Here There and Everywhere

Expat wanderer

The Hanger at the Wharf in Juneau

First, we really love eating at the Hanger at the Wharf. So does just about everyone else. Twice, we got really lucky. It is easier getting a table if you are just two people, and it is easier getting a table if you eat early. As we are still on Pensacola tummy time, we are in luck. As the Celebration 2014 parade ended, we zipped straight over and as larger groups waited, we were immediately shown to a table for two.

No wonder The Hanger is so popular. The food is terrific and this is the view – straight down the Gastineau channel with Douglas and the cruise ships. As the sun slides behind the mountain, it is a stunning view:

00ViewFromHanger

Some hardier souls were eating outside on the deck. I used to be this hardy, but my years in the Middle East have softened me, made me not so good at eating in cool and drafty places, even in the middle of the Alaskan summer.

00HangerDeck

Inside The Hanger: great, courteous, friendly and efficient employees

00HangerPickUpOrders

Every table taken, the bar is packed, and people are waiting in the hallway to be seated:

00HangerInterior

My halibut tempura:
00HangerHalibutTempura

AdventureMan’s halibut burger and fries:
00HangerHalibutBurger

We liked the food and atmosphere so well that we went back a second time during the ceremonial dances and were happy to see a lot of the dancers eating there, too. I had the first mate’s plate, with salmon and halibut and a berry chutney and AdventureMan had grilled halibut. We both left happy. We would go there again in a heartbeat.

There is only one little thing about The Hanger that makes me uneasy, and it has nothing to do with The Hanger. When I was a little girl, living across the channel, I would watch for my Dad to come home – this was the airport for the amphibious planes, Alaska Coastal Airlines (now part of Alaska Airlines) and Ellis Airlines. When his plane would land, we would all rush to the car and drive like crazy across the bridge to pick him up (no cell phones then, LOL). So I still feel a little frisson and feel the ghosts of the past when I eat there.

00AmphibiousPlanes

June 23, 2014 - Posted by | Alaska, Arts & Handicrafts, Circle of Life and Death, Community, Cultural, Customer Service, Eating Out, ExPat Life, Food, Interconnected, Living Conditions, Local Lore, Photos, Restaurant, Road Trips | , ,

2 Comments »

  1. Very nice photos , you are really enjoying your trip and it shows in the photos , and i am enjoying them too . Great photos of shipping things into Juneau too .

    Comment by daggero | June 24, 2014 | Reply

    • It’s also why I had such a great time in Kuwait, my friend. I always like to know how things are done, why they are done that way; do you know the story of the Elephant child? I am the elephant child, always sticking my nose in places because I have a lively curiosity. Juneau was wonderful, my home town.

      Comment by intlxpatr | June 24, 2014 | Reply


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