A blog by Bill Hess

Running Dog Publications

Support Logbook
Search
Index - by category
Blog Index
The journal that this archive was targeting has been deleted. Please update your configuration.
Navigation
Saturday
Nov302013

Logbook: Nuiqsut to Wasilla, entry 1: taxiing to depart Nuiqsut, 4:15 PM

Three weeks ago, I did not want to leave my wife and family, cats included, but I was eager to go to Barrow. One week ago, the thought of leaving Barrow made me sad, but I was happy and excited to be going back to Nuiqsut. Today, I felt downright depressed that my time in Nuiqsut was already coming to an end. Too short. Just altogether too short. There's something about Nuiqsut that I simply love. I did not want to leave. I wanted to stay, but of course I was eager to see my wife and family, cats included.

This is how I live my life - never wanting to leave, always eager to go.

Friday
Nov292013

A bit of a shock.

I had seen Chris at work everyday in the Kuukpik Hotel and just kind of assumed he had been around the Arctic for awhile as he was friendly and seemed confident enough. I asked how his Thanksgiving was. He said he had spent the bigger part of the day cooking Thanksgiving dinner for hotel guests - mostly oil industry workers preparing to build the ice roads and it was like Thanksgiving never happened for him. He had worked all day long. He was ready for a break, even a chance to go home for awhile. When I asked where home was, I expected him to say something like Anchorage, Fairbanks, Kenai, Eagle River, Wasilla... Instead he said "Mobile, Alabama."

He had arrived one week earlier, after the sun had gone down for the winter. He was still in a bit of a state of shock. "Different," didn't even begin to describe how different it was here than in Mobile. When he had first arrived he had heard people talk about how unusually warm the weather was, but by his reckoning there was nothing warm about it. It was colder than he imagined it would be - could be. And the sun - he wanted so badly to see the sun again.

The sun will come back towards the end of January, I assured him, without mentioning that when the sun comes back, that's when the real deep freeze sets in.

At that, he was skeptical that the return of the sun in January would even mean he could see it. He wanted me to describe what the return of the sun would look like, so I held my right forearm horizontal to represent the southern horizon and then slid my left fist up in a shallow over the edge of that horizon as a representation of the sun and then let it slip right back down again. "But can you actually see the sun?" Chris asked.

"Of course," I answered.

He pressed me further. "But it goes right back down again."

Yes, but I illustrated how each successive day would be longer than the previous until the sun was up all the time, 24 hours a day. "How do you sleep?" he asked. I told him about summer activities, about children playing outside in the sun at 2 and 3 in the morning, hunters hunting on the ocean at any hour of the day or night the animals made themselves available.

Hunting - hunting was something he would like to do, Chris said.

Friday
Nov292013

Qaataaq - flash frozen

From the net of Tommy Nukapigak, Kuukpik River (Coleville), Nuiqsut.

Friday
Nov292013

Tommy catches Qaataq in the Kuukpik River

Tommy Nukapigaq found me today during the period of noon twilight and took me down to the river where he had set a net under the ice. He pulled out 97 Qaaqtaq, or Arctic Cisco. It has been a good season for Qaaqtaq, but a bad one for Aanaakliq, or whitefish, a very popular, fat and tasty Arctic fish Nuiqsut is famous for. The Aanaakliqs are here, but they are mysteriously blemished, perhaps with a fungus, from what I am told, and people are reluctant to catch and eat them. As for the Qaaqtaq harvest, Tommy is very pleased. 

Thursday
Nov282013

Her aunt gives Heather a helping hand with her Thanksgiving maktak

Today at the Thanksgiving whale feast in Nuiqsut: Her Aunt Doreen spotted Heather struggling to cut her frozen maktak with an ulu, so gave her a helping hand. I just returned from the feast and I am stuffed - and I have a pretty good-sized box of maktak, frozen meat and frozen fish to take home. I took a picture of it but the internet here is extra slow today and Squarespace 5 falls apart with a slow net. I can't face this struggle twice today so this will likely be my only post this Thanksgiving Day.

Page 1 ... 4 5 6 7 8 ... 226 Next 5 Entries »