Thursday, May 31, 2007

More Vacation Fun...

We spent yesterday at Water Country in the morning and Jamestown Settlement in the afternoon. This morning we again went to Water Country, which is across the street from our hotel. We spent a couple hours at the water park, had lunch there and then returned to the hotel to change before heading out for the afternoon.

The older kids and I went back to Busch Gardens to ride some rides. The others went to Yorktown, which apparently wasn't so great. So I'm glad I went to Busch Gardens. :o)

I think our plans for tomorrow include spending the day at Colonial Williamsburg.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

On the Road to Somewhere...

Finally, long roads that actually go somewhere! We spent the holiday weekend in Lynchburg, VA with my side of the family. We flew into DC from Anchorage after a quick stop in Salt Lake City. We rented a car... big white Dodge Magnum... tres cool. We call it our own iceberg.

The weekend at the campground was a little crowded and hectic with 9 of us sharing a camping cabin. But it was worth it to see my family who I haven't seen for about a year.

The rest of our vacation will be spent in Williamsburg with Stephen's side of the family (his sister and her family). We spent yesterday at Busch Gardens. The weather was great, the crowd wasn't so large. Everybody had a great time.

I'm still trying to unwind a little from what feels like weeks of continuous going going going. The Fairbanks classes went well. I was able to catch the earlier flight back to Anchorage which gave me a couple more hours to repack and head back to the airport. That was an extremely long day of flying and working, etc.... Hopefully I'll be able to find some sufficient relaxation time before we have to do the return flight back to Anchorage.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Fairbanks, Day One

It's 8:00pm. I'm sitting on an oversized sofa in the lobby of the Pike's Waterfront Lodge, making use of their public wireless internet. It apparently does not reach to my room.

Behind the reception desk is a huge painting of Mt. McKinley. Next to that is a large moose head mount. Okay, it's not large, it's gargantuan.

I believe a tour bus from one of the cruise lines has folks lodging here as well. I saw a Princess Tours bus pull up to the front door just a little while ago.

Tourist season is just getting going here in Fairbanks. But I get the distinct impression that I came here 1 week too early. Many of the "attractions" don't seem to open until after Memorial Day. Ah well. This is perhaps the only time in the history of the world that I was ever early for anything. :o)

I have the use of an "office vehicle", which in this case is a Ford F250 XL Super Duty pickup truck. So, I did some tooling around town after my training session ended for the day and I'd checked into this lodge (which is basically a hotel with "lodge" in its name...).

Fairbanks is a nice town. It's almost identical in size to Juneau, population wise. About 30,000 each. They tie for the 2nd biggest city in Alaska. Of course, they are a far distant 2nd to Anchorage which boasts over 260,000. But hey, what's a few zeros between friends?

I think I'd enjoy living in Fairbanks as much if not more than Anchorage. It has a great university campus with the University of Alaska-Fairbanks (UAF). There are all the necessary amenities, but not nearly as much of the congestion. What more could you want?

I'll post photos some other day as I haven't figured out how to get them from my camera to this laptop given that I left the download cord at home.

Stay tuned.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Fairbanks Trip

I'm off to Fairbanks tomorrow morning. I sent a box of course materials up via DHL this afternoon. Hopefully they make it. I'm carrying the materials for tomorrow's class in my luggage.
I'm in a daze of overworked exhaustion. I've been working overtime to put together 6 classes of GIS (and GPS) instruction for our Fairbanks DNR staff. Late nights... weekend hours. I'm whooped. I've done as much as I can. The chips will just have to fall where they may once I get to Fairbanks on a 7:30am flight tomorrow.

Fairbanks is either a 5.5 hour drive or a 1 hour flight from Anchorage. I've opted for the flight.

We're up to 18 hours of daylight here in Anchorage. I'm not sure how much Fairbanks is getting, but it's more than us.... So far so good with the curtains & drapes. I made a major linen score this weekend at yard sales. Some queen size sheets and some awesome Waverly drapes to cover my sliding glass door and the adjacent large window. They're delightful, and I got them for $5.00!

