Tag Archives: Alaska cruise

Alaska cruise part 2: Salmon and totems

(I don’t have the photoshop skills to make it look like this orca is leaping from the water behind DH, so I’ll just let you imagine that it’s happening, while he obliviously checks his social media accounts. It’s a running joke.)

Icy Strait Point is at the lower end of Glacier Bay; you pass by going in and out. There used to be a cannery there dating from 1912, run by the Hoonah tribe. The town of Hoonah is about a mile away. Icy Strait Point as a cruise port was built specifically for the cruise trade, and is only open when a cruise ship is in port. There are three restaurants and a gondola ride to a higher gondola for a zip line tour. And a cannery museum and gift shop (of course). I was particularly interested in seeing the cannery museum, so I could show DH just what it was I was doing way back when.

This photo felt nostalgically like cannery home…

Our cannery on Kodiak Island canned mostly red (sockeye) and pink (humpies!) salmon. I never knew what the fish looked like; I worked up in the egghouse processing and packing salmon roe to send to Japan. I could identify which kind of salmon the eggs came from, though! The chum/keta eggs were the biggest, and you could sample the brined eggs right off the conveyor belt.

There was no reference to salmon eggs in the cannery museum, so I had to be satisfied with the fish cannery displays.

After the salmon heads were removed by machine, pullers removed the egg/milt sacs, and then the slimers cleaned the inside of the fish (oh, the sliming knife…). The butchering machines were known as Iron Chinks, because they replaced Chinese workers at the beginning of the 20th century and made the canning work much faster. Yes, it’s an offensive term. That’s history. I heard it when I worked in the cannery, and we heard it referred to in a cannery documentary that we watched at a museum in Ketchikan.

18 year old me, in the egghouse

We (my friends and family) always called them lines: How many lines are we running today? We could process anywhere from 40,000 to 120,000 fish per day, given enough overtime. We made our money on overtime, and there was nowhere to spend it. The cannery was the only thing on Alitak Bay at the end of Kodiak Island; we arrived for the summer by seaplane from Kodiak, and lived in bunkhouses and were fed in mess halls. We made friends and had dance parties! I worked in the egghouse for five summers, and that’s how I paid for college.

Cleaning the fish (not real fish here!)
Canning line
Retorts, or pressure cookers
Labels display

It’s a very far leap from egghouse girl to knitting designer/teacher!

On to Sitka!

St Michael Cathedral

Sitka was the capital of the Russia’s Alaska colony from the 1700’s until 1867; it was called New Archangel. This building is a reconstruction of the original 1848 building which burned in 1966. Sitka is still the Seat of the Diocese of Alaska for the Russian Orthodox Church. This building is part of the Sitka National Historical Park, as is the Totem Trail we visited.

Bicentennial Pole

The Bicentennial Pole stands in front of the Visitors Center. It was carved by Duane Pasco, who won a contest to depict 200 years of Pacific Coast Indian cultural history. Read from the bottom up: The Native people before the arrival of Europeans, Raven and Eagle (the Tlingit moieties or clans), the arrival of Europeans (see the firearms?), and the top figure representing the Northwest Coast Indians of today.

History Pole depicting the first people to occupy the Sitka area.
Cormorant Memorial-Mortuary Column

I thought this was a raven, but further research indicates that it’s most likely a cormorant. It’s a recarving by Tommy Joseph; the original pole was obtained in 1903 from a Tlingit village (that sounds ominously colonial, and it probably was).

We actually went the wrong way on the Totem Trail loop, so we didn’t see as many totem poles as we had planned to. But it took us to a footbridge over the Indian River, which was full of salmon headed upriver to spawn. Or perhaps they were spawning right there.

Helpful interpretive sign!

Walking to and from the Totem Trail, we saw salmon jumping in the water.

Back to the boat!

The VK knitters joined the Holland America knitters meet up in the art studio. This is on the 11th floor, off the Crow’s Nest lounge which looks out front.

The next day we visited Ketchikan, which was my favorite town. (Glacier Bay was my favorite stop overall.)

Creek Street, on Ketchikan Creek

I liked that you could see how the town had grown up on the creek, and that they have tried to preserve it. The green house is a preserved bordello, Dolly’s.

We saw salmon heading upstream, and a hungry seal planning its dinner.

I had a great visit at the yarn shop, Fabulous Fiber Arts and More. We also visited the Tongass Historical Museum, which showed Alaska’s history as a Native fish camp, mining hub, salmon canning capital, and timber town.

Can you tell that I like science, history, and museums? The National Parks app was a great help on my phone. Cruise ports are full of souvenir and jewelry shops, which don’t interest me. But I can figure out how to have a good time anyway!

