Category Archives: Juneau

A Second Dawn

P1130101Aki and I walk along the lower Mendenhall River, now a world reduced to black and white by a heavy snow shower. This morning’s high tide melted away all whiteness from the beach, leaving only toppings of snow on clumps of severed seaweed. Fat flakes from the storm try to lighten the still wet sand but end up producing a transparent slurry that Aki avoids by walking above the tide line. We have dusk at 1330 even though official sunset is at least two hours away.

P1130079All the sand bars were under water when we first broke from the forest but now they grow in the ebbing tide. Ducks and geese, probably seeking a sanctuary from two hunting seals, form tight groups that cackle out warning when a bald eagle launches from its beach side spruce tree roost. By the time the eagle reaches the sandbar, its potential prey have scattered. The big bird returns to its roost.

P1130114Having no luck last week enticing a seal with song, I try to whistle in a pair cruising the river. One does change course and moves, head elevated from the water, in our direction. It dives when I bring out the camera. Down channel we enjoy a second dawn. The clouds crack, allowing views of a wedge of blue and weak sunlight that returns color to our world.

Convergence

P1130059Seamus, our electronic weather avatar, told me to forget the morning football games, the second cup of coffee, my recent fascination with the chestnut backed chickadees hammering the bird feeder. He told me to grab Aki, put on ice grippers on my boots, and head for Gasteneau Meadows. The little potbellied ikon can’t speak but he did stand beneath a cartoon cloud dropping cartoon snow on his round watch-capped head and on the number, “27.” This meant that after weeks of modestly warm temperatures and light rain, it was finally cold enough to firm up the mountain snowpack but snow would soon fall. For a short time, we could and did move easily over deep meadow snows.

Seamus’ promised snow held off for the morning walk between mountain hemlock and bull pines. Nothing obscured tracks left by a hunting wolf, snowshoe hares (its prey?), and a struggling deer. High clouds moved to reveal and obscure mountain peaks. Once, they released rays of sun that drew a line of bright dashes across Mountain Juneau. P1130048

These magic convergences come on spring mornings along the Kuskokwim River in Western Alaska. When we lived there in a house surrounded by eight sled dogs, I longed for April saturdays when the dogs could fly over the crusted over tundra, hardly slowed by our weight and that of the camp gear. After a winter of being restricted to snow machine trails and smooth stretches of frozen water, we were free to explore the voids in the government maps, maybe see pure white ptarmigan fly at our approach. P1130069

Aki’s Terror

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERALetting desire triumph over common sense, I pulled up at the Montana Creek trailhead and parked the car in one of the spaces shared by trail users and customers of the outdoor gun range. Aki, having waited patiently until late afternoon for this adventure, shot out of the car just before someone emptied the clip of their high powered rifled at a gun range target. Scared of gun shots and fire crackers, the little poodle-mix charged full speed down the trail to escape the noise.    You might think this is irrefutable proof of my lack of common sense, but consider that someone relocated the trailhead to the edge of this war zone after my last visit to Montana Creek. Also, it being dusk, I had a right to expect quiet as no one should have been taking target practice at the unlit range since it closes at sunset. Those were the defenses I planned to raise at Aki’s inquest. They weren’t needed. The little dog appeared a kilometer down the trail, tail wagging as she trotted behind a homeward bound skier. Apparently my fear of losing my fellow adventurer lasted longer than her gunshot-induced terror.

Bedtime for Bruins

P1130045This morning, with its moderate temperatures and lack of rain, the fog brought me joy. That changed in the mountains as I struggle to walk on slick ice trails in the rains. The fog softens and envelops the bare tree forest along Gold Creek and cuts off the mountain sides from view. I look for the tracks of the insomniac bear that still robs neighborhood garbage cans on pickup day but find only those of dogs and man. We had a banner salmon harvest from the local streams. He (or she) should be fat and happy and hibernating in a mountainside hobbit hole, not filling his stomach with man’s cast offs. If you see him, tell him its bed time for bruins. P1130043

Singing to a Seal

P1120980At least four adult bald eagles huddle on the far bank of Sheep Creek. Two more roost on the offshore channel marker. Others hang out in beach side red alders or on the creek delta’s edge. Kept here by the creek’s promise of food they endure each other’s company as the morning’s wet snowfall changes to rain. P1130009

Figuring they need to conserve their energy, Aki and I give them a wide berth, moving to the delta edge where a solitary seal swims past the channel marker. Remembering a claim that seals can be drawn close by singing to them, I start in on, “Dark as a Dungeon.” It’s an odd choice, one I question the first time the seal slips under water. (“Oh come all you young fellers, so young and so fine, and seek not your fortune in a dark dreary mine. It will form as a habit and seep in your soul, till the stream of your blood runs as black as the coal.”).  The seal surfaces for the chorus. (“Where it’s dark as a dungeon and damp as the dew, where the dangers are double, and the pleasures are few, where the rain never falls and the sun never shines, it’s dark as a dungeon way down in the mine.”). Then he disappears for good.

