Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Travel Time

Wow did that go fast!  It is time to pack it in...

This morning we awoke and finished the final pack up of our gear.  After a nice breakfast, we saw off the teacher crew as they headed out to work for the day.  Shoe and I took time to get checked out and then stop into the bookstore at the college.  We even made a bonus run through the kitchen for some frozen items from Gustavus (curious yet?).

Steve the great met us as promised to pick us up for the trip to the airport. What an incredible man!

After getting the bags to the airport counter, we got checked in.  Some minor details were updated and we were set to fly.  There was some question whether the plane would be into Barrow on time from Prudhoe Bay, as there was some pretty good snow on the Arctic Slope this morning.  After a 10:05 AM update, we knew that the aircraft had just departed Prudhoe Bay and was headed our way.  That confirmed that we had about 40 minutes until boarding would occur.

"Mr. Koser," I heard at the airprot...to my surprise!  Several kids we had met at the schools were also at the airport as they were headed to Anchorage for the Native Youth Olympics to represent Barrow for the competition this week.  After chatting with them, Steve suggested we head out for one last tour!

Another few photo opportunities came about!  We stopped by the second Barrow sign and then headed by the web cam tower. 

Here is the house that you see in the webcam.  The white one with the red trim.  The cam is up on top of the bank building.  That was a trick to find...right Shoe?!

A visit to the Top of the World Hotel was neat, and helped Shoe to pick one more neat piece of art.  Then to Steve's apartment to help get this packed up in some foam.  Then back to the airport!

Steve is great at sharing his experiences in this town. More on that in a future post!  Then it was time to get boarded and get the bird in the air!! 
Its not too many places that you load from the stairway!  Notice that the front half of the plane has no windows.  This is the world of being practical...passengers in the rear and full cargo in the front!  Time for Anchorage!

A Final Fling!

Stones.  14 of them!  While in Barrow, do as the Barrowans do?

If you're going to try curling, why not try is somewhere unique!  Out the door of the ice sheet building was the Arctic Ocean.  A stones slide away were lots of us...learning how to get some mass moving!  Thanks to the patience and wisdom of local curling legend Scott, we got some good lessons!  We learned about palm up, palm down, sweeping, and throwing the rock into the house!  Not that we're experts, but we sure enjoyed some learning!

After some practice, Team Gustavus took on Team Barrow in a fine round of curling.  They must have been nice to use...and didn't beat us by a HUGE margin.  But more importantly, we had a great time, and developed an interest in a pretty neat game!  The setting wasn't bad, either.  But as Rachel, Justin and I could likely tell you, it is a bit chilly on the toes curling in Barrow!

 
Check out the concentration here as Justin sets up his throw.  




Steve was a go-getter.  Something about gravity might apply to this picture.  Don't worry...he was OKAY!
 
What a blast!  But I don't think I'll make this my day job just yet!

Up North for the Weekend

Here's a whole new meaning to heading 'up north' for the weekend!  First, the view from the truck is spectacular.  You can almost see forever!
On the drive, you'll begin to notice lake (okay, ocean) cabins in the distance.  Not that they are far off...about a mile or so north from Barrow.


The dock has to be put out yet.  Looks, however, like you might want to wait just a bit on that.  This is a spit of land jutting in between the Chukchi Sea and the Beaufort Sea.  They are pretty frozen here in mid April.  Whales find them lovely in mid spring and late fall as they migrate north and then south annually.

The beach is quaint.  There are precisely three trees.  They are made by the residents.
And the lodging is nice.  For summer!  No heat needed.  And there is a nice drop barrel for the contents of your honey bucket!  I'm not sure even the bears would like one of these! 

But really, it seems to be a place for some serious fishing in the summer.  Here is where the local Inuit people summer when it is time to hunt migrating ducks and fish the ocean waters.  Many small shacks dot the landscape in this half mile long stretch along the road north.


Some of you in Minnesota might be heading up to open up the cabin. But here, I think you'll need to wait at least a few weeks!

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Groceries by Plane

Jet fuel surely influences the price of groceries.  Here is a quick sample from the AC, the Alaska Commercial Store.  A bit of shopping tonight reminded us just how this economy is challenged by location.  You can play "The Price is Right" right now!  Before you scroll down, complete this short quiz...

Name the prices of:

1 case of milk (8 or 10 containers of about one pint each): ________

1 bag of crinkle cut potato chips: ________

1 large bag of French Roast Starbucks Coffee Beans: ________

12 Roll pack of Bounty Paper Towels: ________

1-12 pack of Pepsi: ________

1 pack of Chips-Ahoy Cookies: ________

1 20 oz bottle of CocaCola: ________







Okay. Scroll down and see how you did!


