Always an Adventure

My attempt at keeping friends and family informed about my doings . . . boring or exciting, it will all be here!

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Getting to work...

Doesn't everyone's transportation look like this?!?

Sometimes I use extra small planes (a 207 ... 5 passengers + pilot)


sometimes I get there via helicopter ...

(view flying into my work site... Little Diomede)


or I use a snowmachine once in the village...

and don't forget walking of course, or four-wheelers... transportation in the outskirts of AK :)

How do you get to work?!?

Sun and Snow

Last week I spent some time in Savoonga, where the sun was bright, and the snow was plentiful. Here are some pics...


They have two windmill power generators in Savoonga... helps cut down on the already outrageous cost of heating fuel in the villages. An important move forward for villages, and for the sake of our planet.


I also spent some time in Nome... timed it just right to see some of the mushers from the Iditarod come in.





Sunday, March 22, 2009

Back track for a moment...

Here are those pictures from Fairbanks... family and fun!






And the cutest niece and nephew I have in Alaska ;)

ps- the mark on Cassie's forehead is a birthmark that will slowly change and eventually disappear... there is a name for it, but I can't remember :(

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Spring Break fun...

I spent my spring break in Fairbanks this year. . . not any warmer or sunnier than normal, but I got to hang out with Leif, and my family. My parents were up from Colorado simultaneously helping out my sister with her new little one (yup, they are adopting a little girl). Her name is Cassey Lynn and she is 5 months old.


So over the course of the week Leif and I spent a long weekend in a public use cabin off Chena Hot Springs Road. One neither one of us had been to before and it turned out to be a relaxing and fulfilling weekend, if not exhausting. We hiked in, breaking trail through the newly fallen snow (anywhere between 5 and 10 inches of the fluffy white stuff) only to find out two things, we are far more out of shape than we thought, and the trail was longer than the map said. We made the 7.25 mile (in our estimation) trip in 7.5 hours!!! Talk about a long day...

But once we made it in and were fed, all seemed better with the world. The next day was spent cycling through bouts of eating, reading and napping... a great day of rest, relaxation and much needed rejuvenation. One trip out to get wood helped loosen the sore muscles, and provided some great wood... who has ever heard of a stove heating a place to 110F !! I was dying!


The trip out was much faster for several reasons: less weight being pulled out, our previously broken trail, more frequent refueling stops and at mile four a real surprise. Those who maintain the trail had come out and had packed the trail... not just with a snow machine, but with a groomer.
We were on a packed highway! The trip out only took us 4.5 hours, and for the last four miles we were walking at a pace of 20 minute miles... a vast difference from two days prior. It was a great trip overall, and I'm excited by the idea of being able to do trips like this more often once I move back...

The other parts of my week were spent hanging with the family out in North Pole.... there is always fun to be had with Onan around.... (pictures coming shortly)