Monday, July 26, 2010

Kayaking Photos

I got the pictures from my kayaking trip developed today. Seeing the gorgeous scenery again was great pick-me-up for an otherwise rainy and tiring day.

We got up close to the watery scenery

I don't know if it's my outfit or the disposable camera, but this looks so 80s


Our lunch spot; there's a seal swimming out there somewhere

Sunday, July 25, 2010

The Bears of Valdez


Moose are sooo last month. Yea, I've seen 12 of them, whatever. Now I'm hyped about our recent bear sighting.

On our most recent work trip, we drove from Anchorage to Glennallen, where we spent four days. Instead of driving all the way back to Anchorage, we took the shorter drive to Valdez and then hopped on a ferry to the Anchorage area. Before catching some sleep on Thursday in Valdez, we drove to a spot often frequented by bears and hit the jackpot-- four black bears.

We spotted three cubs in the woods!

Then they decided to cross the road as momma peaked out from the woods
She joined them by the waters edge for a salmon buffet!
The salmon never stood a chance!
Fishing can be fun!
The birds took care of the leftovers



Saturday, July 24, 2010

It's a SMALL World

I never realized the difference that living in a small city can make. I grew up in metropolitan Detroit (with over five million people) and went to school in the Delaware Valley (with over six million people). So with 360,000 people, metropolitan Anchorage is by far the smallest place I've lived. 

Riding my bike through the park, getting groceries, and going hiking inevitably become social events. Another seasonal intern and I have mutual friends in Michigan. I've only been here a month, and I keep running into people I know. For my roommate, this was a little more literal. When she was recently "tapped" by a car on her bike (everyone is ok!), the driver ended up being a friend of our boss.

A small city has other great attributes, too. Traffic, no matter what the Alaskans say, is virtually non-existent. People drive slower and more carefully. People wave and say hello on trails and while passing on the street. The only time I feel unsafe is when I'm in the proximity of bears.

Anchorage does have a little more traffic than this...
My trip this past week was fantastic. I'll be posting more pictures tomorrow!

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Time is Faster Than a Glacier

When summer hits Alaska, people up here tend to get a little frantic. "It's all we've got," one six year resident told me. "We've got to utilize every minute of it."

Having a penchant for adventure, I've easily been swept into this mindset. Suddenly, a lazy Sunday seems like a total waste-- I could be hiking, kayaking, fishing, etc! And with so many new people, the pressure to form bonds and make friends leads to an eclectic collection of get-togethers and parties. Moreover, it doesn't help that I know my time here is limited. My summer here is extra precious as it's probably going to be my only one.

So today, I'm bringing down the pace a bit and just relaxing at home. The rain outside keeps me from feeling too bad about blogging instead of biking. And I'm just going to count myself lucky for getting to experience so many cool places through work. 

On Thursday and Friday, we drove south of Anchorage to Kenai Fjords National Park for a grass identification class. As exciting as lemmas and awns may be, I think my real memory from this trip is the glacier. I had never seen a glacier before coming to Alaska, and up until Thursday, I had only seen them from a distance. We got up close to Exit Glacier (we still couldn't touch it though. It would be dangerous to get that close to this huge, yet fragile and moving hunk of ice). The massive power and density of this natural occurrence is something that just can't be conveyed in pictures. But here are some anyway :)

Where the glacier was in 1917. A lot has changed since then!

Exit Glacier and its outwash
I'm standing about 25 yards from the glacial edge

This upcoming week means even more traveling. We're driving to Glennallen, AK to scout plant populations and collect seeds. The trip homes means a stop in Valdez and a ferry ride through Prince William Sound. So what if time is going fast. At least it's quality!

Sunday, July 11, 2010

AK 930

Just another day at work...
As much fun as kayaking through the sound and enjoying the copious amounts of daylight here are, they aren't exactly my raison d'être up here. I do actually work up here. It just so happens that my work is just as fun.

In December of 2009, I applied to the Conservation and Land Management Internship. This program, run by the Chicago Botanic Garden (CBG), places recent college graduates in government conservation biology positions across the country. In my application, I refused to state a geographic preference, but I did express a desire to work with plants. Since most of America's public lands are in the west, I expected a placement in Nevada or Montana. [If you're interested in what other CLM interns are doing, check out this blog]

Seven months later, here I am working in Alaska! Up here, I work for two entities-- the Bureau of Land Management Alaska State Office (BLM) and the Alaska Natural Heritage Program (AKNHP). And even though these two offices are physically separate, both have the same project for me and my fellow interns. We need to collect seeds.

AK 930 in action
Throughout America's public lands, disturbances often occur. Large fires take out huge swaths of prairie, mining destroys big mountains, or pipelines divide habitats for years on end. Since humans cause most of these disturbances, we often need to repair the damage before bigger problems (usually soil and mineral erosion) take over. To do this, we revegetate.

