Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Mountain Bartering


Lyrics to a great song by Eddie Vedder:  If you know the song Society, this is how I felt in the video above.

Oh, it's a mystery to me
We have a greed with which we have agreed
And you think you have to want more than you need
Until you have it all you won't be free

Society, you're a crazy breed
Hope you're not lonely without me...

When you want more than you have
You think you need...
And when you think more than you want
Your thoughts begin to bleed
I think I need to find a bigger place
Because when you have more than you think
You need more space

Society, you're a crazy breed
Hope you're not lonely without me...
Society, crazy indeed
Hope you're not lonely without me...

There's those thinking, more-or-less, less is more
But if less is more, how you keeping score?
Means for every point you make, your level drops
Kinda like you're starting from the top
You can't do that...

Society, you're a crazy breed
Hope you're not lonely without me...
Society, crazy indeed
Hope you're not lonely without me...

Society, have mercy on me
Hope you're not angry if I disagree...
Society, crazy indeed
Hope you're not lonely without me...









Often, days start out rather slow, progressing little in speed or in interest and, often end slow. But occasionally there is a day when unexpected surprises pop out and make everything feel so much more interesting and alive. I was sitting here at my desk, on the computer in the mid afternoon when in the corner of my eye, I caught the movement and shine of lights. Five snow mobiles and six people were outside my cabin just yards away. I was shocked, excited, nervous and skeptical all at once. I grabbed my pistol, shoved in my pants and braced myself for the first encounter with another person in almost five months.
There was the knock at the door, and I could see a smaller man in height but not so much in width due to his attire of winter gear. He was a native from the village Aleknagik down the river and across the lake. He and his entire family were out fishing at Lake Nerka and were headed back for the day. He was asking about the trail through the forest, which I explained no one had been on this year, and that he would be the first.
It was monumental to see someone, very heart pounding and overwhelming.... I was all smiles.

There was a snow storm that night and I figured, that if I were to have any luck finding the trail they had just made, I'd better get out there as soon as I could. I managed to find the trail, which wasn't the best in ways of marking, so I found myself stopping and hanging flagging tape up every so often for the couple miles until the lower lake was in sight.
















Once I had cleared the forest, there was a new landscape, the one in the video. A new frozen terrain, much more open and breathtaking that what I have been staring at for months. I took time to take it all in, strap on my backpack with emergency supplies in case my venture on the ice proved catastrophic. All around me were mountains and miles of open range for touring. To the right, were my nearest neighbors all the way at the end of the lake, along with a host of other small cabins and part time residents of the area. Some were constructed of not much more than what you might find in a nicer Tijuana barrio. Others were very nicely crafted log cabins with steep pitched roofs and tall chimneys. I couldn't resist the urge to have a look around and explore this new scenery, so I set off. Snow machine trails were clearly visible, weaving in and out of inlets, up and over bluffs, and braided throughout the lake ice. I was uncertain of most areas so I skirted the shore all around, occasionally following other tracks that had gone further from shore but returned out of uncertainty. At one point, I needed to cross an area where there were no tracks, so I got up some good speed and said a prayer. Later I found out that the area is about three feet thick in ice, so no worries.

I saw a man out on the ice in the distance and waved as I approached, receiving a welcomed wave in return. I had emailed this gentleman earlier that month, along with his wife. They have been caretaking up at that lodge for the past five years or so, and had given me an open invitation any time I felt like getting away. I had a real conversation that day, with real people, over tea and by their wood stove. I must say that it was a relief to meet someone, and to know my social skills haven't completely gone away. After a couple hours with them, we managed to find out what each other needs or wants in the way of supplies and so our mountain bartering began. I had no intention of going to visit that day and had not brought any trading goods with me, but their generosity was abounding when they gave me a few packs of Top Ramen and large can of mandarin oranges. It seems small and even unappealing to most who can have that anytime they want, but to me, who is without, it was glorious.
In the next week, I'll be headed down for another meeting, trading and even a homemade pizza with a large green salad.




