Tractosaurus Ex

So things have limited lives when they are used to an Arctic Degree.  Heck, things aren't made to work in the degree of the Arctic!  Barrow IS the coldest place on the continent, according to the not-happy National Weather Service Employee we spent a half hour with tonight.

When things quit working, they don't make it quickly to the scrap yard.  But each summer, a large barge appears with supplies ordered by the people of Barrow.  And the barge can't leave empty.  Or at least its not too efficient.  So the barge leaves with scrap metal, among other things.  Like large tractors that are dead.  Or maybe I've over estimating and they really run.  No.  Not really.  Look at the photos!

Last night Shoe and I headed out for our evening sunset photo shoot.  But the clouds killed that plan.  So I moved to the ex tractor photo study.  Please enjoy!  And play it like "Where's Waldo!"

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Tundra and Ice Science

Many people come here to DO science.  In the 1950s, the Navy established an operation in Barrow and called it the Naval Arctic Research Laboratory, or NARL.  It is a complex of quanset huts spread across about 3/4 miles of land here next to the ocean.

The Navy had interest in existing here for some time, but eventually was done using this space.  Instead of decommissioning and eliminating the establishment, the local people worked hard to come to an agreement with the US Government to use the infrastructure already in place for science.  The Inupiat people arranged to have this place remain as a place for people to come and do science in the Arctic.  At this point, NARL has become Ilisagivk College.  As I understand it, the two essentially exist as one entity now.  This is a word that means "place of learning".  In the years since this was NARL, the dorm building that we are living in was added.  On the west end of this H shaped building is living space for students (and visitors) to the college.  On the east end are offices of various science research projects.  The center section is offices of the college operations and the bookstore.  Notice the building and its proximity to the other buildings here on this map.

There is a significant group called the Barrow Arctic Science Consortium or BASC. BASC has offices in this building as well as well as a beautiful research facility located just a half mile or so from here.  This is the organization the facilitates scientists coming here to work and research a vast array of topics.  Their permanent staff is primarily the Logistics Department.  These folks provide the infrastructure for anyone to use to come here and do research.  They are much the sherpas of the local...providing snow machines, navigation, background data, etc to those that come here to work.

Yesterday we got a tour of the BASC facility and got a bit of an idea of some of the work here.  A group from NASA JPL, for example, is here doing ice research.  They are using the Arctic as a model for the moons of Jupiter.  In future explorations of these moons, we need the skills to probe beneath ice and learn what is there.  What a place to do that but here...where conditions are similar.

Lots can be learned just by spending hours in the hallway outside of these offices and reading the posted research on the walls!  What a rich scientific environment.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Arctic Sunset...After Pizza

It was pizza time after a dog run! Shoe and I walked from Geoff Carrols home to the AC, Barrows primary retail establishment. The good grace of people here (the NORM) resulted in a friendly ride from there to East Coast Pizza where we picked up three discs of goodness for the crew! Steve met us there with the Suburban and we trekked back out the the college.


A few hours of pizza and deprogramming was great for everyone. Oh the laughter...maybe it was the cold air?

After dinner, Alyssa and I peeked out the window on the walk from one end of the dorm to the other. And what a sunset it was!

At 11:10 PM, I've not seen another sunset! This one was glorious...over the ocean ice. But to get the view, we had to head out. The coldest 6 minutes of this trip were spent shooting a bucketful of sunset photos from the edge of the ocean road...a 100 yard walk from our door. AND, it helped me appreciate the need for the right clothing! The three shirts I had on were marginally warm enough for a few minutes. But the lack of gloves...man!! So we went quickly and got cold. But I'd say it was worth every moment of chill for quite a photo set! Here are a few.  More on the photo site, and more at home!

Enjoy...

Kita!

Mush baby Mush
Now this was an experience.  When I called up the person I was told to contact about mushing, I wasn’t sure where it would lead.  Thursday morning I dialed up Geoff at his home.  I described our brief time in Barrow and suggested that he was ‘the guy’ to see about experiencing dog sledding.  He talked about his upcoming trip, leaving today to head out for a week of Moose counts in a small village to the west of here. 
Boy did we not realize just who Geoff Carroll was and his rich history as an expert.  Formally, this is Geoff Carroll, Area Wildlife Biologist, Alaska Department of Fish & Game.  LOTS more here.  To us, this was heading over to his modest house in Barrow and his son Gunner meeting us at the door.  

