Saturday, March 31, 2012

In Like a Lamb...

You know the old saying, "If March comes in like a lamb, it will go out like a lion."  I don't recall the weather here in Shishmaref at the beginning of the month.  I know that my hometown of East Jordan, Michigan took a major hit early in the month after having a rather easy winter season.  They were dumped on by several inches of wet, heavy snow which led to thousands of folks throughout Northern Michigan losing power for several days.  Then just a few short days later, they were basking in temperatures reaching into the 80s.  Go figure!

I think I'd be safe in saying it was cold here in the frozen tundra.  But I want to share how this month is ending....in another arena.....my classroom.

Our classroom is in a building that was built in 1975.  Keep in mind that putting up a structure here on the island is not quite the same as somewhere down in the Lower 48 where the ground is most likely a lot more stable.  This is a sandy island resting on permafrost.  Thus, our building has been experiencing some....shifting....settling....call it what you will.  As a result, our ceiling has been hinting at the stress it was under even as early as last fall.  Well, this is the end of March....and we're going out in style.  We had to close our ECE/Head Start program until further notice as of today.  The "elongated opening" (21 feet) has been noticeably widening this week.  Gravity is taking a toll on the sheetrock above our classroom.  The decision to close the building was finally made when some rather ominous cracks were discovered along the support beams in the far end of the building.

Consequently, we will be searching for a place next week to relocate at least our four year olds so they can finish out the last seven weeks of school.  We're hoping for the best.

Thus ends my March postings!

Let's see....I've come back to "edit" this posting.....hope I don't screw it up!  I want to add a picture taken of Mickey, Matt and me on Friday.  We still had to report to work so we "borrowed" some dress-up hats from the kids' play area.....


Mickey, Donna, Matt...in the "safest" part of the building!  We feel so safe with our "hard hats" on!


40 Years Ago Tonight

On March 30, 1972, David C. Tisron was a gunner on an AC-130 gunship and, along with 14 other crew members, was shot down over Laos.  They all bailed out....and they all survived.  The crew members on a gunship the night before were not so fortunate which was something not lost on the minds of the men of Spectre 22.

We were engaged at the time and married in November of the same year.  Dave hobbled down the aisle in a full-length cast which he would be in and out of for the next three years from the broken leg he received in the parachute landing through the jungle canopy.  We later had two children, Dan and Jessica.  Dave chose to leave this world on April 26, 1991.  He's not forgotten.

Here's a recount of that fateful night forty years ago...

http://www.jollygreen.org/Stories/DavidPreston/loss_of_specter_22.htm

Sunday, March 25, 2012

My Uncle's Poem

First, some background...

My Uncle Bob (my Dad's brother) is, I believe, 92 years old....soon to be 93.  He has an incredible gift for poetic endeavors.  He has also had a life-long dream of traveling to the Last Frontier.  Fostering that yearning has been his ability to memorize and recite many of Robert Service's poems.

Uncle Bob recently sent the following poem to me and I wanted to share it on my blog.  I do so with some reservation, however, because there's a "bit of history" of not copying things as he meant them to be...and we'll leave it at that....and hope for the best.  I do appreciate my uncle taking the time to create this for me.

Thank you, Uncle Bob!


"Donna's Shang-ri-la"


There's a place of God's creation
That can shape imagination
And I feel it has a subject in its clutch.
It promotes the odd sensation
Of an intimate relation
I have witnessed creativity of such.


I've a niece that's independent
A devil-may-care descendant
But the rustic beauty took her by surprise.
As she ventured way up yonder
To that land of scenic wonder
Where Aurora Borealis paints the sky.


Though as a clan we're not nomadic
Her decision was emphatic
And she let her intuition take command.
Providence stood there beside her
As she let her conscience guide her
To that place that she would christen fairyland.


Though the action seemed quite forceful
She was known to be resourceful
So we didn't wish to challenge her desire.
And she sailed off like a Viking
To that island of her liking
That is said to lie within the ring of fire.


Threat of family division
Did not dampen her decision
She possessed a strong desire to sally forth.
She declared the bit of knowledge
She had garnered while in college
She would spread extensively throughout the north.


When she set her feet in motion
To explore the Arctic ocean
She was drawn to the allure of Shishmaref.
Twas a place of rustic glamour
That was touted to enamor
It was nestled on the isle of Sarichef.


Shishmaref offered location
To a few of her vocation
So they chose to share the knowledge they'd acquired.
They disposed of their estrangement
By a mutual arrangement
An exchange of camaraderie transpired.