February feels like it never came and yet is almost gone. I am busy shoveling snow from roof tops, sliding off in to the snow below and keeping tabs on the fox. Now that the trail is clear to the lower lake, I think I may do a little exploring and see what else is out there.  I have about five weeks left out here and will be departing on the first of April which is the six month mark. I have my days of envy for all who are out enjoying the comforts of modern life, but consider my life out here to be much more civilized. I already feel that my time has gone by too quickly, but if you had asked me how I felt back in November, I'd have said something to the effect of how much longer I had to go. Now, it is going so quickly that I'm trying to grasp every moment, each little joy and savor it to the best I know how. I may feel different next year when and if this opportunity presents itself again. Partly I wish to duplicate my experience and enhance it by knowing what to expect and how to deal with it. I also feel like my repeating of this would deprive someone else of truly a once in a lifetime experience. When the time comes, we'll see what happens but no matter what, through the thick of this past winter and the thin of the new year, I will never have traded this experience and personal growth for any other offer. No regrets.





Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Northern Nights




Woodcutting at its finest hour, the last one. I felt at this moment that Paul Bunyan had nothing on me, except his blue ox. A good month and a half out in the woods, mostly dreading having to freeze on the ride out, the search for trees in a feasible location for cutting but more importantly extracting. Dreading the magnitude of how much I was supposed to collect, not knowing how far I had come or how far I had to go.
Daily routines never cease to be adventures in some form or fashion. A ride through the forest to a meadow might kick up a few grazing moose. Along the trail just past the far eastern cabin would be a pair of eagles that would watch as I passed by. Often there were days I would be distracted and follow the tracks of a fox or hare, sometimes both. I had my spills on the ice, the crashes of my snow mobile and plenty of times it became lodged in between trees and bushes, sinking further down as I tried to free it. Many days I decided that my time could be better spent by the fire indoors, and prolonging the task seemed justified by whatever excuses I conjured up.

But now, the much anticipated end of mandatory woodcutting is over, and I rest. I know that I may go out a few more times, out of boredom or perhaps for fun. There are trees abound that call to be cut, and with every massive tree I see, the vision of how it would crash down cannot escape my thoughts. I have always been good at creating a mess, but never cared much for cleaning it up. Some trees have blown over in our great wind storms, and others that grew leaning heavily by some misfortune in their youth, beg to fall.
There are patches in the forest that are bare, and others that choke out light by density. I should like to think that I opened up a very small portion of these areas, allowing for new growth and perhaps those trees will be undisturbed for another hundred years or more.

Every action here is more than what it seems. Every thought has an impression that can freely traverse the mind to warp or enhance beliefs and opinions. Actions such as woodcutting bring out so much feeling deep within. I could only hope that all my thoughts when I leave this place, can be filled with the spirit and life they have now. Hope that my actions spring forth feelings that I now know they have the potential for.



One night a while back I wrote this from what I saw, and what I had seen in past times.


Northern Nights- 


Like pedals of a pond Lily, silky smooth and with a pureness of white, so is the snow that layers the forest, covering a multitude of barren colors.
Grey's and greens, browns of many shades are wrapped with this holy white.
The old diseased trees, rotted and forgotten with time, are strewn over the land and blanketed for a season, laying to rest their soreness in sight.
Young saplings are hidden away for nature to slowly unravel with the melting of a Spring sun.
A thousand stars shine bright, and a thousand times that many dust over the darkness of space, glistening off the waters, mirroring the relaxed gilded sword upon Orion's belt. He heroically shines his light, illuminating the fields of snow that blanket mountains from base to summit and challenging darkness to conceal his glory.
The mighty heavens with guarding constellations and stars that hang in the midst, circle Polaris, taking refuge in the West as the remaining flee from the all consuming sun rising in the East.
To be seen by the rays of its light, means the demise of their visual splendor.
As silent and dark as six feet under, nailed in a coffin, the black and motionless wilds of Alaska project strongly the feeling of brutal and unforgiving ways in this treacherous frozen land.
Flickering of planets and of the brightest stars imitate a gentle breeze that ripples the waters surface, distorting the clarity of the object yet leaving a small amount to the imagination.
A late invitation is the presence of a nocturnal glow, as the moon beams reflect off each facet of crystallized ice, creating lanterns that fill the air with our own twinkling of lights.
And to the passing of night, the treeline silhouette graphs a continual spiked rhythm on the dawns horizon, and the sun defeats all.
As for the peaceful world that remains hidden beneath the slumber of winter's wool coat, it awaits to blossom vibrant colors of life once lost. In a hurry to live and in a hurry to die, this land is preparing for another arctic wonderland.



