Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Anaktuvuk Pass

Flying in to Anaktuvuk Pass...


I wonder if you can packraft this river?
A view of the village from above
Look out the plane's windows...the mountains are right there!
Our pilot guiding us in
The Post Office, flying the POW flag for Veteran's Day.

Mountains surround the village!

View from Health Clinic window.

All over the school and clinic there are signs like this in English and Inupiaq.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Travel, Travel, Travel

When we moved out to Arctic Village in August I was very fortune to get a job based in Fairbanks that pays me to travel. I work with children ages birth-three through the Infant Learning Program in many places across the state. Working with families and babies across the state has been such an amazing learning experience. I feel very privileged to get to meet so many families and work with them and their children.

This past week I traveled as far South as Chitna (the small town you may have passed through if you've ever driven out to McCarthy, the type of place that has bumper stickers that say "Where the hell is Chitna?") and as far North as Barrow! The travel is quite an adventure! Some places I am able to access on the road system, so I drive. Driving from Fairbanks to Delta and Copper there are beautiful views of the Wrangell Mountains and you never know what condition the roads will be in, although they are usually passable. Many of the places I go are way off the road system, so then I fly!

My most recent adventure was a day trip to Barrow! I went all the way to the top of the continent and back to Fairbanks in a day! I took the early flight from Fairbanks, stopping in Prudhoe Bay before heading to Barrow. The plane had come from Anchorage and was a packed flight, full of slope workers headed to start their two week shifts. The plane was a 737-400 combi, where the front half is cargo and the back half passengers. It is an efficient plane for flying up to the North Slope because there is so much freight that gets sent up there. Also, because it is a big plane, they can fly higher and faster than small bush planes.
When I boarded the flight I was supposed to have an isle seat in the second row of seats. However, there was a group of Italian guys seated in the first row, exit row, that didn't speak any English, so they had to be reseated and I was moved to the middle seat of exit row - pressed between two large sleeping slope workers. I squeezed myself between them and thanked God that I at least had leg room and it was a short 45 minute flight. I have no idea why these Italian guys where headed out to the oil field, but you meet all types of people in Alaska.
You can't read it very well, but the sign says Alaska Airlines Deadhorse

In Prudhoe, there was mass exodus off the plane and only a few people stayed on to go to Barrow. The plane quickly filled up again before leaving Prudhoe, with more slope workers heading back home to Anchorage after the plane stopped in Barrow.

I could not see anything as we flew into Barrow because it was still dark at 10am and there was a thick cloud cover. As I got off the plane and walked across the runway to the terminal it was about 5 degrees, probably a little bit colder with the wind chill. From the terminal I hopped a taxi over to the office where I was meeting a co-worker. It blew my mind to be able to take a cab in a village! Barrow is actually quite a large village. The population is about 3,500 and there is a road system throughout the village. In Arctic there is only one truck, the school truck, so it seems strange to me to be out in a village and see cars everywhere. The cab driver was from Thailand and only spoke broken English. He recognized the name of the building where I was headed and got me there with no problems. His cab was a Honda CRV, with a very Alaskan windshield - it had over 30 chips spread across the windshield, but amazingly had not cracked yet!
The houses and buildings in Barrow are all up on stilts like beach houses. Barrow is right on the Arctic Ocean and there are dirt mounds, like sand dunes, set up to help protect the town from ice overflow.
It was an overcast day with light snow while I was there, so I didn't really get any views of the ocean, but I did get to see some of the village as we took cabs around between home visits with clients.
There is always a Post Office in every village. Most of them have a flag flying. Often when traveling in the bush I feel like I have landed in a different country, but then I see flags flying and remember that yes, Alaska is still the U.S.A. You step off a plane and become immersed in a very different culture, but it is still a part of our nation. Isn't that amazing!

Barrow is quite a melting pot. I met people from Hawaii, Thailand, and Indonesia as well as the Native IƱupiat Eskimos. I was not able to get a picture, but I saw many women wearing the most beautiful Kuspucks. They were made of gorgeous fabrics lined with fur and finished with ruffs of wolf, wolverine, beaver and even polar bear. In the airport I saw a group of women with babies on their backs, under their kuspucks. The call this duduing the baby (no idea if I am spelling this correctly, I only heard it said aloud and did not see the word written down) when they carry the babies on their back under their kuspuck to stay warm. One baby who looked about two years old was busy running his fingers through the fur on his mothers ruff and found the claws at the edge of the fur still attached. He carefully felt each claw, which was probably fox, and appeared to enjoy playing with the fur. It was so neat to observe a child explore their natural environment and to think how different that environment is from the rest of the nation. The villages have many modern conveniences, yet children still grow up with many truly Alaskan experiences.

My day in Barrow was very busy, meeting with many families and children, and only getting a quick snap-shot of the community. I look forward to going back and getting to learn and see more. Tomorrow I am off to Anaktuvuck Pass, so there are more adventures to be had!

Monday, November 1, 2010

Happy Halloween

Sunday night we celebrated Halloween with a carnival at the school and a community costume contest! The carnival had been scheduled for Friday, but since the food was ordered late and did not come in on Friday, the carnival was post-poned until Saturday. Then on Saturday when the food still had not arrived, the party was post-poned until Sunday. On Sunday, the food still had not arrived, but it was Halloween, so we made the best with what we had! There aren't really any other Type A people like myself around here, so no one else was even phased by rescheduling multiple times. People here are good at going with the flow, because that is just how life is in the village. This is a lesson I am still working on learning...

Sunday ended up being a busy afternoon! The kids trick-or-treated in the afternoon while it was still light outside because there has been a wolf in the village and it wouldn't be safe to wander around at night...talk about scary, right...!?! The caribou herd is still close to the village and so wolves and bears are starting to come close too, trying to get themselves some tasty caribou. We don't need ghost stories here. Real life is often scary enough! The kids came by the house to trick-or-treat on their snow-goes (village slang for snow machine.) We don't have a door bell, but I knew when kids were coming from the sound of engines idling outside the door. We put Jack inside to protect him from the wolves and headed down to school for the carnival.

So here it is, the Arctic Village School Halloween Carnival...
Tinkerbell arrived with pixie dust for everyone!

Mario and Lugi made an appearance.

Arin - a friendly witch, with a flare for fashion!

Linda, our SPED teacher, fortune teller and store clerk extraordinaire
.
A few more witches....

Don't shoot!

"Yo quiero taco bell"

A Who from Whoville, but thankfully there was no Grinch.
Anyone recognize this outfit?
I'm seeing how many uses I can get out of our old Ski For Women costumes!

A ghoul playing games!

The cake walk was one of the main events! Each person paid $1 to participate and most people played multiple rounds trying to win. Over $200 was raised for the school during the cake walk.

Obi Wan Kenobi was a winner!
Sam, made a great Obi Wan with his beard and long hair!
This little pumpkin was a winner too!

Mmm Mmm Good!

Ding Dong the witch is dead! Each kid got in at least one good whack before the witch spilled her guts.

And then the chaos began.....

Small hands just can't hold enough candy!

Where is mom when I need some help?

CANDY, CANDY, CANDY!

One of Sam's students proudly displaying her loot!

A film crew from Paris, France even attended the carnival. They were in town interviewing elders for some sort of documentary and got a couple shots of the carnival as well. One of the French guys even helped judge the costume contest. For being so remote, Arctic Village gets a lot of visitors from all over the world!

When we got home later that night, the temp had dropped below zero and men from the village were heading out to hunt the wolf. Happy Halloween!