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Alaska Hiway Skeeter Report

2lazy4U
Explorer
Explorer
For those who are ahead of the rest of us going north through Canada and AK, could you kindly give a mosquito report? I'll be tent camping with dogs and, having been in a huge swarm in Alberta once, am hoping to not repeat the experience. Thanks in advance.
17 REPLIES 17

tonymull
Explorer
Explorer
tonymull wrote:
2gypsies wrote:
Ever been to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan? Alaska isn't too bad!!



You just haven't been to the right part of Alaska! ๐Ÿ˜‰


Kidding! I've heard of the UP, I know it's bug heaven. Been to places in BC where you end up eating as many mosquitoes as sandwich or you just skip the food because you can stand them getting inside your headnet. My first time out in the woods near Fairbanks I had on jeans and thought it was cool that there were a thousand or so bombers on my legs....not so funny the next morning when I started scratching over 100 bites. Didn't make that mistake again, but last fall I watched a buddy sit with at least 100 on his back feasting through his t-shirt...no I'm not scratching your back, get a stick! You learn to wear tight weaves and some thickness or spray your clothes.

All that said, I've been to Montana and Idaho when there were hundreds of yellow jackets in camp. You can't keep them off you, but they are sure hard to ignore.

tonymull
Explorer
Explorer
2gypsies wrote:
Ever been to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan? Alaska isn't too bad!!



You just haven't been to the right part of Alaska! ๐Ÿ˜‰

2gypsies1
Explorer III
Explorer III
Ever been to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan? Alaska isn't too bad!!
Full-Timed for 16 Years
.... Back in S&B Again
Traveled 8 yr in a 40' 2004 Newmar Dutch Star Motorhome
& 8 yr in a 33' Travel Supreme 5th Wheel

joe_b_
Explorer II
Explorer II
When people talk about it is a dry year in the Fairbanks area, it is important to remember, this is all relative. Fairbanks gets less precipitation a year than does Tucson Arizona, so every year is dry for both places, LOL. The heat is what makes the difference. Fairbanks is classified as a subarctic climate and could be labeled as a northern desert with the little amount of precipitation they receive. But at Tony mentioned, with the underlying permafrost of the Interior of Alaska, any moisture received, tends to stick around. Water can't get through the layer of permafrost so it just sits around on top of it, and with the muskeg vegetation on top, which is an excellent insulation, you end up with lots of lakes and swamp like areas. Sometimes the permafrost starts a few inches below the ground surface and sometimes several feet, it can be a layer a few feet thick or it can be hundreds of feet thick. Once the insulation is scraped off to build a road or to build a building, it starts the frost to melt and most has the consistency of a bowl of jello. To build on it successfully, you have to keep the frost frozen, and that is not easy or cheap to do. You put insulation down before you pave or put in freeze piling to support the building. The freeze piling work in the same manner as do most of our RV refrigerators, by absorption and don't require electricity to operate, like running on propane in our rigs.

There is a very interesting permafrost tunnel in the Fairbanks area, run jointly by the U of A, Fairbanks and the US Army. I have been able to tour it a few times but don't remember who I had to talk into letting me go in it. A large railroad sized tunnel, going back into a hill side several hundred feet with all sorts of insulated doors to keep out the heat of summer. It has one of the foulest smells, of any place I can remember but very interesting if you can get access to it.

A lot of verbiage to say, even if it doesn't rain the normal amount in the summer time, there is still plenty of moisture in the muskeg/tundra/brush to raise large crops of bugs. The bugs, mosquitoes, no see ums, gnats, white sox, horse flys, etc. are a staple food of all the migratory birds that come to the north each summer to lay their eggs and raise their chicks. So they, the bugs, do serve a useful purpose, but at times, I do wonder, when being devoured by them.

