
The 1996 Alcan Winter Rally
A day-by-day description of the route to be traveled and places visited on
the 1996 Alcan Winter Rally
Participants will have already arrived from their home states or countries and
finished preparing their vehicle for the trip. The afternoon will be filled with
event registration and a cold weather survival class by the Mountain Rescue
Council. Those with the morning to spare might catch some last minute shopping
in Seattle,
The Emerald City, a quick lunch nearby at Redhook or
Cafe Veloce, or a cruise past Bill
Gates House, Lake Washington's most popular construction site.
- Saturday February 24 (Day #1)
From the Clarion Inn at Kirkland, the rally will start north on Interstate 405.
Soon leaving the Interstate behind, rallyists will wind their way through the
Cascade mountain foothills before crossing into British
Columbia, Virtually Yours! Canada,
near Abbotsford. With a long drive ahead, we download the free Super,
Natural British Columbia Screen Saver and
check out some of the scenery to come.Joining Canadian Highway 1, the route
winds north through the rugged Frasier River Canyon. At Cache Creek the rally
finally joins Highway 97 North and the rolling prairie of BC's Cariboo Country.
Temperatures begin to drop swiftly, and as evening falls we enter Quesnel .
This first day has covered 540 miles in about 12 hours. The outside
temperature is 0 F.
- Sunday February 25 (Day #2)
Rallyists are up early to make last minute adjustments and prepare for the day.
The day begins clear, cold, and bright, and the first slalom event is nearby at Gold
Pan Raceway. In this event cars will run one at a time on a snowy oval track
normally used for summer stock car racing. A great photo opportunity, and each
vehicle is allowed two runs for each driver just to share the embarrassment.

Departing Quesnel, we take an alternate route on the Old Prince George
Highway for another TSD section, then rejoin Highway 97 North. Time for a quick
burger and gas in Prince
George, then we push on quickly while checking the Central
Interior of British Columbia Weather Forecast, since we're now heading into
the Hart range of the Canadian Rockies and road closure is a possibility. In the
late afternoon we again stop for gas in Dawson
Creek, BC, and a mayor's reception and photo opportunity at the Alaska
Highway's Mile 0 marker. Another two hours of TSD route on secondary roads and
we finally stop for the evening atFort
Saint John, about mile 47 on the Highway.
This second day covered 510 miles (total mileage here is 1050). The outside
temperature tonight will be -20F.
- Monday February 26 (Day #3)

An early start,
opening with a TSD through the Kansas-like rolling hills of this Peace
River Region. Quickly back on the Alaska Highway we head north again with
some lasting impressions of this northern farmland Scenes
from the Peace Region. A late lunch in Fort Nelson, and time for a second
track competion. From here we head into the highest and most rugged part of the
Alaska Highway, past Summit Lake, Muncho Lake and the Liard River. Dinner
tonight is at Watson Lake, just after we enter theYukon at
Contact Creek. As the road straightens and flattens, we push on late into the
evening. This will be our first good opportunity to see the Northern
Lights, and we finally stop in Whitehorse at the Regina Hotel - the Regina
is significant to us both as headquarters for the Yukon
Quest and because it has a heated
parking garage!
Day three has covered 850 miles (total to here is 1900). The temperature is
again -20F.
- Tuesday February 27 (Day #4)
A short day, and a chance to sleep in a bit. We will begin with a TSD near town,
then proceed immediately to a Solo II on the Yukon River very close to our
hotel. The 3-mile course here is maintained by the Whiteout Snowmobile Club, and
we'll use a 1 1/2 mile portion that affords good safety and visibility as each
car loops down the river and back along the other shore. After this, time for
lunch and some sightseeing (Yukon
Picture Library) or shopping (Yukon
Artist Jim Robb) before the trip north to Dawson City. After checking in at
the Eldorado Hotel, we have another TSD nearby and an evening to rest up for the
long drive to come.Day four has covered 320 miles, the total to here is 2230.
The temperature is -40F tonight...
- Wednesday February 28 (Day #5)

This section will
proceed 1400 miles from Dawson City to Prudhoe Bay, the Alcan's longest driving
stretch. Teams will have two options and may either leave very early from Dawson
to allow for a short night's sleep in Fairbanks, or wait for a scheduled Dog
Mushing photo opportunity and
depart in the late morning to drive through the night. In either case, teams will regroup
for a scheduled departure from Fairbanks (checking the current
Fairbanks weather) very early Thursday morning and start up the infamous
Dalton Highway (the north slope "haul road"). (For Northern Lights odds, see the
U of Alaska at Fairbanks Geophysical Institute's Auroral
Activity Forecast). Arriving at Prudhoe in the afternoon, we take a guided
side trip across the private Kuparic oilfield to visit the shore of the Arctic
Ocean at Ilicktak Point (Xerox
PARC Map Viewer: Prudhoe Bay area), and see how an oil field coexists in
this sensitive area (Environmental
Record at Prudhoe Bay).
The total mileage is about 3,700. It's windy and at least -50F here tonight.
This will again be a relatively short day, with a 400 mile trip back to
Fairbanks and civilization (welcome
to the End of the Road). Another TSD then we'll rest and regroup here for
the night before a final push to the finish in Anchorage. Fairbanks is also a
popular dog mushing center (see Mushing
Magazine Online), and a place to learn more about the sport.
- Saturday March 2 (Day #8)
One more early departure, south on the Parks Highway toward Anchorage (current
Anchorage weather ). This
last day will include one or two more TSD's, and a final slalom event on the
course at Big Lake near Wasilla. The 1996 Iditarod
Race started in Anchorage
this morning, so we'll also stop to see the action at the Iditarod
headquarters in Wasilla. The
"official finish" location for one last photo op, then on to the Regal
Alaskan Hotel for the night.
Sponsor Isuzu will host the awards banquet here, starting about 8pm. The total
event distance was 4,750 miles, or about double the shortest road distance from
Seattle to Anchorage...
For the 6th year the Regal Alaskan is also the Iditarod
host hotel, and the lobby has tables full of souvenirs. The bar has a great
view of small planes on skis coming and going on Lake Spenard, and is a good
argument for a Monday flight home! For more to do here check the Anchorage
Convention And Visitors Bureau Home Page, or Alaskan
Tour Guide - ImagiNet, Inc.