
© Alaska Division of Tourism,
Chena Hot Springs |
The following information
was taken, in part, from the Alaska Wilderness Guide,
7th Edition, Vernon Publications Inc., Bellevue, Washington,
1993.
The U.S. Geological
Survey identifies 79 thermal springs in Alaska. Almost half
of these hot springs occur along the volcanic Alaska Peninsula
and Aleutian chain. The second greatest regional concentration
of springs is in southeastern Alaska. Hot springs are scattered
throughout the Interior and western Alaska as far north as
the Brooks Range and as far west as the Seward Peninsula.
|
Early miners and trappers
were quick to use the naturally occurring warm waters for baths.
Today approximately 25 percent of the recorded thermal springs are
used for bathing, irrigation or domestic use. Only a handful of
the known hot springs can be considered developed and these are
found in Southeast, Interior and the Western Alaska regions. Facilities
can range from full resorts to simple changing shacks at crude dams
to create sitting pools.
Southeast
Hot Springs
Hot springs are scattered
throughout Southeast Alaska. The soothing springs often are a destination
for wilderness travelers but in many cases, they are simply an added
treat. The town of Tenakee Springs actually grew up around the hot
springs which are still a major attraction for this community. Following
are a few of the springs found in Southeast Alaska.
Baranof Warm Springs.
Located 20 miles cast of Sitka on the east shore of Bararnof Island.
A private hot springs bath is located on Warm Springs Bay (status
unknown). Accessible by boat or floatplane. A Forest Service trail
extends a half mile from the hot springs to Baranof Lake where a
cabin is located. Cabin access is by floatpIane. It is riot possible
to hike from the springs to the cabin.
Chief Shakes Hot Springs.
Located off Ketili River, a slough of the Stikine River, approxirnately
12 miles upriver. The Hot Springs Slough Route is one of several
established Canoe/Kayak Routes along the Stikine. Two hot tubs,
1 enclosed in a screened structure, provide a good place to soak.
The open-air tub has a wooden deck around it, and both tubs have
changing area. There are also a picnic table, fire ring,
and an outdoor privy. The area is used
heavily in the evenings and weekends, according to the Forest Service.
Paddlers should also be aware that use of the Stikine and the slough
by powerboats is especially high during evenings and weekends. The
Forest Service maintains 2 cabins just upriver.
Goddard Hot Springs.
Located on the outer coast of Baranof Island on Hot Springs
Bay off of Sitka Sound, 16 miles south of Sitka. This may have been
the earliest Alaska mineral springs known to the Europeans
and before their arrival Indians came
from many miles away to benefit
from the healing waters. In
the rnid-1800s there were 3
cottages at Goddard that were used to house invalids from Sitka.
In the late 1880s, a Sitka company erected frame buildings for
the use of people seeking the water's
benefits. By the 1920s a 3-story hotel was built to provide
more sophisticated accommodations. The building was purchased in
1939 by the Territorial Legislature
as an overflow home for the
Sitka Pioneers' Home. After 1946
the building fell into disuse and was torn
down. Today, the city of Sitka owns the
property and maintains 2 modern cedar bathhouses
for recreational use. A few people
live year-round on nearby private land.
There are open shelters
over the hot tubs, which feature natural hot springs water and cold
water. The springs are very popular with area residents. The area
has outhouses. Boardwalks provide easy walking. Boaters can anchor
in the bay and go ashore in skiffs. This is riot a place to take
a boat without a chart; there are lots of rocks and shoals, especially
around the hot springs. There are protected routes to Sitka and
a fascinating series of coves and channels just north of the hot
springs. At the springs there are campsites in a grassy meadowlike
area and on higher ground. Biting black flies (whitesox) are plentiful
in the summer months.
Shelokum Hot Springs.
Located approximately, 90 miles north of Ketchikan in the Tongass
National Forest on the Cleveland Peninsula. A 2.2-mile trail begins
at Bailey Bay just south of Shelokum Creek and leads to Lake Shelokum.
At the inlet to the lake is a 3-sided shelter. The hot springs are
completely undisturbed and support a healthy population of unique
algal plant life.
Trocadero Soda Springs.
This seldom-visited carbonated "soda" springs is located
on the west coast of Prince of Wales Island about 12 miles southeast
of Craig. Access is by boat. Rubber boots are advised for this hike.
This is bear country; exercise caution, particularly when salmon
are spawning. The springs are reached by walking up a nameless creek
that has its outlet in a small inlet on the south shore of the bay.
The springs flow into the creek about a mile upstream. The first
sign of the springs are 2 giant golden steps. These are banks of
yellow tufa formed by the constant runoff from the springs. Tufa
is a geological term referring to a concretionary sediment of silica
or calcium carbonate deposited near the mouth of a mineral spring
or geyser. The 4- to 5acre area around the bubbling, hissing springs
features lunar like mounds and craters, splashed with colors ranging
from subtle yellow to iron red. The springs originate in muskeg,
then the mineralized water meanders about 100 feet, forming a deep
crust of tufa in which there are hundreds of small vents with escaping
gas and bubbling water. The highly carbonated water is described
as having "a sharp, pleasant taste" and has no unpleasant
odors. Although water from other carbonated springs in Southeast
has been bottled and sold in the past, Trocadero water has never
been commercially marketed.