Unfortunately, many seeds of plants native to the disturbed area are not commercially available or exist so at a prohibitive cost. Thus, the government started the Seeds of Success program in 2001 to bank these vital seeds and increase their availability. Hundreds of collecting teams throughout the United States find native plants and collect around 10,000 seeds from a populations. They then FedEx these seeds to various seed banks and seed processing facilities.

Dryas Drummondii (our only seeding plant)
 and my boss
We are collecting team AK 930, the only collecting team in Alaska. Because of Alaska's unique climate, only one of our target species is currently seeding. This means we spend a lot of time planning. When we're in the office (so far about 30% of the time), we arrange for rental cars, flights, hotels, and food for our upcoming trips. When we go out into the field with our boss, he teaches us plant names and systematics. When he doesn't come with us, we scout out plant populations that might be good to collect.

So what makes this job so awesome? First, we are pretty independent. Second, I'm using my degree. We get to make scientific decisions based on our rapidly expanding knowledge of the plants up here. Last but not least, I'm basically getting paid to hike and look at flowers. Later in the season, we'll even travel around the state. Place like Nome, Fairbanks, Glenallen, and Seward await. Not bad for a first job, huh?

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Just keep paddling...

After a couple weeks of settling in and meeting people, I was ready to shake things up for the 4th. One of my co-workers/roommates/friends and I decided to join the Anchorage Adventurers for a weekend of sea kayaking.

This story is a great example of how easy it is to meet people thanks to the internet. The Anchorage Adventurers really only exist online. The 600+ members all have some sort of interest in outdoor activities and various members set up events for others to join them on. No one charges a fee or holds board meetings. People simply show up, have fun, and enjoy Alaska together. I've also been able to meet really interesting people through the Anchorage couchsurfing group.

But I digress. Even though we went with a fantastic group, the kayaking was really the highlight of the weekend. On Saturday, we drove out to Wasilla (about an hour away from Anchorage) to take Sea Kayaking 101. We spent the morning learning proper paddling techniques. Sure, it sounds simple, but I'm glad we did that. Paddling out into the lake, the whole group was like 2010's Lindsey Lohan--messed up and all over the place. Coming back, we resembled Lohan ala "Mean Girls." Even if we weren't completely perfect, we were at least somewhat put together.

The afternoon held the big events. Amid a light rain, we practiced getting out of and into our kayaks. Oh, and we were in the middle of the lake. With a gentle push from our instructor, we were flipped over in the lake, quickly undoing the skirt that kept us in the kayak, and floating to the surface. And climbing back in isn't as easy as it sounds. To keep from flipping back over or filling our boats with water, we had to follow special instructions. I'd tell you, but we don't the terrorists finding out how to navigate Alaska by kayak, do we?

Saturday was simply the prelude to our big trip on Sunday, however. We met up at 7am and drove over to Whittier, Alaska. This tiny town began as an air force base in WWII, because its isolation and heavy fog provided a natural defense against the Japanese. This unique situation has also kept Whittier from booming. All 182 people live in a single apartment complex.

But man do those apartments have views. Paddling around the Prince William Sound, I saw three different glaciers, gorgeous blue-grey waters, steep cliffs, and lush vegetation. We even got 5 minutes of sunshine! By kayaking, we got up close to the wildlife of the area, too. Tiny ducks dove when we got about 5 feet from them. A bird rookery allowed me to watch some interesting (and loud) sea birds. Towards lunch time, a seal swam along side us.

I'm really glad I chose to start kayaking. Through my work (which I will blog about eventually!), I'm going to be doing a lot of hiking and get to see a lot of great stuff on land. But if I can use my free time to explore Alaska's waters, I'll see a side that I might have missed. The company we went with really hyped up their Blackstone Glacier tour. Kayaking around icebergs and watching otters try to crack shells on my kayak sure sounds appealing. Does anyone have any other suggestions of places I should look into going while I'm up here?

Since neither my friend nor I have a waterproof camera, we just brought along a disposable in case of tipping. I'll post pictures of the trip once I get the film developed.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

The Obligatory Post About Weather

We finally have some great weather up here today. Ever since I got to Alaska, it's been in the 50s and cloudy, threatening rain, or rainy. For a city with 19 hour days, I haven't seen much sun.

But today, for maybe the third time since I've been here, the sun poked out. And this time, warmer temperatures followed. I was outside--comfortably--in shorts and a t-shirt. Yes, my dear friends, it was 62 degrees!

Most Alaskans have told me that this summer has been unseasonably rainy. They said to expect much warmer and drier forecasts in July and August. Although I love living right next to the ocean, it does bring down the temps and up the rain. More inland cities like Fairbanks tend to have really hot summers (yes, hot in the lower-48 sense of the term, like 80s and 90s), but really suffer in the winter with dry, freezing spells.

