Fossil From Another Age

And in this place, one of the last pieces of that pre-historic history remains today, shrinking faster than ever, but still impressive. Thousands of years ago, this would have been a common place, but looking at it now was surreal. This place, the Harding Ice Field, is like a fossil, an ancient piece of the past entombed by time itself, preserved from change. And though this ice field is but a tiny remnant of a time that passed long before humans settled into cities, this vast sheet of ice is a monument to the forces that shaped our world.

No photo can capture the incredible scope of this view. Glaciation as far as we could see. The Harding ice field is simply surreal – it feels like a place from somewhere else, and it kind of is. It’s a relic from an era that ended long ago.

Have you ever wondered why some valleys are shaped like a V and others are shaped like a U? U-shaped valleys once contained glaciers like those before us, and over the centuries, the tremendous weight of the ice pressed down the rock itself until the valley flattened out. A V-shaped valley was simply carved by water, formed by the erosion of a river, not the immense crushing power of a glacier.

After some time we began to grow cold, especially as the wind picked up and blasted us with glacial snow and ice pellets. And so we began our descent, much easier than our ascent. We actually slid down quite a bit of the firmer snow to save time and effort. We were low on water too, oops. And then, almost in an instant, we crossed back over that ridgeline and left the winter behind. Now, instead of impenetrable ice and snow, we saw the green valley ahead of us, trees and brush and no snow at all.

On the way back down, taking a final look at the Exit Glacier.

From there, we almost flew back to the ttrailhead This had indeed been a difficult hike, made worse by the snow conditions. The Harding Ice Field is a fairly popular tourist destination, though those people typically come in July or August when the cruise ships make the rounds of the Alaskan coast. I would love to go back, maybe even in winter for a snow shoe hike.

To be able to see snow and ice of that magnitude, a glacial formation older even than the human concept of time, was amazing. An ice field like this truly is like a fossil preserved in one place for millennia. Simply by seeing it, we were seeing history, a vision of what this continent once looked like. And that made the difficulty of the hike worth it.

We value reader feedback – What glaciers and ice fields have you explored? Have you been to these areas? Let us know what you think in the comments below!



This post first appeared on Adventure Travel Magazine, please read the originial post: here

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Hiking the Exit Glacier and the Harding Ice Field

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