We spent the rest of that day cruising to Victoria, British Columbia. We were in port from 8 to 11:30 pm, so we opted to stay on board and pack. The next day we spent at sea headed back to Seattle, so it was time for another knitting class. Ana and I swapped students, and we now have more brioche knitters, and Portuguese-style knitters too.

Knitting and looking for orcas
Dutch 75 (French 75 with Dutch gin and a sexy ORANGE twist)

This bit of brioche was my social knitting for the cruise. It’s not hard, basically brioche rib with just a little bit of thinking at the edge. It turns out this is just a swatch; I’m playing with a design idea and the rib needs shaping, and a different needle overall. But it was great to have on this cruise.

I really enjoyed this trip! I hope you enjoyed the travelogue. Onward!

Alaska cruise part 1: Glaciers!

A travelogue post! With a bit of knitting…

I had the pleasure of teaching on the Vogue Knitting Alaska Cruise earlier this month. I hadn’t been to Alaska since working five summers in a Kodiak Island cannery to pay for college, so I was looking forward to seeing more of the state, and not being covered in fish slime.

We sailed on the Holland America Eurodam, which can accommodate 2000 passengers. This is a nice sized ship, not overwhelming, but big enough to have lots of options for dining and amusements.

Veranda stateroom

DH came with me on this trip. Can a marriage survive a week sharing a room this size? Sure! Just don’t make me share a closet! One of us is tidier than the other…

With co-teacher Ana Campos

It was still summer when we sailed out of Seattle, and we made the most of it!

Happy knitters on the aft deck
We love brioche!

The next day was spent at sea, which meant there were no distractions from knitting class. Except for the orcas that we missed because we weren’t watching for them.

Laura began the increases and decreases by the end of class, and she finished her hat before the end of the cruise. Well done!

Lunch and knitting

This was the one day that the seas were a bit rough (because we were on the ocean rather than in the Inside Passage), so I treated myself to a lovely lunch of ginger ale and some random pretzels from my travel bag (Alaska Airlines, maybe?). And Dramamine. Yum! Things smoothed out a few hours later.

Juneau was our first stop, the next morning. Friends Tim and MJ were on this cruise with us too. Tim was in our wedding 41 years ago. Time flies! My two goals for Juneau: To visit a yarn shop for qiviut, and to see the Mendenhall Glacier. I’m a science nerd.

Mendenhall Glacier and Nugget Falls

It takes 200 years for ice to move from its beginning as as snow on the Juneau Icefields to the terminus of the glacier at Mendenhall Lake.

Stunning. It really is a river of ice. And it’s huge.

It’s an easy walk to Nugget Falls. The visitors give you a better sense of how big the glacier and falls are. I met a man the next day who had taken a dip into the lake below Nugget Falls; he’s a fan of ice baths. Brrrrrr no thank you! But he did help me spot mountain goats with my binoculars.

Iceberg with ice birds (zoom in)
Touch it!

It’s someone’s job to put glacial ice samples under the sign every day. These are the things I think about…

The next day we cruised Glacier Bay. This is a national park and preserve, and park rangers came on board to narrate the day. This was my favorite day of the trip.

Fairweather Range
Reid Glacier inlet
Lamplugh Glacier
Gilman (left) and Johns Hopkins Glaciers

The face of the Johns Hopkins Glacier is 250 feet high.

We saw several calvings (ice falling from the face of the glacier)

The Johns Hopkins Glacier has been off limits to cruise ships for most of the summer, to protect the harbor seal pupping grounds. The pups spend their time on ice floes, safe from predators. This visit was the first for the Eurodam since the beginning of summer.

See the pups? (hi-res photo so you can zoom in)
Better?

I took this last photo through my binoculars, and cropped it. All for you, dear reader!

Selfie (ussie?) on the veranda with Johns Hopkins Glacier

All in all, a spectacular day. But the fun wasn’t over. The Eurodam serves tea every afternoon at 3 pm, so we had a Knitters’ Tea. Bonus points if you decorated a hat (supplied by VK) for it.

And it happened to be my birthday, so there was a bit of cake, too.

Happy birthday to me, with an Indonesian happiness song from the wait staff

This post has gone long, so I’m going to end with this glacier day, and begin another post with salmon, another Alaskan treasure.

Onward!

Alaska cruise: Yarn shop hop

I had a great time on the Vogue Knitting Alaska Cruise on the Holland America Eurodam. I taught brioche classes, had fun with other knitters and DH (my plus one), and visited some cool towns and glaciers. But I know you’re here for the yarn, so I’ll start with my three yarn shop visits.

Display case at Changing Tides, and is that a JaMPDX yarn bowl?

Our first stop was in Juneau. I made a quick scouting trip as DH waited for me in a coffee shop before our tour to Mendenhall Glacier. Changing Tides (Instagram link, formerly Seaside Yarns) is right in the port area. They have yarn and lots of fabric for quilters, too. Local dyers Juneau Woolies and Alaskan Yarn Co. are featured here.

