Christopher mccandless where is the bus




















For a certain kind of questing hiker—and a state government tired of rescuing them when they came unprepared or the swollen Teklanika River trapped them—it was the end of an era.

However, the final flight of the Magic Bus was just the beginning of a much longer journey for a group of curators, students, and skilled volunteers. After the helicopter landed, a crew loaded the bus onto a waiting flatbed truck. Following a stint in storage, it made its way to its final resting place at the Museum of the North, a University of Alaska-affiliated institution in Fairbanks.

There, staff set to work, assessing the damage to the dilapidated vehicle and figuring out what it would take to transform it into a museum piece that would tell the story of a brief, unusual chapter in Alaskan history.

It was abandoned in , and became a shelter for those using the backcountry to recreate or hunt. The department received dozens of suggestions for use of the bus that came from individuals, museums and institutions nationwide, with varying plans to preserve, exhibit, monetize or memorialize it, Feige said.

The museum also has the staff to restore, curate and display the bus. This proposal also allows the Department of Natural Resources to retain ownership of the bus, and decide future uses, including whether to lend it out for display and where. An Alaska state repository, the Museum of the North made a proposal to exhibit the bus, winning out over other museums. Fittingly, the museum is where McCandless picked up his Tanaina Plantlore field-guide-turned-survival-log on his way to the Stampede Trail, according to his sister, Carine McCandless.

He lived in the bus miles north of Anchorage and kept a journal of his plight and hardships. Though still a topic of debate, it is believed McCandless died due to starvation. The body was later discovered by a local hunter from the area. Unfortunately some have lost their lives. Many search-and-rescue missions were also carried out by the authorities. With no casino, spa or buffet, five-day cruise from Taiwan to the scenic outlying islands of Penghu, Kinmen, and Matsu resumes with social distancing.



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