White Sulphur Hot
Springs. Located within the West Chichagof-Yakobi Wilderness
area, some 65 miles northwest of Sitka. Many visitors fly in to
a small lake nearby and hike to the cabin or boat to Mirror Harbor
and walk the easy, year-round 0.8mile trail to the hot springs.
Various log bathhouses have been built over the principal springs
and in earlier years occasional hunters and trappers camped here.
At that time the pools were called Hoonah Warm Springs, but years
ago they were renamed for a dentist, Dr. White. In 1916 the U.S.
Forest Service built its first cabin and bathhouse here. This cabin
has been modernized in recent years so bathers can pull back a translucent
fiberglass screen and admire the view of the often turbulent Pacific
Ocean while soaking in the hot water. This is a popular bathing
spot for commercial fishing and charter boat guests, and a destination
for kayakers (primarily paddling from Pelican).
Western
Hot Springs
Pilgrim Hot Springs.
Located on the left hank of the Pilgrim River 13 miles northeast
of Salmon Lake. This site of a gold rush resort and later a Catholic
mission is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. In
the days of gold mining on the Seward Peninsula about 1900, the
property was known as Kruszgamepa Hot Springs arid was recreation
center for miners attracted by its spa baths, saloon, dance hall
and roadhouse. The roadhouse and saloon burned in 1908. The property
was given to Father Bellarmine Lafortune, who turned the ranch into
a mission and orphanage in 1917-18 and operated it until 1941, housing
up to 120 children. Ruins of the mission school and other church
properties remain at the site, which is still owned by the Catholic
Church. Access is by charter air service from Nome to a small airfield
at Pilgrim Hot Springs, or by car on an 8-mile gravel road that
joins the Nome-Taylor Road at Cottonwood.
Serpentine Hot Springs. Located within Bering Land Bridge National Preserve. The waters of Serpentine Hot Springs have long been sought for their healthful properties. Eskimo shamans gathered here in earlier times. When the influence of the shamans had passed, Native healers still relied on these waters to help their followers. Likely the most visited area of Bering Land Bridge National Preserve, Serpentine still offers a soothing break from the harsh surrounding climate, and the nearby granite tors create a dramatic landscape that lures hikers to explore. A public-use cabin is located at the springs. Winter trails from Shishmaref and other traditional villages lead to Hot Springs Creek near the tractor trail. Traverse by snow machine and dogsled in winter reaches the springs from the end of the Nome-Taylor (Kougarok) Road. A 1,100-foot airstrip at the hot springs allows wheeled plane access.
Interior
Hot Springs
Chena Hot Springs:
Located about 50 air miles northeast of Fairbanks, this popular
private resort can be reach via the Steese Highway and the Chena
Hot Springs Road. The road cuts through Chena Rivers State
Recreation Area, an exceptional area offering picnic sites, campgrounds
and easy access to the Chena River's grayling fishery (catch-and-release
only).
Chena Hot Springs were
first reported in 1907 by U.S. Geological Survey field teams.
The resort offers food, lodging and swimming in the mineral springs;
phone (907) 452-7867. There is also an airstrip at the lodge. Overnight
camping is available for a fee in the parking area at the end of
the road.
Circle Hot Springs:
About 100 miles northeast of Fairbanks, the springs are 8 miles
off Mile 127.8 Steese Highway. Ketchum Creek BLM Campground is located
at Mile 5.7 of the Circle Hot Springs Road, offering 12 campsites
with toilets, tables and firepits. At the hot springs, year-round
swimming, lodging, food, groceries, bakery, gas and camper parking
are available; phone (907) 520-5113.
Circle Hot Springs was
discovered in 1893 by prospector William Greats. In 1905, Franklin
Leach homesteaded around the springs. Tents were used as the first
bathhouses. Many miners wintered over tat the springs when they
could not work on the creeks.
The springs provide warm
water for irrigating the resort's garden, which produces vegetables
of great variety and size. Many buildings have been extensively
renovated.
Manley Hot Springs:
Located 151 miles from Fairbanks via the Elliott Highway, the
springs are on a hillside just outside the community of the
same name. One spring runs 35 gallons a minute with a temperature
of 136 degrees farhenheit, another runs 110 gallons per minute at
135 degrees fahrenheit, for a total of some 208,800 gallons every
24 hours. Manley Hot Springs Resort ((907) 672-3611) offers good,
lodge, camping and swimming in a hot mineral spring-fed pool.
The resort is open year-round.
Melozi Hot Springs:
Located on Hot Springs Creek, 30 miles northeast of Ruby. There
is a group of 20 or so springs along the creek. A 1911 U.S. Geological
Survey team reported finding a 2-room cabin and 2 small bathhouses
on the springs. Today, Melozi Hot Springs is the site of a
private fly-in wilderness lodge; phone (907) 892-6987.
Alaska
Science Forum Hotsprings Article.
|