Aug 10 2008

More Barrow

Published by Crawlmeister under Day-to-day depravity

I forged a dedicated page with specific info on Barrow, for anyone who’s interested.

No responses yet

Jul 27 2008

Arctic Circle Superdash, Part 4

Deep Arctic

:arrow: Barrow, Alaska. The coolest town in the United States. Literally. Nothing will prepare you for the culture shock that Barrow is - thousands of years of tradition colliding with the modern U.S. government system. As our Alaska Airlines plane circled around for landing, we were all treated to the icy vista of the Arctic Ocean below. In July. As we stepped out of the plane, we were taken aback by a gust of 40-degree air blowing from the tundra. After all, it was 85 degrees in Fairbanks - just 90 minutes ago.

Barrow is not a destination for major tour companies operating in Alaska - it’s mostly for  adventurous souls and small groups/couples traveling on their own.

You might think that this place would at least be somehow similar to the other cities, such as Anchorage or Fairbanks - but it’s not. It looks more like the sci-fi settler colony LV-426 in James Cameron’s “Aliens”.

Barrow, AK by hemicuda_2001.

Harsh, cold, winterized, disorienting. There are no paved roads, since they are all covered in snow and ice for most of the year anyway.  The roads are covered in mud during the summer when it rains, or host tons of dust when it’s dry. Don’t count on strolling around and just happening upon a Starbucks - not that kind of place. Built for survival and not luxury, things are better than in 1972, however. There is a sewer system, running water, cable TV and “internets” - all the conveniences that most people are used to, albeit in the surreal context of the Arctic Ocean.

So how is it seeing the sun not go down at midnight? It’s weird. My hotel room in particular was facing west, which meant  the sun was bursting through the window in the middle of the night. But, what, you say - didn’t the window have blinds? Well, yeah, but it looked like someone had used them for target practice with an AK-47 - the thing was full of holes.

It was a clear and sunny night when I arrived in Barrow. The first thing I did was grab my camera and hit the streets. This town is a photographer’s paradise. Tons of junk everywhere, cast in gentle sunset light.

Arctic Dumpster Art by you.

While the coveted yellow light usually lasts only a few minutes everywhere else on the planet, here in the Arctic Circle it lasts for hours, which makes taking pictures a pure thrill. That, of course, if the night is sunny, which the next one wasn’t.

I woke up to dense fog the next morning, and it refused to go away. But, it was 4th of July, so I had to “document” it. How is it celebrated in the Arctic anyway?

The locals line up the city’s emergency vehicles, as well as many cars supplied by local businesses. The cars put on everything that can make noise or blink, and the column moves through town. Children greet the column with plastic bags, which baffles visitors a bit. The plastic bags are for candy, and it is hurled out of cars and onto the streets. After the whole thing is over, the roads are still covered in candy that nobody wants anymore.

Arctic Dumpster Art by you.

Since my time in Barrow was very limited, I decided to not let the rest of the day go by, so I treked along one of the roads leading out of town, into the arctic tundra. To my surprise, the fog turned out to be a shoreline phenomenon, which dissipated right outside of town. Here in the tundra, it was frigid and clear. Great success!

There are no trees in the tundra, so migrating birds have no choice but to nest on the ground. This makes it a bird-watcher’s heaven. A lot of birds have a special tactic against arctic foxes, where they will fly out of their nests and make it look like they are nesting somewhere else. Foxes usually buy that. Some birds get fairly aggressive and do consecutive air raids right over your head. This is the time to keep your camera ready and in-focus:

Arctic Dumpster Art by you.
“Stay off my property”

One thing that was a bit disappointing about the tundra was the extent of litter over it, right outside of town at least. Perhaps not as obvious during winter, but once the snow melts, it looks more like a landfill. Well, it’s definitely not “pristine”. Not littering is not encouraged, let alone enforced. This upsets the bird-watchers who come here, since shiny carton boxes far away beg for some attention along with the birds. Even the town itself is a place of abandoned junk throughout. No one cares to clean it up, so the city offers free cleanups.

