The South Riding RV Travels

617

14th-17th July 2010 - Whitehorse YT to Teslin YT to Dease Lake BC Museums

After we had sorted out the tyres and the oil change we headed down to Teslin where we had camped on the way up. We spotted this as we left.

Immediately after the campground is a bridge over the river. We never made it! As we pulled out on the road there was a huge bang and our engine suddenly sounded very sick. There is no mechanic in Teslin, we were faced with returning to Whitehorse 110 miles to the north or going on to Watson Lake 170 miles to the south. We were strongly advised to return to Whitehorse.

Well we sounded like a tank but we seemed to pull OK so we headed back for over two nervous hours. The RV repair place said 'It's the engine, go to Ford'. Ford said 'Can't look at it until the end of next week'. They sent us to Fountain Tyre who listened and said 'Sounds beyond us'. They sent us to Horsman Mechanical where Terry and Riley sorted us out. We had blown a spark plug out of the engine stripping the threads in the aluminium head. Apparently these engines are prone to it and they had a kit to fix it. They couldn't do it until the following afternoon and they recommended checking the other nine which took us to lunchtime on the 16th.

The engine from the inside of the cab with the doghouse removed. It is a 6.8L V10 engine and the cylinder which had blown was almost at the front on the right hand side. The most difficult to reach of course.
It wasn't any better from the front even with the air filters removed. But they did us an excellent job and it didn't turn out as expensive as I had feared and at least we found someone who knew what he was doing. The plugs had been changed about 5000 miles ago by a Ford dealer in Dawson Creek. I will be having words!
So we set off from Whitehorse south again, pausing to admire the mural on the wall of the Transportation Museum by the airport. This mainly celebrates the building of the Alaska Highway in 1940.
They also have some railway bits since the WPYR used to come as far as here. This is the 'little engine that did' - but I don't know what. It is a 12T 0-6-0T Porter tank engine and was built in 1888. It was used at the Coal Creek mine about 54 miles north west of Dawson City.
We didn't go round because we were now running rather behind schedule. So we just looked at the outside. This was once a sternwheeler but looks to have lost its paddles. Maybe they are being renovated.
Next door is the Beringia Museum covering the ice ages when the Bering Straits was a land bridge. The mammoths are unfortunately plastic.
So we headed south once more towards Watson Lake hoping to get as far as the junction with the Cassiar Highway.
Normally everything passes us as we only travel at 90kph (55mph). It is rare that we pass anything. The back wheels on this vintage car were wobbling quite a lot. We are a bit sensitive to that at the moment.
This is the bridge at Johnson's crossing where the road to Ross River turns off. The bridge is quite spectacular from this view but looks very ordinary when you cross it.

We were just 9km short of Teslin when there was an almighty bang and we were leaving a trail of bits. Rapid investigation revealed we had lost the tread from a rear tyre and we were also leaking propane. Teslin was becoming a bad place for us.

When the rear tyre blew it tore the gas line apart as you can see. Tthe red copper tube has been yanked out of the main gas feed. Fortunately we could smell it so I had turned the tank off almost immediately.
I had felt that we were stripping a tyre tread which was why we had had all the tyres checked in Whitehorse. Maybe I was right after all.
We found a young lad in Teslin who could change the tyre and he also fixed the gas line. Jan read for a while but then got persuaded to throw a stick for his dog and ended up making a friend for life.

We had to stay overnight yet again in Teslin.

We set off on Saturday morning in some trepidation but made it over the bridge and down 150 miles to Junction 37 where the Cassiar Highway starts. This is almost 800km long with almost no habitation or services and at this stage was not looking good.
There is a lot of frost heave and sections where it had been rebuilt. We had expected quite a lot of this road to still be gravel but so far we have only found this short section and it is better than some of the sealed road.
About 100km in we came to Jade City where they sell jade that they mine close by in northern BC. About 90% of the world's jade apparently comes from here. The jade is shipped to Asia for carving then shipped back to be sold here. These carved eagles outside are only wood - perhaps that's why they look so miserable!
Jan bought a small piece of  jade but not this one.
There are odd bits of old machinery from the mine but we couldn't find out where the mine actually is.
Continuing onward towards Dease Lake we pass this striking feature which is known as Needlepoint Mountain - for obvious reasons. There is almost no traffic on this road in either direction.
Dease Lake, although we are still 40 miles from the village and campsite.