Need arose for the cessation
Of extensive navigation
So her sights she set on one specific spot.
Her resolve will not diminish
She'll be stalwart to the finish
She'll be there when time expires....like as not.



Go Backwards!

I am realizing that it's best to read my posts for March starting at the bottom one first.  My commentary will seem rather awkward if you try to start at the top and read down the list!

Thank you!

San Antonio Pix

You don't see these plants in Alaska, that's for sure.  Well, not in Michigan either!


Picture from our room on the 34th floor looking down at the boat on the river that winds through San Antonio.


No, this is not just another picture of the boat on the river....look closely.  Remember...this was taken from the 34th floor of our hotel.  There's a little "speck" standing by the wall under a tree.  Look at the next picture.


It's Dan!  He had called us up in the hotel room and when we looked out, we could just barely see him.  I zoomed in with my camera....funny!


I love trees...and oh, how I miss them here in the tundra of Alaska!
                           

Alamo archway



The "Alamo Three"....Mom, Dan, Jessica


Trees...any kind!
       
The view of San Antonio, Texas from our 34th floor window!
                   

End of March!

Since we are approaching the end of March and given my history of posting here on my blog, I will probably not be on again until sometime in April.  Here's an update...

I have signed a contract to return next year to Shishmaref.  As of yesterday (March 24....and this will be news to some because it's not officially announced yet until Monday), I will be teaching third grade next year in the "big" school.  I have enjoyed my year in ECE with the four year olds.  What a nice bunch of kids!  But it's time to move on to a new adventure.

Speaking of adventures....my daughter and her boyfriend have adopted an 11-year old kitty from the Human Society back in Michigan.  They have named him Jeepers!  He really is a cute cat and he's lucky to have them as caretakers.  Jessica and Chris are gearing up for another season at Skydive Tecumseh....a parachute drop zone in southern Michigan.  Check out their website if you want to take the plunge...(skydivetecumseh.com).

My son is preparing for his next adventure starting in early April.  He will be walking the Appalachian Trail.  He invites folks to follow his exploits as well:  (http://trailjournals.com/entry.cfm?id=370456).

I am so glad that my kids were able to visit with me in San Antonio, Texas back in early February.  Although I will be visiting Jessica this summer when I get back to Michigan (wouldn't miss a chance to meet Jeepers), I won't get to see Dan again until the summer of 2013 because he will be gone before I get home in May and he'll return to Michigan in September or October....after I've already returned to Shishmaref.  Here's a shot of the three of us in Texas at the Alamo...or should I wait to post it on another posting in case it causes this to freeze up again?  I guess I won't take any chances....go to the next posting to see the picture!

TTFN...thanks for checking in on me...I enjoy hearing from you all....through snail mail (OH!  That reminds me....my Uncle Bob sent me one of his poems written just for me....I'll have to post it on another posting!), through email, and through Facebook....oh, and via the phone (Thanks, Mary....I'll get back to you!)...although if you've tried calling me via the phone, you know the connection can be iffy.  By the way, I can't wait for all those Girl Scout cookies to arrive!

Take care....remember, don't give up on your dreams....no matter how farfetched they may seem!

Fingers Crossed...Adding Iditarod Photos!

Whew!  First one worked....keep your fingers crossed because I'm going to try adding more.
This was behind the Unalakleet post office where all the bags of dog food and bales of straw were set out
for the 66 Iditarod teams that would be arriving....if they hadn't already scratched....and some had at that point. 

So far, so good...second photo worked!  This is a close-up of what the dog food bags looked like
for each team about to arrive.


Aliy Zirkle arriving in Unalakleet.....first musher in at that point.


Aliy's dogs.....tuckered out and resting!
  


Aliy Zirkle....attempting to eat breakfast amongst the media and onlookers!



And to think....I ran my hand along this sled handle!  Dallas would go on to win the 2012 Iditarod.
 I'm sure it had nothing to do with my touching this sled....hee!



This is Dallas Seavey....bending over in front getting dog food prepared while the vets in the background check out his dogs.  There were swarms of vets immediately tending to the dogs when they arrived making sure all was well.  If there was any question at all about a dog's well-being, the dog would be pulled from the team and sent back to Anchorage.  It is my understanding that dogs and teams having to be sent home were taken care of by the inmates at a women's prison until the mushers could get back to take over.


