Searching for Alaska's northern lights

Author went in winter to see northern lights. In the daytime, she saw much more.

Moonrise in Fairbanks, Alaska, over a yurt at Borealis Basecamp. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Katherine Frey.
Moonrise in Fairbanks, Alaska, over a yurt at Borealis Basecamp. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Katherine Frey.

Where were they?

The hour was closer to midnight than noon, and the sky above the small Alaskan town of Talkeetna was as black as a bear's button nose. Several stars twinkled their encouragement. Before stepping out in the minus-numbing-degree air, I had checked the Aurora Forecast. The rating was a 5, which the Geophysical Institute described as meaning "Auroral activity will be high." I had even brought along my lucky charm, Aurora Dora.

So I ask again: Where were they?

"Nature does as nature wants," said the northern lights photographer as we stood in the middle of an empty street, gazing at a layer of creamy clouds.

The aurora borealis is a staple of Alaskan winters, as common as moose, down skirts and frosted beards. From roughly late August through mid-April, the skies take on a hallucinogenic cast, the result of sun particles colliding with gases and releasing streamers of green, pink, blue, red and violet. The auroral zone — the staging area for the astronomical show — covers a wide swath of the northern polar region. Interior Alaska, for one, averages 40 to 100 sightings a year. In fact, Fairbanks is so keen on the spectacle that it created a fifth season, the Aurora Season.

Even with such strong odds, there are no guarantees. On my migration north from Anchorage to Fairbanks, I always kept one eye on the sky, but I allowed the other one to wander. Offseason Alaska, I learned, also illuminates.

Alaskans cultivate a strong sense of community, and that neighborly spirit extends to strangers chasing down the lights. Locals willingly offer tips on how to see them and will even watch the skies for you so that you can sleep.

At the Hotel Captain Cook in Anchorage, the first stop on my nine-night quest, I ordered a wake-up call. A front-desk attendant jotted down my room number and promised to rouse me, no matter the hour, to see the lights. I asked him where the staff receives its information, imagining an emergency aurora hotline and text alerts. Cabdrivers and a co-worker whose shift ends at 11 p.m., he said. However, he said he won't typically awaken guests for a reading below a 6.

"You'll see it for a minute," he said, "and then it's gone."

The Alaska Railroad’s Aurora Winter Train runs through spectacular vistas on the way to prime destinations for viewing the northern lights.
The Alaska Railroad’s Aurora Winter Train runs through spectacular vistas on the way to prime destinations for viewing the northern lights.

RIDING THE RAILS

The Aurora Winter Train travels around the same time span as its namesake, from mid-September through mid-May. The train departs Anchorage on Saturdays and arrives in Fairbanks 12 hours later; it reverses course on Sundays. Several years ago, the railway added a midweek run on select dates to accommodate the growing number of offseason passengers.

On the train, an employee rattled off interesting facts from both sides of the track. On your left, a grove of trees felled by the 9.2-magnitude earthquake of 1964. On your right, a moose. On your left, Denali, the tallest mountain in North America. On your right, two moose.

Most of the travelers continued onward to Fairbanks, but a few of us hopped off at Talkeetna. I disembarked knowing that I would be stuck here for several days. The next passenger train would not return till Tuesday.

Trisha Costello, who owns the Roadhouse, and her partner picked us up. The lodge and restaurant are a short walk from the station, but we took the long way around to get the lay of the town: the Fairview Inn, for music and drinks; the Walter Harper Talkeetna Ranger Station, for a video about mountain climbing in Denali National Park; and Nagley's Store, office of the late Mayor Stubbs, a cat. We passed only a few people walking around the snowy streets, a sharp contrast to summer, when throngs of cruisers and land tourists jam the town like spawning salmon.

"There are two Alaskas," Trisha said. "Winter Alaska really belongs to Alaskans, with the occasional visitor, flight crew or traveling nurse. They come in the winter because it's not summer."

Iris Vandenham leads a dog team home after getting water from a Talkeetna spring.
Iris Vandenham leads a dog team home after getting water from a Talkeetna spring.

IN THE DAYTIME

To view the northern lights, you need utter darkness. That leaves a lot of daylight hours to fill. To be exact, 9 hours, 51 minutes and 32 seconds on the first day I arrived, with more than a six-minute gain each day thereafter.

Several outfitters in Talkeetna rent snowmachines and arrange dog-sled rides, but only Iris Vondenham shows visitors how her dogs help her run the household.

"I have a spring a quarter-mile away," said the owner of Talkeetna Flower and Homestead Tours. "I use four dogs to fill up the jugs."

Iris, who came to Alaska by way of the Netherlands and Silicon Valley, homesteads seven miles south of Talkeetna. In addition to traditional dog sled tours, she invites guests into her home, a gnome-like dwelling with the basic amenities of a campsite. She chops wood for her stove, forages chaga for tea and relies on solar panels and a generator to power her lights (winter-use only) and computer (she still works as a Web designer).

"People say, 'You're so tough,'" she said, "but I don't have an option."

Iris bought the 40-acre property for her dogs. She needed space for her septet to run — and howl — without annoying the neighbors.