P1120984The gulls, apparently unbothered by my singing or Aki’s presence stay for another refrain but I stop when the eagles we left on the stream register noisy complaints.  A dog walker heading right toward them, his herding dog close at his heals, flushes them to flight. Idiot, I think, then decide to give him the benefit of the doubt. He has temporary license plates on the pickup truck he parked next to my car.  He might not know better. It’s easier to tolerate ignorance than rudeness. (Isn’t  there is a song about that?). P1130019

Simplified to Shapes

P1120947Patrons of MOMA, rather than the National Gallery of Art would enjoy a walk today on the Mendenhall Wetlands. A low marine layer cuts off mountain views and migrating fog obscures the horizon. The gray simplifies, allowing appreciation of contrasting shapes: grass collapsed by cold then woven by tides, snake like channels delivering runoff to Gasteneau Channel, mud formed into fish scale shapes by tidal flow,  the simple geometry of the Number 17 navigation marker where two bickering bald eagles roost. We cross the curving channels and approach Number 17. One eagle flies off, setting a chain reaction in motion as he flies toward a gang of Canada geese that rise in an alarm. startling geese a mile away from the eagle.  P1120965

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Schedule Time for Solitude

P1120919In her book. Silence, Sara Maitland recommends creating little pockets of solitude by taking walks over ground seldom used by others. I wanted to follow her advice today but wind and rain drove Aki and I into the wooded ruins of the old Treadwell Mines. We found other dog walkers there but they were wrapped up in too much foul weather gear to sing in the new year or even speak. P1120927

Ms. Maitland convinced me that everyone should dedicate some time to silence on January 1. After morning coffee or tea, bundle up and walk through some noiseless place. Don’t fill the earned silence with thoughts of the past or your hopes and fears for this year. Enjoy the void or let ideas bubble up from your subconscious stew. Watch, as we did, your local winter ducks fly urgently over the water or gulls move through the sky at a leisurely pace. Ignore your ghosts, for us those of old Treadwell miners or the avalanche gun that fires rounds across Gasteneau Channel to bring down unsafe loads of snow from the slopes of Mt. Roberts. Taste the resulting peace even if rain swollen streams carry eroded land to the sea. Bring it home.    P1120921

Happy New Year from Chicken Ridge

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAIt’s been a remarkably white December on Chicken Ridge. The big spruce trees marching up Mt. Maria retain snowy highlights. Snow shovels come out every day, building our sense of community as neighbors work together to open paths for people and cars. It’s the best time for neighbors to visit during the busy holiday season.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAAki, the snow lover, thrives here and on the more remote places where we cross country ski. With me, she hunts exciting smells and the odd chance to charge after a scolding squirrel. She changes when as on recent trips out the road, we ski with people with various skill levels. A good sized gap can open between the fastest and the slower skier. Aki becomes the herder she was born to be, dashing back and forth between the alpha and the omega; trying to encourage by example, the slowest to close the gap. After these outings, she spends the car ride home collapsed into the arms of one of the passengers.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAAki can’t consult a calendar so she doesn’t know that this is the last day of the year. She can sense emotions in her humans but I wonder if her skill is finely enough tuned to detect our communal optimism that next year will be better than 2013. The closing one brought joy and contentment to the house with the purple door on Chicken Ridge. Its occupants reasonably look forward to more of the same in 2014. We pray for the same for friends and family in the USA, France, Norway, Sweden, Portugal, Ireland, England, Scotland, and Canada. We have more desperate prayers for the rest of the world, inspired by the optimism of the season to ask for peace and an end to starvation, hatred, and bigotry. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

A Gourmet of Smells

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAIt’s amazing the different 20 miles of driving can make. Yesterday tromp through the moraine involved rain and heavy, wet snow. Today, out the road pointed north, we skied on good smooth track. Off trail, 18 inches of snow covered the ground, forming the sides of a deep, but skiable ditch. I gripped my poles halfway down the shafts to avoid skiing with my hands high in the air. Aki dashed up and down the ditch, ears flying up and down to the rhythm of her bouncing gate. At trails end she rolled in a stain of deer’s blood on snow as she has in beaver scent, bear scat, and even dead salmon; her face a mask of ecstasy until someone shouted, “Aki EEUUU.” The little dog looked shocked, a gourmet of smells wrongly condemned by her pedestrian people.  OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Rain Brings the Calm

 

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We have the moraine almost to ourselves. Only a few dog walkers show on the well packed trails. Our solitude comes cheap—rain dampened pants and boots wet from tromping through soft snow.
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Last weeks’ rich winter whiteness remains but without the enhancement of sun or the sparkles of frost. The snow, almost too white when contrasted with the black silhouettes of bare trees, throws up its own light. Since low clouds and fog cut off views of the glacier and its mountains, we only have the white, and gray, and black of the lower ground.
P1120914While last week’s sunny excess excited, this landscape deconstructed by rain brings calm, like that which always surrounded my father. He would have been 95 today, If I had the skill and an umbrella, I’d capture the calm, monotone moraine with ink washes but my painting couldn’t include this stream near the beaver village, stained a rust red by the surrounding muskeg.