“Hi!  Dad’s not home from work yet, but come on it!  You guys are going out mushing with dad, right?”  We entered the two story home and were greeted by Marie, Geoff’s wife.  She warmly welcomed us as we did introductions and stepped into the basement.  It is unique to have the kitchen upstairs, she explained.  But the higher ceilings make for a nicer space, so we put the kitchen and living space upstairs.  The basement had three rooms…one original and two add ons that are Geoff’s ‘play land’.  Soon he arrived home and we got to chatting.  There were signs of the arctic…lots of skis, parkas, dog harnesses, and a nice bucket of fish.  The dogs each get two fish per day…a happy diet for a Greenland Husky living in the backyard with his or her 9 chums.  A little whale blubber to top it off keeps them happy.  More on that later, if I remember to get back to it.
Anyway…Geoff suggested we go out and talk to the dogs while he got a few things ready.  How to rile up ten sled dogs…step up and give them some attention!  The fired right up.  But when they realized we weren’t ‘their guy’, it wasn’t quite as exciting.  When Goeff came out, they knew it was play time…and they really got going!  We learned how to harness each dog and then get them placed on the line from the sled.  Gunner helped to set up the team, taking pointers from his experienced dad.  We got situated on the sled and the dogs ready roll.  We were geared up…three layers on the bottom, multiple socks and Sorrels.  Then four layers of shirts plus the coat.  Then the neoprene face mask, a neck gator, a head band and the ear-flap hat.   Some ski goggles topped it off to keep the face out of the wind.
“Kita”, Inupiak for lets go, was all it took the dogs to hit it!  0-20 in a matter of a blink, and we were screamin’ through the backyards to the east.  Gunner held traffic on the one road to cross (traffic?  Okay..one car) while we flew across the street.  Then to the open snow, and across the lagoon (water source here) to the east.  The cutting wind caused me to tighten up the face cover…and realize it was a pretty good idea!  Nice place for a beard, really. But this was a warm day here…no snow fall and a whopping 0 degrees.  We moved across the snowpack for 15 minutes or so.  “Gee” for right, and “Haw” for left.  The dogs are a living machine…with the brains up front.  “Haw, Haw, Haw” from Geoff as we curved across the snow.
Off to the right picture the DEW-line radar system of the 1950s.  That is the defense early warning system for those incoming Soviet missiles.  Then a Doppler radar dome, also part of the NARL science here.  “Gee, Haw” to keep the dogs on track.  Yet the smell and watch, and pretty much can follow the trail of their last run.
Soon we get to the road…the one that runs the shorline.  We cross it, and are most clearly headed to the Chukchi Sea.  We swiftly and smoothly glide along a trail marked with small orange flags by the whaling crews.  The first stage of setting whaling camp is to establish a trail across the ice to get there.  Marking this triail with flags helps one to return again.  Wind makes the trail disappear otherwise.
We moved across the ice, and learned that the lead dogs are learning from each other!  The newby dog on the front end was working out the concept of following the trail.  “Haw, Haw, Haw” bellered Geoff as the dogs once decided to instead to a full right 180.  We nearly stopped as Geoff pressed the rusty steel break teeth into the snow with “Whoa”.  The sled snowly pivoted around as we make it a full 360 and got back to the trail.
The ice attached to the shore is known as land fast ice…as it is frozen to the shore and pretty firmly attached.  Beyond this, there are significant ice heaves and 20-30 foot tall piles where the flowing ice presses into the land fast ice.  We approached the first large heave and at “Whoa” the dogs came to a stop.  Geoff suggested he take a look up the trail, now steeply bounding up and down over 4-6 foot mounds of ice.  As we watched him step up to inspect, we noticed a tall flag on a pole just beyond the ridge…sign of a whaling camp.  Musher man mad the call to make a turn to our own trail.  We piled back on the sled and turn a sharp left as the dogs led along the icy piles.  Geoff skillfully guided them…like steering a train from the back with your voice…threading through some piles of ice.  He’s done this before!  30 years back, when he and Will Steger trekked to the North Pole with four teams totaling 48 dogs and 8 people at the start.
It was time for the doggies to catch their breath and us to explore.  Feel free to hike up and check that out, he instructed as we flipped the sled on its side.  He pinned a drillbit like ice spike near the front of the dog line and tacked the dogs down.  This plus the overturned sled kept our ride waiting for us.  The extra steel ice anchor pressed into the snow on the back of the sled added another level of ‘we’ll wait here’.  So Shoe and I climbed carefully along the ice…up and over 6 foot pieces of beautiful blue colored solid sea…frosted with snow.  About 20-30 yards onto the ice we got a glimpse of whaling camp.  Off another 60 yards or so we could see two tents and a pile of gear planted below the whaling flag of this particular team.  While no sign of life was visible, the white canvas tents shuddered in the steady wind.  I suppose camp just beyond this tall ice pile meant a bit of shelter form the persistent wind.  We panned around, seeing ice as far as one could look.  While only about ¾ of a mile from short, it felt like another world.
Geoff explained his work as a wildlife biologist had him living on the ice for 2 months at a time here in Barrow years ago.  That made him more comfortable with this life than most of the other folks on the Steger arctic expedition.  He spoke of the trip and of his work here.  The changes in the ice over time are significant.  It used to be, he explained, that there would be several ridges of ice heave like this…from thicker more massive ice reaching farther into the Chukchi Sea.  But in the last ten years, the thinning has been troublesome.  Whales are brought onto the ice by pulling them with block and tackle up a ramp.  20 tons of whale needs support to keep in on top.  The ice has been so thin some years that whaling has been affected.  When it cant support the weight of the beast, the subsistence is more difficult.  I asked what the next ten might hold, and he worriedly admitted he wasn’t sure.  Whaling has changed.  It used to be that the spring season was the big one…pulling bowheads onto the ice this way.  But the fall season has become stronger, using motorized boats more than the traditional ways.  With much open water then, the techniques are different and more automated.  The spring hunt has become less while the constant shift to fall is evident.  Changes.  Caused by the rest of us.  Imposed on this culture.
Holding his shotgun, an essential tool here on the ice, his tales seemed to share the stress of change.  But now…time to get back to the dogs.  My video camera captured his tales, so stay tuned for the first hand account if you’d like it!
We gathered images with our cameras, hardly enough to take in the scene.  But they will have to do!  Time to fire up the dogs.  The spikes came out and the break was lifted.  Those dogs like the 0-20 at the get go!  “Kita,” “Haw” and “Gee” got us headed across the ice along the ridge.  Once back to the more flat ice, we “Hawed” our way back towards our original path.  The dogs know what do so.  The follow the trail…they head home!  A perfect time for us Minnesota dudes to try out our mushing skills.  Shoe took the standing position and “Kita” we went again.  After a slow down to let a set of Innuit snow-machine folks by, we picked up the trail again and headed to the shore.   A break midway to home gave me a turn as well at my dog skills.  They know the trail…so I had a nice chance to stand and let them do the work.  I realized now that my toes were getting chilly.  The chance to run a bit helped to keep the blood moving in the feet.  As we got closer to the lagoon and then the neighborhood, we talked more with Geoff about his experiences.  This man is humble, and doesn’t let on to his worldly experiences.  But were in the presence of a legend we have now realized.  Geez, what a neat experience.  And now were headed back to his house to bring the dogs home.
We let the dogs out…and now its time to put them away.  One by one, we unhook the dogs and Geoff reminds us to which chain each belongs.  We take the dogs in and unharness them as instructed.  Then I put on the monster rubber gloves and grab the five gallon pail of treats!  As I mentioned, each happy dog now gets a fish snack.  The whole thing…happily goes into each dog in a flash.  No scraps left here.  And then the whale blubber slides down for dessert.  Another five gallon bucket holds these snacks, and a long grill-tongs helps Geoff grab the slippery slices out and present them as a prize to each dog.  Talk about happiness!  A good run to the ice.  Some nice pats on the head.  And then a fish AND some blubber.  All in a great doggy day.
Wow.  That was a lifetime experience.  Writing about it one day later, I hope I capture some of the thrill.  The photos help plenty, and the video gives a front seat to the experience.  A few photos fill in the story here.  This run was about a 100 photo experience.  Stay tuned for the full show at home!
Wow.  Let me say that just one more time.  Wow!