Friday, February 4, 2011

Bitter Sweet






Days have opened up, lasting much longer and feeling a touch more realistic than twenty hours of dark. The clouds have cooperated with the setting sun day after day, clearing up at the right moment to show a small bit of color in my isolated world. There are times like these, when the evening falls, that where I am fades away from thought, the temperature is no longer a factor and for that moment there is no where else that I would like to be.



Snow is... enjoyable and dreadful. In the last two weeks, there have been approximately four feet of new snow and all powder. In the middle, there was a break in temperature that rose to about thirty three and snow showers became rain showers lasting a couple days. This morning was back at ten below and a nice crunch with each footstep. The volume of snow makes gathering wood harder in every aspect. Falling trees quickly vanish once on the ground and digging them back out is more work than its worth.

I do find myself sometimes shouting, other times a mumble under my breath the word "timber" as each tree crashes down. Slowly cracking and splitting at the trunk, these massive trees gain momentum as the destroy carelessly other tree's limbs, glancing off smaller trees or sometimes buckling them in half before the bushes below become as flat as a french pancake.

Fifteen more trees did fall at the mercy of my saw. Some twenty plus inches diameter at the base. I had a moment to cut a slice off of one, to count the rings and see how old it was. In the very center, the rings are too hard to see, so the estimation is between 145 and 155 years old. It would seem that about a hundred years before Alaska even became a state, this tree was just springing forth from the ground. Through the civil war, through the presidency and the death in 1885 of Ulysses S. Grant.... the first airplane by the Wright brothers, NASA and the moon landing.... war after war, my birth and up until the end just a few days ago, this tree lived a peaceful life. Just another angle to see from when woodcutting.






A while back, a month or two maybe I was sitting around bored and decided to carve a ring from a caribou antler that I pulled out of the forest. Passing the time away can be hard to do sometimes, when there isn't much around to work with. It always seems that men of old, be it in the woods or at sea, possessed the trait of carving, sculpting or other small artworks... so with my time at hand, I too thought of something.
The holes are representing stars in the constellations Leo and then the Big Dipper and Polaris.







There are two Eagles that watch from a perch along my trail for gathering wood. It seems that my passing by has no effect, but when I stop, they seem to mind. They too are looking for food, maybe setting their sights on a rather plump fox they've seen around. Mr. Fox still gets his daily fish sandwiches when he shows up, and now he knows that there is a bottom piece of bread so he takes the whole sandwich.... I like that.



Another moose encounter on the snow mobile.... running fast!



I've cracked open the last five pounds of my crab meat. Bread and water after this is gone.









                                                         Scenery






























Hard believing that February is here, and soon the spring will unravel with the melting away of packed ice on the lake, mountains of snow and new life will emerge. I've seen the summer months and how wonderful they are. Now living up here for the winter months, they too are wonderful in their own way. Some said November would be the hardest, others thought January but I can't say until I've seen them all. I can most certainly pick out the highlights and low points of each month so far, but there is more to come so I will wait and see. I will miss the summer up here, when the bears come to feed on the salmon and the days are never dark. I will not miss the unrelenting mosquito's and gnats.

As I ponder things during the day, one of my biggest questions is how bad will I miss being up here when I'm gone. I have stopped thinking about other places mostly, trying not to give too much effort into the thought of a tropical setting, because I know once I'm there, I will wish I was back up here. No, for now the days are enjoyed, sunshine or grey, the feeling of the downward slope is upon me.
Bitter sweet.