I just love this picture!  I hope you can see it as I do.  The dogs' eyes are gleaming in my camera shot as they arrive off the darkened trail in the wee hours of the morning.  Can you imagine what it must be like out on the frozen trails lit up only by the moon and the musher's headlamp around his or her forehead?



Here comes a musher and team from the frozen tundra into Unalakleet.



This is John Baker from Kotzebue, last year's Iditarod champion, arriving!



John Baker giving directions to his team volunteers on what needs to be done for the dogs.
Check out the heavy fur-lined hood of his parka...you can barely see his face.
There's the headlamp, too, around his head.  I just can't imagine how incredibly cold
it must get out on the trail. 


John Baker inside the warming house.  "Could you just give me a chance to eat?"


Dallas Seavey being interviewed inside the warming house at the Unalakleet checkpoint.
This is where he was saying, "I think it's Aliy and me to beat at this point."


DeeDee Jonrowe's dogs arriving....check out those hot pink booties and harnesses!
DeeDee would eventually come in 10th place in Nome.


Not the best shot of DeeDee but I wanted to point out the huge fur mittens hanging off her backside.
Most of the mushers wore huge mitts over their regular gloves.
Fur and animal skins play an important role up here in keeping folks warm.

Frosted dogs!


Another incoming dog team!


Time to rest!

                                                                   

Resting dog...he could care less what's happening around him!

Iditarod 2012

Everyone keep your fingers crossed!  I am starting a new posting about my Iditarod adventures because my previous one froze up and I can no longer access it....grrrrr!  It was going so well...until I tried adding photos.  Let's see....it started something like this....

Honest to goodness, how lucky can one person get?  I had the opportunity to see the Iditarod in person in Unalakleet over the weekend of March 10 -11.  I have posted lots of pictures on my Facebook page and now I'm afraid to try to post them on here.  I might just post this story and then try a different one for just photos.  That way, if it freezes up on me again, at least my story will appear!

First of all, if you are new to the Iditarod or would like more information on the route (changes from year to year) or the mushers, go to Iditarod.com.

On March 8, I flew from Shishmaref (by the way, up here we all tend to use the airport codes...SHH) to UNK (Unalakleet) for an ECE (Early Childhood Education) working weekend.  I stayed in the District dorms with several other ECE staff members.  That in itself was a hoot!  During the flight from SHH to UNK, we stopped in several of the villages to pick up other ECE teachers.  It was interesting to see the other villages from the air and also to see the terrain the mushers would be covering on their way to Nome.

Upon our arrival that evening, we were treated to the most incredible display of Northern Lights that I have EVER seen in my entire life....no kidding.  We were told that there would be more the following night but despite our "whistling and dancing", they didn't appear (check out Northern Lights lore).  It's a wonder that the neighbors didn't report us to the Alaska State Troopers as their office building was located right across the road from the dorms!

Our working weekend ended on Saturday afternoon.  My dear friends left Unalakleet for their home villages but I stayed put.  I had made arrangements to stay over until Monday so that I could see the Iditarod mushers come through that particular checkpoint.  Again, this is so exciting for me just thinking about it...my heart is racing!  I hope you can feel the excitement of yet another Alaskan adventure for me.

I walked down to the post office where the food bags and bales of straw for the dogs were set out for the 66 incoming teams (unless they had already scratched).  I talked with some of the volunteers who told me that the front runners would begin arriving in the wee hours of Sunday morning (March 11).  Aliy Zirkle was in front, followed by Dallas Seavey.  So, after taking some pictures...which, like I said, I will try posting on a different entry...I headed back to the dorms.

That evening, after a nice dinner at her house, my good friend, Julie, and her family took me to a concert at the school gym.  "Broken Walls" was the name of the group.  Check them out online.  Valid message for all of Alaska and beyond...and great music.  The drummer was awesome...well, they all were.  There was a Native dancer with them as well.  Great time....thanks, Julie!

Oh, I don't want to forget this....at one point during my extended weekend, I went to eat at the "Peace On Earth" restaurant.  Two things....first of all, I realize the crowds coming in for the Iditarod were from all over the place but one thing I've noticed about up here in Alaska is that a great number of people are from "someplace else"....mostly from locations in the Lower 48....mostly from the northern sections of the continental United States....because we're used to snow and cold weather.  Uhhh...wait....now that I've said that, I understand that the weather back in Northern Michigan this past winter has been anything but normal with very little snow and temperatures last week in the 80s.  Good grief!  What is up with that?

Anyway, in overhearing many conversations...OK..OK...so I was eavesdropping....I heard so many people asking others, "So, where are you from?"  I find it rather interesting that so many of us are transplanted for one reason or another.