Since tomorrow should be good, too, I'm working on finding ways to enjoy the weather. I'm settled in and falling into a pretty good work routine, so I have lots of extra time on my hands. I've been biking a lot with my roommates and just joined a running group yesterday. Now I'm thinking about volunteering with something. Any ideas or suggestions?

Monday, June 28, 2010

My Kinda' Town

My field, environmental science, can be a bit ambiguous at times. No one has ever really tried to define it, and since it's so interdisciplinary, some might say that it defies definition. I specialized in biology. But geologists dominate the environmental studies department at Penn, so their classes felt a lot like earth science. Other schools incorporate a lot more political science, economics, chemistry, the list goes on and on.

I have a theory about the field; I tend to see it as the study of humans actions in the context of a natural environment. How does our search for uranium impact soil erosion? How do populations of flagship species affect conservation initiatives? I'm pretty sure that just living in Alaska, I'll be able to test this theory quite well.
Ever since I accepted this job, I started reading the Anchorage Daily News online. Simply scanning the headlines got me geeked for Alaska-- quite literally. Nearly half of the stories seem to have a fairly direct connection to my environmental science interest. Whether native tribes are debating allowing mining on their lands or the Alaskan politicians are recounting their experiences with the Exxon-Valdez oil spill, it all relates back to humans interacting with their natural surroundings. Even a simple public interest story, like salmon fishing on a river, is fraught with such issues. When will the salmon run this year, how many permits will Fish and Wildlife allow, how many fish were taken, etc., etc.?

Since I haven't met many Alaskans yet, I can't yet rate their perception or knowledge of these issues. But for a people who grow up with human-environment conflict as a constant presence, I wonder if they view it as a science at all. Or is it simply life?

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Alaska is BIG

Everyone knows that Alaska is the biggest state in the union-- and quite a bit bigger than most countries in the world (do you know which ones actually surpass Alaska?). But it's quite a different thing to actually experience this largess.

My roommates and I thought about flying to Barrow, Alaska, the northernmost city in the United States (and the sun doesn't set for three months of summer!). We figured that we're already so close to the Arctic Circle, we might as well go over it.

Well, close is a relative term. Let's just say that a flight to Barrow costs around $500 and takes 3.5 hours. For the chance to dip my feet in the Arctic Ocean? I don't know if it's worth it...

I've met a couple Alaskans who are from villages or islands so isolated, no roads exist. They have to fly three or four hours in a fixed wing plane or take a day-long ferry ride just to visit family and friends.

I'm sure my appreciation for Alaska's size will only grow with time and travel experience. Let's just hope I don't get lost!

My New Big Wild Life

Anchorage, Alaska's current tourist slogan is "Big Wild Life," and the city plasters it on everything, from the welcome packet I found in my room to the buses driving around town. I think it's pretty easy to see why they chose this slogan. 1- Alaska is known for it's size and grandiose wilderness. The city wants to reinforce that thought and attach it to the city itself. 2- Alaska is known for it's size and grandiose wilderness. The city wants let people know that the wilderness isn't ubiquitous. Quality restaurants and nightlife can coexist with bears and moose in Alaska.

Since moving here a little over two weeks ago, Anchorage has surprised me on both points. I expected the gorgeous scenery and news of bear attacks, but I didn't realize that all of that would be so present in Alaska's largest city itself! Chugach State Park lies within the city boundaries, and it's mountains tower over the city's skyline. The coastal trail passes by lusciously growing estuaries and tidal mud flats. I spend 80% of my morning bicycle commute on a wooded river trail. I've seen eight moose so far-- all within the city boundaries.
As far as the second point goes, Anchorage surprised me here, too. I'd heard some negative talk about the city before getting here (ugly, unplanned, can't go anywhere without a car, lack of good restaurants, expensive), but I've found most of this to be untrue. The city's oil boom did coincide with the American strip mall boom, so the architecture and urban planning does leave something to be desired, but overall I'm pretty pleased with the city's density and logical layout. Anchorage has a high concentration of microbreweries, and the food, while certainly not international, has been creative and delicious. The few bars and shops which I've seen in downtown and midtown compare well to my favorites from Philadelphia, Munich, and Detroit.
With only two weeks of residency under my belt, I still have plenty of Anchorage to explore. And I'm certainly looking forward to every minute of it.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

A New Adventure Begins

I haven't written here for over a year, a fact that I am quite ashamed of. This blog details the travels and adventures that I'm lucky enough to enjoy. It forces me to reflect on what I've experienced.

The lack of a post does not mean I haven't had interesting travels. My whole second semester in Germany seems to have missed this blog. My return to the States, my quick jaunts to Chicago and Cincinnati, and my move back to Philadelphia all deserve posts just as much as Munich and Mongolia.

But for now, my energies are focused on a new chapter-- Alaska. Yes, I'm about to graduate and enter the work force in Anchorage, Alaska. As I learn more about this great section of our country, I hope to keep track of it here. Perhaps I'll even be able to recollect about Prague, the farm, and my final year in Philly, too.