The fog refused to go away on my second day in Barrow as well, so I just ended up walking around town with my camera (still, a lot of fun).

Most houses in Barrow are fairly small light wooden boxes. Some even have sleds underneath, so they can be moved from place to place during winter. The founding permafrost makes construction here extremely difficult. There are only a few buildings in Barrow that stand out because of that: the high school complex is massive, the glass-and-metal Wells Fargo looks like it was airlifted from Seattle and just plonked where it could. Or maybe that’s what happened.  Construction of the Alaska Airlines terminal was an award-winning engineering feat - the building had to be assembled and shipped in pieces. The two-months-a-year construction window didn’t help much either.

A large portion of Barrow’s population depends on subsistence hunting, at sea or inland. It’s common for many households to own a snowmobile and an ATV, which are ideal for winters and summers, respectively.

Barrow Household by you.

Hunters generally hop on a snowmobile and depart the settlement in winter, but what happens if the machine stalls, and it’s 20 below with 20-knot winds? Search and rescue is a big part of life here. It’s very easy to get in trouble, especially for visitors who don’t take this harsh place seriously. The local Search & Rescue greets you with their smug slogan: “Search & Rescue - We Don’t Want Your Business.”

Indeed, just eyeballing the rescue missions for the last few months, Barrow graces the list pretty much every month. Not to mention the State of Alaska in general.

A personal locator beacon is a must-have little gadget for anyone on the North Slope - if you get stuck far away from town - a few satellites up above are the only ones listening.

microfix.jpg
Personal Locator Beacon - “Come with me if you want to live”

As a curious fact: the predecessor to current PLB’s originated here, in Alaska, after a plane carrying two Congressman  crashed on its way to Juneau in 1972. It triggered one of the largest search and rescue operations in history, unsuccessfully. The current generation of PLB’s are a fairly recent invention, and can/should be owned by anyone in the lower 48 who has a thing for wilderness. The system was first tested in Alaska and went into “wide release” in 1990’s for the rest us.

My stay in Barrow was over. As a usual occurrence, our plane was delayed on the way out because of bad weather, but not enough to make me miss my connection to Juneau in Anchorage. As our flight approached Anchorage, the Alaska Airlines 747 descended and corrected its course a bit. And then, in a spectacular fashion, the plane flew right over the highest peak in North America - the summit of Mt. Denali.

No responses yet

Jul 25 2008

Arctic Circle Superdash, Part 3

The Interior and Fairbanks

In Talkeetna, I boarded an Alaska Railroad train for the second leg of my trip – on to Fairbanks, past the Denali National Park. The trip from Talkeetna takes 8 hours, through increasingly sub-arctic vegetation, and the Alaska Range gracing the windows of passenger cars.

Traveling along the rail road can give you the false impression that people live everywhere in the interior - the immediate area seen from the train is often sprinkled with small towns and occasional lonely houses. Don’t be fooled, though - it’s only because the railroad is here, and the only highway around runs nearby as well. Very few people want to intentionally cut themselves from any lines to civilization. Beyond the railroad, it’s Nothingness.

DSCF1243.jpg
Stay in these Denali Park lodges and pay through the nose

The noisy families got off in Denali National Park, and the quieter and more mature audiences continued on north, in an almost empty train:

DSCF1232.jpg

Mnt. Denali can be seen about 20% of the year. This was one of the 20 percent. The entire trip was blessed with the weather that was actually getting better. It got so much better, in fact, that we could see the massive mountain all the way near Fairbanks. Indeed, on a good day, the highest peak in North America can be seen from hundreds of miles away.

When it comes to traveling Alaska Railroad, you can spend more money riding Gold Star class (equivalent to First Class), but I found coach perfectly acceptable. Perhaps because with very few people, I could move around, sit wherever I wanted to, get the best seat in the dome car, or stand in between the cars and take in the views. There is a snack car and a restaurant on-board, and since I pretty much lived on this train for one day, I got both lunch and dinner there. For me, of course, traveling the rail was a means to an end – I needed to get to the next major airport.