The other thing I don't want to forget is this....WOWZER DOWZER!  There is one HUGE white, fluffy dog living right near the restaurant.  I mean...HUGE!  If you were to come across this dog at night, you would swear you've just met up with a polar bear.  I am NOT kidding.  HUMONGOUS!  I guess it belongs to the minister living in that house.  I hope I can somehow get a picture of the dog.  Wouldn't you know it?  I did not have my camera with me at that moment.

Now, I'm back at the dorm and trying to get some shut-eye because I knew I'd be up in the wee hours of the morning.  I was trying to follow the GPS tracking of the mushers on my laptop and keeping one eye open while trying to rest.  Yeah, I know...I am NOT good at electronic gadgets....I did not know how to set the alarm on my phone!  Around 3:45 a.m., I wake up and immediately enter panic-mode thinking I might have missed the excitement down at the checkpoint.  I hurry up and get my layers on and head down there.  It's dark and very few people are outside at that point.  There was a guy setting up a camera tripod and he quickly introduced himself....Greg from Iditarod Insider...taking official pictures along the trail.  Very friendly and very helpful....telling me where I should stand and that, yes, of course, I can be right down where all the action is going to be...just try not to block any of his photo opportunities....HA!  Another media person arrived and informed me that I could go into the warming house, too.  Can you believe that?  I got to go inside where all the arriving mushers would have their breakfast and meet with the media folks and try to catch some sleep before moving on to the next checkpoint.  I could not believe my luck.

As the hours ticked by and the cold seeped into my clothes and boots, the number of onlookers grew.  Then someone announced that Aliy was within 45 minutes of arriving and we all started looking out over the dark horizon for a headlamp to appear.  It finally did....bobbing in the dark....whoa....I was about to see my first Iditarod team arrive in person...and in dog!  There they were...the dogs...and Aliy....and...and...my camera died in the cold!  But I will not forget what it looked like.  The dogs were smaller than I expected and they arrived wearing red "leggings" pulling a frosty sled and heavily coated Aliy.  Her hood ruff was rather large....couldn't see her face.  At that point, I ran back up to the warming house to change batteries in my camera.  By the time I got back down to the site, Aliy had already been given $2500 in gold nuggets.  It was a prize given to the first musher to reach the "Gold Coast".  I was able to get several pictures after that of Aliy taking care of her dogs and then back up in the warming house where she ate and talked briefly with folks before heading into one of the rooms to sleep.

I was able to get pictures of Dallas Seavey and John Baker and other front runners.  It was so exciting to be right down by the racers, the dogs, and the sleds.  I ran my hand over the handle of Dallas Seavey's sled....not realizing at the time that he would eventually become this year's champion in Nome.  I think, looking back on it now, he had a pretty good idea of his chances because while listening in on his interview with the media up in the warming house (not even five feet from him), he was saying that he and Aliy were the ones to beat at that point.

John Baker was an interesting musher to see.  He's a Native from Kotzebue so when he came in, I said, "The folks in Shishmaref are rooting for you!"  It's exciting for those in Shishmaref to see locals in the race because Herbie Nayokpuk, the "Shishmaref Cannonball"(now deceased), was an Iditarod musher.  His family members still raise sled dogs and participate in local races.  I am told that DeeDee Jonrowe (came in 10th in this year's race) bought some of the Herbie's dogs.  I do have pictures of DeeDee and I also have one of her dog's hot pink booties...for my great niece in Illinois.  It's coming, Maddie....I'll send it when I send Flat Stanley back to you!

Yes, folks....Flat Stanley has come to Shishmaref, Alaska!  We had to make a fur-lined parka, mittens and mukluks for him though.  It is way too cold up here not to be dressed for it!

Back to the Iditarod...I took many more pictures and watched more mushers arrive.  The dogs all looked so excited (and frost-covered) when they came in.  Once the vets were done with them and the straw was spread out, they immediately curled up and went to sleep.  It didn't bother them a bit to have people walking around them taking pictures.

The whole event....what an experience!  I am so lucky to be here right now!   I hope to be able to see it again from another checkpoint next year.  Other SHH staff members went to Nome for the final days.  I am sure that was exciting, too...but with far more people to contend with.  Me?  Give me one of the checkpoints where you can see them up close and personal!  I sure hope I can post my pictures....wish me technological luck!

BTW...

By the way, that Iditarod posting froze when I tried adding pictures....ha!  I will never get the hang of this.  What's the saying...."You can't teach an old dog new tricks!"