"Every day, they're pretty much running," she said of the dogs, which the day before had helped her groom five miles of trails.

The dogs live outdoors, in or atop their wooden shelters, although Iris will sometimes bring a few inside for a sleepover. Iris unhooked Sam, an Alaskan husky mix who acted more like a lap dog than a lead-in-training. I followed him inside, where Iris made tea and talked about her way of life. She bought the property and transformed the weekend retreat (basically a skeleton with an outhouse) into her year-round residence. She has a long list of renovation ideas, including a garden, woodshed, root cellar, sauna and smoker.

AURORA DORA

In the winter, the Aurora Dora Gallery in Talkeetna opens at 1 p.m. Owner Dora Redman, who works the graveyard shift as a northern lights photographer, is not an early riser. When she teaches workshops, her day starts at 10 p.m.

Dora hails from Sao Paolo, a Brazilian city that has neither northern lights nor snow. She has been photographing the aurora borealis for nearly 20 years and understands the natural phenomenon as well as any Alaskan or geophysicist.

"You need dark, clear skies with no light pollution," she said. "Some people believe that if you whistle, the aurora will come closer."

She paused and looked at me with mock sternness.

"Please don't whistle."

Dora explained that we were in the low end of the 11-year solar cycle, which means the amount of activity in the sun that produces sun spots is calmer and creates fewer intense auroras.

"In three to five years," she said, "we will reach a high."

But, she added, "Any little shake of the magnetic field will produce some form of the aurora."

I told Dora that I was headed to Fairbanks next. She said the city was an excellent spot for the lights, because Fairbanks sits directly under the aurora oval. However, for a dramatic framing of the main subject, she prefers Talkeetna.

"For a photographer, Fairbanks is gorgeous, but Talkeetna is phenomenal," she said. "We have something no one else has — the Alaska Range on the northern horizon."

To bide my time, I set out in search of moose and more people who could assure me that I would see the aurora.

A heated walkway leads to the steaming, geothermal waters at Chena Hot Springs Resort in Fairbanks, Alaska.
A heated walkway leads to the steaming, geothermal waters at Chena Hot Springs Resort in Fairbanks, Alaska.

HEATING UP

About 60 miles northeast of Fairbanks, the Chena Hot Springs have been pruning skin since 1905, when a pair of gold-mining brothers pursued a steamy tip from a U.S. Geological Survey team. The brew of sulfate, chloride and bicarbonate of sodium averages 106 degrees, easily 100 times warmer than the evening air temperature.

I stayed in the hot springs for more than two hours, my arms and legs wobbling like overcooked noodles. Back in my cabin, I was brushing my teeth when I noticed an insulated golf cart puttering down the lane. The vehicle pulled up and the driver walked toward my front door. Waving my toothbrush, I excitedly asked him, "Are you my wake-up call?"

He showed me an image of a neon green bolt hovering over the Ice Museum, a few steps from my cabin. I scoured the sky for a match, but only saw a fuzzy green shape that, in a different place and time, could pass for pollution. Wrapped in a quilt, I roamed the resort wishing upon a star for a stronger aurora. But I was too late: The stars had shut down the request line.

At the Borealis Basecamp, I set up my position before the sun dropped. Tea mug on the nightstand, gray down comforter peeled back, pillows stacked and angled. Now, I was ready for some bedtime aurora-viewing.

The base camp opened in November 2017 on 70 acres of boreal forest, 25 miles north of the bright lights and big city of Fairbanks. The natural features (trees, mountains, unobstructed sky) dwarf the bread crumbs of civilization, including a gold mine, an oil pipeline and the distant Elliott Highway.

Guests sleep in futuristic-looking domes that are off the grid, though you'd never know it without peeking behind Oz's curtain. I had heat, running water and a fridge. The dome's best feature: the giant window that turned the sleeping accommodations into an observatory.

I watched the full moon rise before venturing over to the communal yurt, where guests gather for meals and socializing. Jeremy Rogers, one of the owners, and Frank Stelges, who leads photography classes, were relaxing with a pair of dogs and a plate of pastries. I asked Jeremy about the inspiration for the domes. He said research centers in Antarctica use the shelters, as do rescue teams, after natural disasters. The fiberglass buildings are quick to assemble and can withstand extreme weather as well as polar bears. The base camp's domes are identical, with the exception of the 16-foot-wide helicopter-screen window. Those are a Borealis Basecamp original.

"Nothing was built for aurora-viewing," Jeremy said. "We are trying to create an aurora-centric destination."

For once, I didn't care if the sky was blotted out with snow clouds. That it was bright outside. That the Aurora Forecast was a 2. I was going to finally see the northern lights.

I entered a very dark space and, within minutes, swoops and swirls of green appeared before me. I watched the lights flit like gossamer scarves across the sky and cascade down like a waterfall. A detached voice reminded us that to see the aurora borealis, we needed patience and a parka.

I sank deeper into the movie theater seat at the University of Alaska Museum of the North in Fairbanks. Actually, I just needed patience.

For more information, visit travel­alaska.com.

Travel on 01/27/2019

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