Gold Star has its perks - a better food menu, and everyone gets their own glass dome window. Gold Star cars also have open-air balconies on the upper level. All this comes at a co$t.

Fairbanks - outskirts of the Arctic Cirlce. July 2nd. 9PM. Hot as a crotch. It’s bad enough that the sun does not even think of going down this late in the evening, it is actually clear, dry and hot, pushing the day’s temperature to 80F. Well, dragon poop, I am not traveling into the Arctic for *this* crap! This is not a fluke of weather. Fairbanks is in the part of the interior that experiences some of the most extreme temperature fluctuations on Earth. It can hit -60F in winter, and +90F in summer – a 150 degree difference.

The owner of the place where I was staying before my flight to Barrow picked me up at the rail depot. She told me - as she was turning the AC on in her car - “this is why I live here, it gets so hot that you forget about the cold winter.” Ironically, the only time I had to wear my short-sleeved t-shirt is in the Arctic.

Fairbanks is a very modern college town, with some of the most advanced scientific research taking place at the local University of Alaska campus (UAF). I had a full day ahead of me, trying to see the campus, get back to the hotel, get to the airport, go through the always fun airport nonsense, fly to Barrow, get to the hotel in Barrow, and finally find something to eat in Barrow.

One thing that I hate when traveling to new places is arriving there in total darkness. It’s totally disorienting – you just don’t know where the heck you are and what’s around you until the next morning. No such problem in Alaska this time of year. You look at the watch and think – “Oh, it’s 8PM. The sunset is at around 12AM. I got time before it, well, doesn’t get dark anyway.”

Falling asleep in Fairbanks near a major road is nearly impossible – students with their motorcycles and souped up cars raise hell into the late hours of the night, where “night” is a relative term. The fact that it was bright out well after midnight didn’t help either. I was glad I had to put up with this for just one night, and I was sufficiently tired by the 8-hour rail trip to get some shuteye.

DSCF1293.jpg
Fairbanks - spread out and hot

I woke up the next morning to my first of the three days and nights that would never see the sun go down. The concept of “night” was now completely gone. Night is the new day. The next “day” was even hotter in Fairbanks, with temperatures crossing 85 degrees. Fairbanks, with its surrounding green-ish hills, and dry hot weather, sometimes just feels like LA. Including the kind of a bus system:

DSCF1294.jpg
You don’t want me to ride the bus. I get it.

After walking a few long blocks under the scorching sun, trying to find a bus stop, and then figuring out the bus system with the barely readable schedule, I decided I was not going to put up with 45 minute to 1 hour service gaps, so I grabbed a cab to the University campus.

DSCF1283.jpg
Foreground - Geophysical Institute (research of Aurora Borealis, permafrost, etc). Background - Arctic Research Center (climate change research)

Since the campus is a spit away from the Arctic Circle line, it’s a place of fascinating studies of everything Arctic - Aurora Borealis, animals and plants in the Arctic, housing design in extreme cold, geophysics, health in the Arctic, and climate change. The latter has its own building which is only a few years old (built by U.S. and Japan in 1999, it’s the International Arctic Research Center).

From the elevation that the campus is on, I could see the Alaska Range and mount Denali, incredibly enough:

DSCF1291.jpg
Denali is to to left (and seen much better in real life, even from 200 miles away)

Fairbanks is known as the “Gateway to the Arctic”. But I didn’t want the gate. Open the gate, yo. I want to go the Arctic. I wanted to go to a place where there is only one weather forecast – cold as a bastard. Thanks to Alaska Airlines mileage plan, my trip to Barrow was on the house….

No responses yet

Next »

Recent Images

Juneau, AlaskaJuneau, AlaskaJuneau, AlaskaJuneau, AlaskaWhy so serious? :)Juneau, AlaskaWhale W@@tchingHarbor Seals