The kids are cooking supper tonight. I'm amazed we ever manage to have dinner at all judging by the level of impossibility they've allotted the cooking process. (particularly Tess) But I have faith we'll consume some form of pancakes, sausage patties, and scrambled eggs before I fall into bed at around 9pm.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

There's Alaska... and then there's true Alaska


Last night the older kids went to see Shrek the 3rd at the movie theater in Eagle River. Stephen, Alicia, and I went out for Chinese at the China Lights restaurant. Then we took a short stroll along some of the trails near the Eagle River. There's a nice, and I believe pretty extensive, trail system with easy access from "downtown Eagle River".

Alicia May thrilled at gathering and throwing rocks into the river and little creeks flowing into it. She's got a pretty good arm.

Stephen's trip to Deering was an interesting experience last Thursday. He flew into Kotzebue on a 737 and landed on a paved runway. Then he transferred to a little 10 seater and took off from a dirt runway to go to Deering. He thought that was neat... the real Alaska thing.

Then he saw the airstrip they were intended to land on at Deering. Basically, it's a clearing in a field with a couple little buildings nearby.

The fella who picked him up from the Deering airstrip was driving an old Chevy truck which had just been broken out of winter storage the day before. It was running very rough. And when they stopped to pick up some keys, it wouldn't start back up. So they called someone and a woman on a 4-wheeler pulling a little trailer showed up. Stephen's work supplies were loaded on the trailer and he and the other fella perched on both sides of the back of the ATV. This is how he got to his inspection site.

He worked a few hours at the site. He didn't really have sufficient time to do all he needed. But he had to get back to the airstrip to catch his flight back to Kotzebue. He made it to the airstrip 5 minutes before his plane left. He was the only passenger this time on a 6-seater.

These planes are the supply lifeline for small villages around the state. Stephen said it was just like you see in the movies. The little plane lands, a bunch of locals run out to unload the supplies brought by the plane. They reload the plane with luggage and supplies of outgoing passengers, those folks get on and the plane flys away. He said he'd love to be a pilot working a route like that. Who knows... maybe someday!

When he reported his story to me, he said he hadn't been very well received in Deering. They weren't unfriendly. They just weren't really hospitable either.

I told him (and I should've told him before he left, but at the time, I didn't know he was going to a Native village), that next time he needs to change his approach. One thing in particular that probably would have made a big difference would have been to inquire of the village elders. All outsiders are expected to go through the elders before doing anything that affects the village. He should have brought a gift of some sort for the elders (fresh fruit is great because it's so hard to get in those distant places). And he should have been prepared to "visit".

You figure, these people see the same 136 people 365 days a year. When someone new shows up, it's polite to visit. Even peddlers of colonial America days knew that.... Socialize before business.

Had he taken these simple steps, I'm pretty sure his reception would have been completely different. It's almost an old-fashioned mindset.

We live in a busy, populated space. Yes, it's Alaska. But we may as well be living in Cincinnati. I'm convinced that more than half of all Alaskans have no idea what it's like to live in Alaska. That's the percentage which lives in Anchorage. Our lives are busy and urban or suburban. I think it's great that Stephen's getting the opportunity to see the true Alaska. And with some more practice, maybe he'll even learn how to slow down and savor the difference.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

North to Kotzebue

Stephen is boarding a flight for Kotzebue (KOT-sa-byoo) as I type. From there he'll transfer to a small plane operated by Bering Air and hop across Kotzebue Sound to the small village of Deering, pop. 136.

Kotzebue sits just north of the Arctic Circle, Deering is just south of it. So he'll cross the Arctic Circle briefly on both legs of the trip. He returns to Anchorage late tonight. Of course, it'll still be daylight for most of his trip.

He's going to Deering to survey a construction project where they're converting what was once the National Guard armory... then the Teen Center... into teacher housing.

I found this photo of Kotzebue on the web.

The populations of Kotzebue and Deering are largely Inupiat Eskimo.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

This Site Under Construction

My office building is surrounded by noisy construction on two sides now. Cranes are towering over my head wherever I go. It's like working on the set of "Bob the Builder".

I'm sure all the banging, grinding, and "backing up-beeping" will result in some useful structures. One will be a parking garage for my building and the other is the convention center. But they will also serve to block my entire view of the inlet and the mountains. Sigh. Already, that view is largely concealed.

You can see a reflection of the Chugach Mountains in the side of the building. The people on that side of the building will retain their vista.

