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Jakes Corner HW 1 & HW 8 MP 886

Ernest
Explorer
Explorer
Hello,
I have been following this theard with great interest and doing planning for next years trip.
I was wondering if anyone had taken this cutoff and what the road was like. It looks really great and would get me to Skagway or should I take HW 2. Also which one might have the better views.
Thanks in advance for your input. Boy I wish I was up there with you all!
Ernest & Joanne
2000 Tradewinds 300 CAT
2014 Jeep Cherokee Limited
Travelingonthetradewinds.blogspot.com 2014 Alaska Blog
Travelingonthetradewinds1.blogspot.com 2017 South West Blog
7 REPLIES 7

paulj
Explorer II
Explorer II
In BC there also places like 100 Mile House and 150 Mile House, named for their distance from Lillooet (Old Cariboo Road).

sue_t
Explorer
Explorer
Wonowon, B.C.!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonowon,_British_Columbia
sue t.
Pictures from our many RV Adventures to Yukon & Alaska from Vancouver Island. Now we live in Yukon!

PA12DRVR
Explorer
Explorer
(Mostly for Sue.t and an admitted hijack):

Back in the day (and I just don't recall from my last-unfortunately-too-long-since-trip, there was a collection of buildings/enterprises, maybe a real community, called some variant of One-oh-One, Won-o-Won, etc that was, strangely enough at Milepost 101.

Has that location faded into the mists of time or do you know if it is still around?
CRL
My RV is a 1946 PA-12
Back in the GWN

sue_t
Explorer
Explorer
In Yukon, the highways aren't signed with numbers so people don't get familiar with the official number designations.

Locally, some of the highways are known by different names but everyone seems to also know the official name.

Further mussing things up here is the use of mileposts vs. kilometre posts along the Alaska Highway.

American visitors seem to prefer using the distances listed in the Milepost guide, usually using the familiar miles.

The posts along the highway display kilometres in Canada. Yet, very few locals use the km numbers to designate a location. "These days" locals tend to use place names.

Some of us 'old-timers' continue to use historical mileages which is how locations were referred to decades ago. The historical mileages differ from present-day mileages due to highway improvements, except for Mile 0 :B

For instance, I grew up at Twelve-oh-Four, very near Twelve-oh-Two.
The Alaska border was at Twelve-Twenty-One
I had friends who lived at Eleven-Sixty-Nine, Eleven-Eighteen, Ten-Eighty-Three and Ten-Sixteen.
On occasion we drove into Nine-Eighteen to stock up on supplies.
sue t.
Pictures from our many RV Adventures to Yukon & Alaska from Vancouver Island. Now we live in Yukon!

Ernest
Explorer
Explorer
sue.t wrote:
Highway numbers aren't used up here so I had to confirm that Hwy 8 was Tagish Road.

Taking either Tagish Road or the Klondike Highway from the Alaska Highway to Carcross are good options. Both are paved. Both are scenic, although the Klondike Hwy portion includes Emerald Lake and the Carcross Desert which are popular sights.

Tagish Road connects to the Klondike Highway at Carcross, where you can continue to Skagway.

If you are driving out again, then take the Klondike Highway all the way to Whitehorse and see Emerald Lake and the desert. If you're taking the ferry from Skagway then you'll miss those two lovely spots.


Thanks for the quick reply. Sorry for the confusion with the numbers. I'll use the names in the future.
Ernest & Joanne
2000 Tradewinds 300 CAT
2014 Jeep Cherokee Limited
Travelingonthetradewinds.blogspot.com 2014 Alaska Blog
Travelingonthetradewinds1.blogspot.com 2017 South West Blog

SideHillSoup
Explorer
Explorer
sue.t wrote:
Highway numbers aren't used up here so I had to confirm that Hwy 8 was Tagish Road.

Taking either Tagish Road or the Klondike Highway from the Alaska Highway to Carcross are good options. Both are paved. Both are scenic, although the Klondike Hwy portion includes Emerald Lake and the Carcross Desert which are popular sights.

Tagish Road connects to the Klondike Highway at Carcross, where you can continue to Skagway.

If you are driving out again, then take the Klondike Highway all the way to Whitehorse and see Emerald Lake and the desert. If you're taking the ferry from Skagway then you'll miss those two lovely spots.


Agree with Sue .... Again.... Your like my wife Sue,,,, " always" right! :B
We don't use hwy numbers down here either, I am for ever looking at a map when someone drops the hwy number or route number in a conversation .
Soup
2018 Northern Lite 8-11 EX Dry Bath
2017 Sierra SLE, 3500 HD / 4x4 / Duramax with a 6 speed Allison Trans
Torklift Super Hitch 20K, 48" Super Truss, front and rear frame mounted tie downs
Fast Gun Long Range SS Turnbuckles, Fast Gun locks

sue_t
Explorer
Explorer
Highway numbers aren't used up here so I had to confirm that Hwy 8 was Tagish Road.

Taking either Tagish Road or the Klondike Highway from the Alaska Highway to Carcross are good options. Both are paved. Both are scenic, although the Klondike Hwy portion includes Emerald Lake and the Carcross Desert which are popular sights.

Tagish Road connects to the Klondike Highway at Carcross, where you can continue to Skagway.

If you are driving out again, then take the Klondike Highway all the way to Whitehorse and see Emerald Lake and the desert. If you're taking the ferry from Skagway then you'll miss those two lovely spots.
sue t.
Pictures from our many RV Adventures to Yukon & Alaska from Vancouver Island. Now we live in Yukon!