Native Youth Olympics Team Heads Out

Today the NYO team from Barrow headed out to Anchorage.  I'll not be able to do justice to the acrobatic skills of these young people in my writing.  But imagine yourself crouching on the floor.  Then place one elbow in your gut...near your belly button.  Place the palm of the same hand on the ground and then rise to balance your body on this hand.  No, nothing else can touch the floor.  While you're at it, reach up quickly with your other hand and smack a seal-skin ball hanging from the ceiling, about two feet off of the floor.  Good luck with that!

Or, you could stand with your feet together on the floor and place a wooden dowel in front of you on the floor a foot away.  Then jump forward, tap the dowel with your toes, and then land beyond the dowel.  Yes, and don't fall on your tail bone or stick your feet on the rollable dowel and face plant into the floor.

Next...simply hang the seal skin ball about four feet off of the floor.  Then jump in the air, both feet together, and kick the ball with both feet.  Yes, and stick the landing on the floor.

For another impressive move, hang that ball above your head about six inches.  Then jump up off of one foot, and with that same foot kick the ball.  Yes and stick the landing on the same foot WITHOUT falling over.

You could work on your seal hop.  Push up position on the floor, knuckles down.  Then hop on your knuckles and toes across the floor.  Last one there is a rotten seal!

The wrist carry?  Two people hold a horizontal bar between them.  Then hook one wrist over it and let them pick you up.  And ride down the hall!

Yep.  Those are a few of the skills in the NYO.  Good luck with that!  But these athletes are both nimble and amazing!