I just noticed that the building in the foreground apparently has a tree growing in the middle of it. Interesting. The federal building down the street has trees inside the building surrounded by a greenhouse sort of wall. Whatever it takes, I suppose....

You can note by that tree there in the building, that Alaska is turning a spring green. Almost overnight it seems we've gone from bare branches to delightful green. It's lovely to behold on the hillsides. I'll try to get some photos of it before too long....

Monday, May 14, 2007

Mother's Day Report

We went to lunch for Mother's Day at the Eureka Lodge. Eureka is 100 miles northeast of our home up the Glenn Highway. Someone had told me on Saturday (at a yard sale) that the food was good there. They were right!

I had a cheeseburger and a chocolate milkshake (which I shared with Alicia May). Stephen and Donald both had beer-battered halibut. Tess had grilled ham & cheese. We all had a giant slice of pie to top things off.

The drive was full of great vistas, several moose sightings and a few geocaching stops. (FYI: We download sites from www.geocaching.com and then go find them using our GPS unit.) We also spent some time gandering at the Matanuska Glacier. I put some photos of the day on the dropshots page.

Stephen (and the kids) gave me a new camera for Mother's Day. I'm enjoying the familiar feel as it is an upgrade of the camera we had stolen back in December. Yay!

In other Alaska news, a cruise ship ran aground near Juneau over the weekend. It's been pulled off the rocks and is currently moving under its own power. Nobody was hurt.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

How much for the moose?

Alicia May and I went yard saling with a moose this morning.

As we browsed the Clifford books and REI pants, someone said, "Oh, there's a moose." We all look up, and strolling through the front yard is a young moose... maybe 50 feet from the sale.

I think once he figured out the deck furniture was already sold, he headed off for some other sale... Across the cul-de-sac and behind a neighbor's house. We were on the lookout for "Mommy Moose", but she never showed up. Must be that "teen moose" was on his own.

We bought the Clifford book and REI pants...

Friday, May 11, 2007

A Whale of a Time

This photo is from yesterday's Anchorage Daily News.

Those industrious folks up in Barrow snagged another whale! Party at the Igloo tonight! :o)

When one crew gets a whale, it is credited to the captain of the crew. But then it is shared with everyone in the town, I believe. It's a team effort to "process" a whale. And you thought quartering a moose sounded daunting...

So, for the record, we're up to 17 hours 7 minutes of daylight. Sunrise here in Anchorage was at 5:24am and sunset will be at 10:31pm. When I'm up in Fairbanks in a couple weeks, we'll have even MORE daylight than we get in Anchorage. That is truly the land of the midnight sun. Of course, up in Barrow, it's basically daylight from now till September or something...

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Pooker Perspective


Some early works of the great future photographer, Alicia May.
Good eye, don't you think?

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Be A Star Where You Are...

It occurred to me today that about a week ago (April 30), I was supposed to be elsewhere. That was the day I was scheduled to be in DC undergoing an oral assessment with the State Department to become a Foreign Service Officer. Instead, I was sitting at Johnson's Tire Service having my studded tires swapped out. And later that day I spent some time making stars using Play-doh and a little cookie cutter.

Maybe some other year I'll continue my pursuit of diplomacy. For now, I guess I'll be content with red Play-doh and fresh tires. :o)

Sunday, May 06, 2007

Eagle River Nature Center

The girls and I took a 3 mile stroll on the Albert Loop Trail at the Eagle River Nature Center. It took us 3 hours.... My whole body is throbbing. But it was pleasant. Only a little mud. But since I was wearing Tess's old cheer sneakers... it didn't bother me too much. :o)

Poor Alicia May hadn't had her nap before we departed on the hike. So she was pretty weary and had to be hoisted much of the way. Tess and I traded off between being yanked along by turbo mutt and having our hair messed up by a shoulder-riding Pooker.

There are a couple of yurts you can rent and a public use log cabin. Each was secluded and in a beautiful setting. Maybe we'll stay at one some day...




I took several photos. I'll put a few of the others on the dropshots page...

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Crab Meat and Chilly Feet

Well, it's a little chilly and borderline drizzly here in the 'hood today. But maybe it'll perk up before we head out for the day.

Stephen's already out in Anchorage this morning. He rode the bike and said his hands froze, as usual. He needs better riding gloves.

