The Prof takes his sons, James and Tom, fishing in America’s ice box: Alaska, the 49th state
Twice the size of Texas, with more coastline than the lower 48 states put together, and famously sold by the Russians in 1867 for less than two cents an acre, Alaska takes its name from the native alaxsxag, meaning ‘great country’. There are also several thousand salmon rivers and we were heading towards the Bristol Bay area, to the mighty Alagnak river. It’s a longish schlep to get there (six flights for one of the boys) and wasn’t overly helpful of Icelandair to leave most of our kit in Keflavik, but, eventually, our bush plane left the little airstrip at King Salmon—where, aptly enough, we had been waiting for another guest named Mr Salmon. Below us was endless green hinterland pocked with lakelets and scribbled across with streams.
This story is from the October 11, 2017 edition of Country Life UK.
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This story is from the October 11, 2017 edition of Country Life UK.
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