Denali's Medicine

Denali at sunset as seen from Half Dome, September 1990.

At first I didn’t recognize the power of the medicine I had stepped into during my first journey to Denali. I was too absorbed in photographing a she-wolf who approached my camp in the afternoon of the third day. I didn’t notice the obvious medicine sign in her visit. She closely circled my camp once counter- clockwise. Then approaching from where she began in the north to within three feet of where I squatted by the tent opening, she slowly bobbed her head and studied me through lightly falling snow.

Guiding in Denali

When I returned three years later I came guiding a group of 11 hikers from the Philadelphia area. We had broke into four small groups and set out on the alpine tundra to explore. I had paired with a 20ish computer programmer who had betrayed an eagerness for a ‘challenging’ adventure. I doubt he considered the possibility of a sentient Denali actually listening to his wishes. He could have been more careful articulating what he wanted. As it was, my partner and I rather ignorantly thrust ourselves, with full backpacks, into crossing three miles of some of the most challenging terrain Denali could offer: the Lower Muldrow Glacier Moraine.

Looking north at Muldrow Glacier's lower moraine. June 1993.

The largest and longest glaciers tend to carry down massive amounts of boulders, rocks and gravel on their surface every year. When a glacier reaches that area where it melts as fast as new ice arrives, the resulting ‘traffic jam’ can cause huge hills of rock and gravel to pile up (seen at left). Some hills will still contain ice just below the surface, lending more hazard to traversing them. It was into such challenge that my partner and I thrust ourselves at the unseemly hour of 9 pm one late June evening. We reached the other side by 6 am the next morning; in nine hours of exhausting work we had only traveled three miles.

After a few hours of rest, we ventured out on an ascending hike south, parallel to the mighty Muldrow. We followed a caribou migration path leading to a 5000′ pass (below) that overlooks a westward hairpin turn in Muldrow’s course. From the top I turned and photographed my partner as he began his return descent. A wind came up and low-lying clouds behind me began lifting. I turned back south and watched as peaks a few miles away began unveiling themselves. These peaks, climbing from Denali’s eastern ‘lap’, commanded my gaze. Again, I felt the spell that had compelled my return. I experienced a momentary call to return to this place again, though I knew not how or when I might do so. I have yet to return, though I remember the sensation, ten years later, as if it occurred only moments ago.

Looking south up the pass, 11 pm, June 1993.