The other night we had Survivor food for dinner while we watched the latest episode. King crab was on sale at the grocery store so we picked some up along with some fruit. Tess chopped up the strawberries and melons and added the other fruits from cans.

Someone from Stephen's work will be doing a job in Dutch Harbor in a week or so. That's the place in the Aleutians where they film "The Deadliest Catch". If the price of crab is good there at the source, his colleague is going to pick up a case which we'll chip in on... Keep your claws crossed!

I've been messing around with my photo editing software this morning. Here's a lovely photo of the girls....

Thursday, May 03, 2007

More Photos to Check Out

I've added a bunch of photos from the Juneau trip to the Dropshots page... www.dropshots.com/tdsaulnier

Juneau Report - Day 2

The weather on Day 2 was as pleasant as Day 1. Not a cloud in the sky. Too warm for even a light jacket. Just beautiful.

We spent the morning learning about GIS. But then during the afternoon we did some outdoor exercises with GPS. So we were able to better enjoy the day. My colleague had set up a scavenger hunt of sorts for teams to locate with their GPS units. It was a lot of fun and sort of reminded me of a challenge on the Amazing Race. In the end, everybody “won” and received cookies as their reward.

After work, I was given another driving tour by another colleague. This time we went across the bridge to Douglas, AK which is on Douglas Island just across the Gastineau Channel.

There was once a mine over there, and no bridge. People ferried back and forth on boats. Now it is a pretty large enclave with almost a beach town feel. There is even a “Big Sandy Beach” at one end of the populated area where you can play beach volleyball or take a dip in the extra chilly waters of the Gastineau Channel.

We went to “The Island Pub” there in Douglas and visited with some other current or former DNR employees before she drove me to the airport to catch my evening flight home.

I was pleased to discover that it would still be daylight when I arrived at our house. We followed the sun west as we flew over glacial rivers of snow and ice, high peaked mountains of solid rock, and wide expanses of untouched snow-covered icefields. I’ve flown over that view several times now. And each time I am struck by just how spectacularly beautiful this part of the world is. It is completely devoid of life, as if no living thing could possibly co-exist with its desolate beauty. Just water (frozen) and rock.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Juneau Report - Day 1

Juneau is great so far. I was able to fly in a little earlier yesterday, arriving at 1:30pm. I checked into my hotel (the Goldbelt) and then headed over to the DNR offices which are just around the corner.

Flying in, I snapped some photos from the plane window. The city of Juneau is a long strip of civilization on the edge of nowhere. It is banked by steep peaks on one side and the Gastineau Channel on the other. You can drive all the roads in and around Juneau in less than 2 hours. One of my colleagues and his girlfriend took me on a driving tour of the area last night after work. I think we hit all the main roads. Including a dinner stop at a fabulous Thai restaurant, I was back at my hotel by 8:30pm.

Given the limited road access, it amazes me that everyone here has a relatively newer model vehicle, sometimes several. Most people also have some form of water craft. There is a large marina with lots of USS Minnow looking boats and then you see lots of smaller skiffs tucked under stilted houses clinging to the edge of the hillside, just above the high tide mark.

The town is currently waiting with bated breath for the first cruise ships to arrive. They are scheduled to start rolling in this weekend. Every shop owner in the quaint, touristy, downtown area knows exactly which ship will arrive when and how many passengers will be browsing their aisles. There’s a measure of financial anticipation in the air.

Despite the popular belief that it constantly rains in Juneau (and the entire Southeast AK region), yesterday was absolutely beautiful. Bright blue skies, sunshine, and mild temperatures. Hopefully today will be a repeat performance. I’ll be doing some GIS and GPS training all day at the office and then catching the 7:50pm flight back to Anchorage.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Off to Juneau... where's my umbrella?

I think I'm going to try do catch an earlier flight to Juneau today via standby. My scheduled flight is at 7:30pm, but I want to arrive there during daylight hours, so I'm shooting for the 11:45am flight this morning. It was only half full the last time I checked, so it should be feasible.

I've packed a small overnight bag as I'm only planning to spend one night in Juneau. Of course, with the weather patterns in Juneau and their propensity for shutting down the airport, that could change. I've got an extra pair of sweats, just in case. And a travel state credit card....

I just need to pack an umbrella now and I'm good to go!