The Portage Glacier just outside Anchorage is a huge tourist attraction in the summer. In the winter, the lake at the toe of the glacier freezes over, and locals can skate to it.
AYESHA RASCOE, HOST:
In the summertime, the Portage Glacier, an hour’s drive southeast of Anchorage, is a huge draw for tourists. You can’t see the glacier from the visitor’s center, so people take boats out onto a lake that sits at the glacier’s toe to view it. But in the wintertime that lake freezes over, and locals put on skates and glide out to it. From Portage Lake, glaciologist Aurora Roth has this audio postcard.
AURORA ROTH, BYLINE: It’s 8 p.m. at the darkest time of year, but the moon is out, illuminating the mountain peaks that surround this lake. Snow reflects light in all directions. There are about 12 cars in the parking lot of the visitor center. Groups of twos and threes huddle along the shoreline, putting on their skates. It’s so cold that the ice crunches under our blades.
(SOUNDBITE OF ICE CRUNCHING)
ROTH: The lake is 3 miles long and curves around a corner towards the Portage Glacier. In the distance, you can see skaters’ silhouettes in the moonlight.
It’s maybe minus 5 degrees. All the stars are out – Orion, the Big Dipper.
This lake takes a long time to freeze because it’s so big and deep. When it does freeze, people in Anchorage post on Facebook. My phone lights up with text messages. And we go skating. I’m out here with Qunmigu Kacey Hopson who also came from Anchorage. It’s breathtaking.
QUNMIGU KACEY HOPSON: It’s like my friend said when, one time, she ran around and exclaimed, the world is all around me. You just feel like the world is all around you in this really profound way.
ROTH: We’re skating towards the hidden glacier, putting half a mile behind us and then another. We skate through a meadow of frost flowers, clusters of ice that look like glittering chrysanthemums.
(SOUNDBITE OF ICE CRUNCHING)
ROTH: I’m a…
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