Gosh Darn It!

I had a good post started on the Iditarod and now it's frozen....can't do a thing with it.  But then this is the Arctic region....so I guess being "frozen" is typical.... :(

I'll have to start another one....be patient with me....or not....your choice!

How Does That Happen?

Gosh, I cannot believe it is almost the end of March and I did NOT get anything posted earlier.  I am so sorry because I know there are people trying to follow my adventures.  It's a combination of so much happening and so much to get done and finding the time for everything....including getting everyday chores completed....because it does take longer to do certain things that I have so much taken for granted back home.

For example, we were recently put on a severe water conservation plan.  The village has two huge tanks supplying the water for the village.  I can't remember exactly what each tank holds...one is in the hundred thousand gallons and the other is in millions, I guess.  The smaller tank is the one the school, the Health Clinic and some city offices get their water from.  That includes a few of the teacher housing units, too....but not mine!  We have to haul our water and dump our honey bucket!  Anyway...we were down to five and a half feet of usable water in the tank and that is getting serious when it's only March.  It's my understanding that in the past, April is usually when things get "iffy" when it comes to the water.  Water is pumped to the city tank from the washeteria tank (I might have that wrong but that's what I heard at one time) and that the initial water is collected from the fresh water ponds (??).  Well, surprise, surprise....the water line froze.  That meant that water had to be hauled via filled tanks and pumped into the big tank....a difficult, round-the-clock job in order to get the water level up to par.

One of the reasons we began to run out early in the year was that at the beginning of March, Shishmaref hosted the Bering Strait School District Regional Basketball Tournament for four full days.  That meant 170 additional students and coaches in our school building.  You can imagine the water usage at that point.  Last week, we were given measures of what to do to conserve water.  This week, we received the "critical" point word that we were at only one foot of usable water.  Let me put it this way....IF we had had to shut down, we would have been using honey buckets in the school....get the picture?

Here in the ECE building, we set our own water conservation measures by cutting back to one toothbrushing session per day instead of two, no coffee for the staff (EGADS!), snacks and lunches served on paper plates, ice being brought in for our water use, and....catch this...

"If it's pee, leave it be (Don't flush!)!  If it's brown, flush it down!"

Actually, that was no big deal to me because back home in East Jordan, that's what we attempted to do at the house simply for our own way to conserve water even on the city water hook-up.

But, can you imagine that in a school system?  Ha!  Fun!  NOT!

The teachers were all instructed to haul their house water from the washeteria and to shower at home...not at the school.  Laundry was to be done at the washeteria as well...not at the school.  It may seem like a small inconvenience but one thing I learned is how expensive it is to do laundry at the washeteria.  Another eye opener for up here and makes me understand why the villagers are not able to afford washing their clothes as often as one would expect.  I have taken up wearing the same pair of jeans and tops for several days myself.  Oh, my....how would that go over back at school in East Jordan?  I'm laughing up a storm right now....STOP!  I promised myself I would NOT use this blog to vent about issues back home.  STOP!

So....it had even gotten to the point that we had to cancel our evening open gym sessions and that's a BIG deal up here.  Keep in mind that there's not a whole lot to do up here and it's not like the kids can go out and play a lot in the severe cold.  Even the adults thoroughly enjoy the late evening gym times for their basketball games.  Closing it down was a hard, but necessary, decision in conserving water in the long run.    We were even put on notice that the upcoming Inupiaq Days and Spring Carnival (basketball tournaments with neighboring folks coming to play and local dog mushing events) might have to be cancelled.  We have 20-30 military personnel coming to the village from April 10-18, too, and I would assume that means they will be staying in the school.  They are from Arctic Care and from my understanding, they are coming to work on the dogs in the village....snip, snip and such!!!  There will be a lot of water usage during that time.
Oh, and we recently had a hairdresser visit the village and worked into the wee hours of the night for a couple of days doing hair in the school...using lots of water.

It's different up here, folks!  We take a lot for granted down in the Lower 48.

Now...on a more positive note....we are back up to five feet of usable water in the city tank.  The workers have literally been hauling water around the clock.  We can go back to doing laundry at the school but I'll still wait another week...it's still important to conserve where we can....everybody doing their part.  We're still not...."out of the woods" on this one....but then there are no "woods" nearby up here in the tundra!

On that note....I'll end this posting and go use the bathroom....and no, I won't be flushing!  Be back in a few to talk about the Iditarod....TTFN