We had a
wonderful Fourth of July! Although we
weren’t able to celebrate the holiday with our biological family, we did enjoy celebrating
with our Alaskan-work family. The
holiday was different from any we ever experienced. It all began July 3rd, with street
dance beginning at 9:00 and fireworks beginning at 11:45 p.m., because it doesn’t
really get dusk until 11:30. From the
middle of June to the middle of July we really don’t see a dark night, just
dusk until 3:30 a.m. then daylight
begins. There was an amazing fireworks
display, with fireworks being shot off of a barge in the harbor.
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| How cute! |
The Fourth dawned
with a Kiddie parade beginning at 9:30 a.m., which ran three blocks long. After the three blocks some of the kids from
the parade entertained us with singing, tricks, or dance routine.
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Ten o’clock was the adult parade. The old White Pass engine blocked the sight
of the adult parade until it was ready to begin. The Royal Mounties even made an appearance. The parade went seven blocks through town,
around the court house and back down the same seven blocks, so you have the
opportunity to see the other side of the parade.
There was a
full day of games and races. I’ve never
heard of a SLOW bicycle race. It was hilarious watching people trying to ride
their bikes as slowly as possible. If
you lost your balance or your foot touched the pavement you were disqualified.
Courtney
participated in the spike driving contest, placing fifth out of 14 girls. Not too shabby. Now, she is suffering from
sore arm muscles. An example of train tracks were laid on the street. Contestants
tried to drive spikes into the ties. Men
had to drive five spikes, women three spikes in two minutes or less. The winning time for men was 12.5
seconds. Winning time for women was 46
seconds. Courtney completed it in 1 minute and 46 seconds. Not bad for a girl
who has never swung a sledge hammer before. When she completed the competition
she looked and sounded like she ran a few miles in that amount of time.
The reason
for this contest was because the railroad was the major reason Skagway didn’t
become a ghost town. Ships unloaded
cargo onto train cars, shipping supplies into Canada. Goods were shipped by rail from Canada into
Skagway to be loaded onto ships for transport.
From 1989 to 1942 the train ran right down the middle of the main street
of town.
Skagway will
celebrate anything to the fullest, even a big reason for keeping a small town
alive!
| Courtney and Rejoy, her sister in arms, after they completed the challenge. |


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