Again it is all about location, stay on gravel, in the breeze, in towns, on thawed soil, out of the trees and you can keep to bug population to a manageable number. But what fun is that to go back home to the lower 48 and not have any good mosquito stories to tell. The Denali highway is often a great source for bug stories or anywhere out in the tundra vegetation.
joe b.
Stuart Florida
Formerly of Colorado and Alaska
2016 Fleetwood Flair 31 B Class A w/bunks
www.picturetrail.com/jbpacooper
Alaska-Colorado and other Trips posted
"Without challenge, adventure is impossible".

tonymull
Explorer
Explorer
Russell Clifton wrote:
The skeeters are alive and well in the Fairbanks area. Especially where there is stagnate water, trees, or people to chew on. I guess that just about covers the whole state.


I lived in Fairbanks for 3 years and spent a lot of time in the woods. Even on high ground there is still a lot of moisture under the moss that covers most of the ground because it's still frozen just a few inches down so they are everywhere. It was interesting to watch the progression from early summer 'bombers' that will nail you right through jeans, to smaller and smaller, but more aggressive ones right through fall. The last ones are only about a quarter as big as the early ones. I bet I used a gallon of DEET in those 3 summers. Had to put it on clothing too lots of the time.

Russell_Clifton
Explorer
Explorer
The skeeters are alive and well in the Fairbanks area. Especially where there is stagnate water, trees, or people to chew on. I guess that just about covers the whole state.

Teacher_s_Pet
Explorer
Explorer
When we stopped at Sue's in 2013, the little devils were all over our motorhome the moment we stopped at her gate. No doubt in my mind if I had still been on blood thinners, they would have cut through the screens to get to me.
'06 Phaeton 40' QSH
'14 Ford Flex SEL AWD Toad
'04 R-Vision Trail-Lite 213
Scottiemom's Pet or husband to Dale
RV.net Rallies 13, Other Rallies 21, Escapades 7
Fulltimers since 2005, Where are we?
Our Travel Blog

Scottiemom
Nomad
Nomad
Kinda tells you something when mosquitoes hit the windshield, doesn't it? Just sayin' . . .

Dale
Dale Pace
Widow of Terry (Teacher's Pet)

Traveling with Brendon, my Scottish Terrier

2022 Honda Odyssey
2011 Mazda Miata MX-5

2021 Coach House Platinum III 250DT
Fulltimed for 15 years, now living in Florida

http://www.skoolzoutforever.blogspot.com/

sue_t
Explorer
Explorer
Much depends on where and when you are in the neighborhood. At our cabin which is in an open area with light wind, there are few skeeters. Take a walk down our shaded driveway and you'll be swarmed if you stop for a second. On a cool morning, nothing is active. Before a rain, egads, they're bloodthirsty.

In the city (Whitehorse) I haven't seen one yet.
Lots hit my windshield on the way home though. I admit to not feeling remorse with a bug gets in the way of my car.

For the dogs, Advantix or Frontline will help a lot. Tends to keep the skeeters from swarming them. For my short-haired dog, it saves him. The long-haired dog gets swarmed but they can bite only her muzzle area.
sue t.
Pictures from our many RV Adventures to Yukon & Alaska from Vancouver Island. Now we live in Yukon!

alaska_dennis
Explorer
Explorer
I have seen 3 mosquitoes so far this year. Dry. The little flying bugs are more of a problem this early in the year.

explorenorth
Explorer
Explorer
There are virtually none so far in the Whitehorse area, I expect because it's been so incredibly dry.
Murray

Whitehorse, Yukon
http://ExploreNorth.com/
and blogging at http://ExploreNorthBlog.com/
I live to travel, and travel to really live

tonymull
Explorer
Explorer
Start now taking b vitamins in good quantities and while your up there don't eat potatoes or bananas. Skeeters hate the B's, B-6 specifically and they are drawn to potassium, heat, and carbon dioxide (which is why they seem worse when you are working hard.)

tonymull
Explorer
Explorer
Mosquitoes are just part of the wildlife! They vary year to year, place to place, even day to day. I had a few years in Alaska when I didn't use repellent all summer long and more years when I used it every day. There's really no foretelling of mosquitoes. They don't like smoke, they don't like wind...but they do like blood ๐Ÿ˜‰ But they are as much of part of the great north as anything else. They make repellent for dogs too!

Tee_Jay
Explorer
Explorer
On the trip north from May 6 to 13 we had no mosquito issue. So far nos issue in Alaska on the Kenai.