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Alaska lives up to reputation as ultimate state for adventure

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When I found out that the national Outdoor Writers Association of America was having its annual conference there this year, that gave me my chance.

I set out with visions of grandeur and Alaska didn’t disappoint. It took me 4,500 air miles to get there. And once there, I put another 1,650 miles on my rental car.

Along the way, I learned that even in the wilderness, you’ll find the orange barrels and cones of construction zones. Traffic often came to a halt when a flagman stopped one lane of traffic so that construction crews could do their work.

I also learned that you’d better stop whenever you see the rare gas station or restaurant. They’re few and far between.

But there was a reward for the remoteness of those roads. Every turn offered new treasure. I marveled at snow-capped mountain peaks, waterfalls, countless creeks bubbling out of the mountains, and hillsides colored bright yellow from the changing leaves of aspen and birch trees. I briefly drove through snow in mountain passes, I fished in world-famous venues, sand I took a dog-sled ride on bare ground, not snow, at the Chena Hot Springs Resort near Fairbanks.

I sat in restaurants and bars and listened to talk that centered on fishing and hunting. My kind of places. I listened to the residents talk about the snow that the mountains had received the previous night, a sign that winter was on its way. And I talked to people such as Holcomb, who looks forward to winter in the remote wilderness.

“I came here to ski and snowboard,” she said. “I worked with a business that offered heli-skiing, and I still do that myself.

“But it’s the guiding for salmon that is the most fun for me. A lot of people come here and catch their fish of a lifetime.”

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