Monday, May 21, 2012

Get by with a little help from my friends

Blue skies are smilin' at me!

As all of the other teachers in the Bering Strait School District have finished school for the year, I finished my last full office week of the year and am gearing up for our grand finale, month-long high school session.  I wasn’t able to attend any of the graduations as I’d hoped due to limited funding, and I experienced many a twinge of jealousy as I learned of the departures of other teachers in the district, flying home to their families and friends for the summer.  In the district I’m looked at as having one of the easiest jobs, but little do they know there are complex reasons why there's a 75% teacher turnover each year.  To help keep my spirits high, my closest friend in Nome surprised me with a tray of freshly baked muffins (one for each morning of the week!), made with subsistence blueberries, preserved in the freezer over the long winter to help me through my week.  It’s because I have friends like these that I am able to buck up, put on a happy face, and make it through.

The yummiest muffins I've had!
Outside of work, the week flew by.  I attended a concert for the students of the Anvil Science Academy (a local Charter middle school), performing in the style of the Tlingit Tribe.  They reenacted a traditional legend taking creative liberties, performed their own instrumentals, and demonstrated customary techniques in body percussion.  Afterwards we were in such close proximity to the mountains that we decided to take a hike, despite the fact that it was fogged over and snowing.  There wasn’t much of a view, but the company made the trip worth it.  I still catch myself chuckling to thoughts of “snow madness” preached about in a think southern Baptist style.

The opening Tlingit chant
Acting out a legend
The only tree on the tundra!  Actually a willow...
Friends!
The edge of the Earth
King of the world
May 16th turned out to be the rainiest day in May in Nome history, with the previous record being swamped by 4pm, with continual rain all night and into the next morning.  You’d think such a rainy, gloomy day would dampen my spirits, but the moment I woke up to see pouring rain I was filled with childlike excitement.  I haven’t experienced this type of precipitation in over 7 full months of hardcore winter; I was elated!  To celebrate the weather, two friends and I decided to try out a new restaurant that just opened in town and was reported to be “the only place in Nome that didn’t feel like Nome”.  That sold me on the idea!  Off we wandered through the wet and the rain to go on our sushi dinner date.  The only indications that we were still in Nome were that our food came out at all different times, the entrance to the place was riddled with cigarette butts and trash, and a glance out the windows showed the stubborn sea ice.  All in all the evening was wonderful and the pictures speak for themselves!


The chandelier is made of paper and buttons

Modern decor

Up-cyling in the walls
The women's bathroom
Rainbow roll with four kinds of fish
Simple salmon roll
Green dragon roll - my favorite!

Hiking has become a staple in my routine, and we’ve been going every chance we get.  It’s hard to imagine that I could be battling snow in 20 degrees in the same week that I’m getting sunburned in a t-shirt in unwavering sunshine and nearly 60 degrees, but it happened.  The rainy day finally broke the cold weather with warm southerly winds, and it’s been beautiful ever since.  The only word I can use to describe this change in weather in miraculous; on days like these there’s no place I’d rather be than on a mountain in Nome.  It’s amazing to see the impact a day of warmth can make on a snowy mountain, as the base of the hillside becomes saturated with water.  Pools of water form over the tundra, some of which resemble actual creeks and streams.  The tundra only ever thaws to about twelve inches deep (the remainder underneath is frozen all year) but it is resuming its spring-like bounce and flowers.

Can you see me?
So warm!
Posing
Still up to my knees in snow
Melting snow river
Temporarily swamped tundra
Playing Winne-the-Pooh sticks
I lost!
Besides the always breathtaking beauty of a trek across the tundra, there were a few other notable happenings during our frequent jaunts.  As we completed our trip up a rocky ridge, we noticed two hawks becoming noticeably more agitated and aggressive, paired with a high-pitched chirping from the outside of the rock face.  Parents protecting their hatchlings!  It was fascinating to watch them circle and swoop, making alarming screeching noises to warn us to back off.  A friend and I followed their advice, but my honey stayed to investigate further.  At one point the hawk dive-bombed him from nearly 30 feet, talons within a few inches of his shirtless back.  Needless to say, it was time to go.  All we wanted to do was enjoy the scenery and nice weather, but you win this time, hawks!


Slowly melting snow
The hawk!
Tempting fate
Can you find my honey sneaking a peek at the chirpers?
Duck and cover!
Hiding!
Another notable moment was witnessing eighteen adult musk oxen lounging and munching on some greens while driving home after a hike.  I’ve seen many a musk oxen, but never this many at one time.  I couldn’t believe how close we got to them, all from the protection of a vehicle.  The poor things are so overheated in this nice weather, being able to maintain a core body temperature of over 100 degrees even when completely immobile in -50.  Pretty soon their chill-zones will become goldmines; the warm weather leads to these animals shedding their quiviut, which will be stuck in the tundra and can be collected by the bagful.  This fuzzy and downy soft under-hair is treasured for its insulating and non-irritating qualities, and an ounce of quiviut is worth $90, and is used in knitting all types of luxury garments.

Muskies!
Chowing down
You lookin' at me?
Can't believe we got so close
The musk oxen have not moved on just yet, so I haven’t been able to capitalize on this lucrative opportunity.  This week we did however try our hand at some gold panning.  The town is beginning to fill up with mining characters of all kinds (purportedly not as friendly as last years crowd), and the dredges are already out in full-force thanks to the huge mass of ice miles from shore blocking the waves and allowing for calm water and prime dredging conditions.  Armed only with a borrowed gold pan, we made our way down to the waters edge to strike it rich.  After painstakingly reducing two pans of soil, we decided that we had perfected a new technique in gold mining; the catch and release method.  We had a hard time deciding what might be gold, and what might just be shiny.  Our efforts on the beach were not completely fruitless, and we did not leave empty handed – the newly exposed beach allowed me to find plenty of beach glass, which while not actually valuable is still pretty to look at.  I’ll call it a success!

They're back!
Out dredging amongst icebergs
Close-up of the melting sea ice
Gold panning on the beach
He's got gold in his eyes!
Striking it rich?