Qiviut, or qiveut

I try not to stash a lot of yarn; I’d rather shop for each project as I go. But I knew I wanted to get a skein of qiviut, musk ox fiber, while on this trip. You can buy qiviut yarn in its natural brown color, but this lovely Violet called my name. Qiviut is very soft with a lovely halo. Stitch definition won’t be great, but that’s not the point. It’s lightweight, warm, and cozy, and it packs down to nearly nothing. This skein is 200 yards of fingering weight, and it will be a simple cowl, eventually.

Qiviut facts, click to embiggen

Changing Tides also had a little goodie bag for VK cruisers: a mini skein, postcard, and tea. Sweet!

In Sitka I stopped at the Raven’s Hook, a small arts and crafts store with yarn and other craft supplies. No qiviut here.

My favorite thing here was the yarn dyed by Raven Frog Fibers in kits for the Glacier Bay Beanie by Nancy Bates. I resisted because I knew I’d never knit the hat (I don’t wear them very often), but oh how I coveted that blue yarn! I’d love a whole skein of it, please.

In Ketchikan I visited Fabulous Fiber Arts and More (formerly The Hive on the Creek). This is an easy walk from the dock.

They have an inspiring wall of yarn from Raven Frog Fibers (and more twisted hanks in the cubbies below), including the Glacier Bay Beanie kits. I still resisted the beanie, but I swear it was following me!

Raven Frog’s Garden Wall colorway was swoon-worthy.

Fabulous Fiber’s other featured indie dyer is Robin’s Nest Fiber Arts; Robin is one of the owners of the shop. She dyes very pretty yarns on interesting bases.

I fell in love with this Robin’s Nest color on a sparkle base, but Rhoda found it first. Clearly it’s her palette; it goes with what she’s wearing! And no, Rhoda wasn’t on my cruise; she and Jen were on a different ship, the Royal Princess. We ran into each other in both Juneau and Ketchikan. (I first met Rhoda and Jen at VKLNYC last February.) Like the beanie kit, I think they’re following me!

Juneau meetup

They were out of qiviut here, so I’m glad I bought some in Juneau while I had the chance. That’s my lone Alaska yarn souvenir.

My other cruise souvenir? Covid-19! After we got home, I poured myself a glass of bubbly. It didn’t taste like anything. Nor did the cherry tomato, chocolate chips, and pistachios I tried after that. Uh-oh. (Breakfast on the ship was delicious that morning.)

Guess which one is mine? I feel like I have a cold; it’s not terrible. I’m hoping I can taste/smell things again soon!

Upcoming Brioche Pastiche update

Brioche Pastiche

This is the original Brioche Pastiche (Ravelry link); I designed it to be a quick start introduction to brioche in the round for a 3 hour class back in 2018. It begins with a bit of 2 color brioche rib to learn and get comfortable with the technique. Increases and decreases happen next, to form the leafy pattern.

Alternate crown

Last year I added a different crown shaping to the pattern, just for fun.

And now I’m planning to add a cowl to the pattern. This one is pretty short; I’m hedging my bets to make sure that two 100g skeins of worsted weight yarn can make a cowl and hat set. I’m keeping careful track with my handy yarn scale! (Some would call it a kitchen scale, but I know better.)

So I’m re-knitting the hat with the alternate crown, too. I want the pattern to look more cohesive, so I want new pictures for hat and cowl in the same color set, with the same yarn as the original (Malabrigo Worsted). Three color sets and two yarns is too jangly in one pattern.

While I’m at it, I’m making the pattern “choose your own adventure” style. I like offering both hat and cowl in a class, because not everyone wears hats, and not everyone wears cowls, either. Also, in class, a student can choose to complete a project in plain brioche rib, if they’re not ready to tackle increases and decreases. Lots of options! Those options are also good for knitting at home.

That’s a lot of updating! So I’m going to make these all these changes to the pattern, and make it stand alone. It will no longer be part of the Brioche Hat Trick (Ravelry link) collection when the updated pattern is released. If you already purchased Brioche Pastiche (Ravelry link), or the Brioche Hat Trick collection, you’ll get this updated pattern for no additional charge. If you want the updated Brioche Pastiche pattern, buy it now at the current price (pattern or collection), and you’ll get the update without paying the new price.

This pattern will be my teaching pattern on the Vogue Knitting Cruise to Alaska in September. That’s what’s driving this update! We had thought about using Whale Watch Cap and Cowl, but we have some repeat cruisers and wanted to do a different brioche project. We’ll pretend that those leaves are sea kelp, and stay on theme. I’m really looking forward to this cruise; I haven’t been to Alaska since working at a salmon cannery to pay for college.

No salmon roe packing for me this time!