Sunday, February 11, 2007

Villages and Northern Lights

I have found that I love flying! Or maybe I just love flying in the Alaskan back country! The views are just incredible and it is really such an adventure. I experience something new each time. I have never flown much but I am certainly getting the hang of it. The one bad thing is the whole "flight fatigue" thing. I really was not sure what people were making such a big deal about when they talked about it before. Now I certainly get it! Between the dehydration of the dry air involved in pressurizing the plane, the slight hypoxia involved in small planes, the vibration of the plane and the constant movement of the plane. It is much like the constant movement of a steering wheel and your body makes these small adjustments constantly as well. It can wear you out more than I can even explain.
Last week I went to 4 more villages. I have been to most of them in my area at this point. I have sadly only visited them at night. One of the villages we went is currently having a large problem with Polar Bears. When we land, normally the pilots do a walk around the plane to insure everything is fine. At this village, they tend to be a bit hesitant, go figure. When we get to the clinic, the folks there ask if we had problems with the bears coming in. So far, I have not seen one. I really want to, uummm, I think? The obvious concern is that I will be considered Polar Bear Bait.
When we fly into the villages, we are normally heading into one of the medical clinics. Most of the clinics here are small with community folks who have some basic first responder/midwife/CPR knowledge "staffing" them. The hospital in the area has doctors that are each assigned a village to visit for a few days. They take care of patients with chronic health problems and basically see patients for regular doctor appointments. For all those times that an emergent patient comes into a clinic and there is not doctor there (more often than not), all the clinics are wired on a radio system straight to our hospital. We also have video cameras and telemetry that they can go directly one-on-one with the doctor who is one duty. Kind of handy for these folks.
I am going to be traveling to the villages every few weeks to get a better idea of the Alaskan village life. I am looking forward to that! I am going to try to go out with the doctors originally so I have someone to guide me through the cultural steps.
Our weather has been getting colder again, but still no new snow. Lots of freezing wind that is blowing like a fiend! It is turning everything very icy! I stepped out of my apartment building a few days ago to take trash out. As I stepped onto the "snow" I lost my footing on the ice/snow. Managed to stay on my feet but the wind was blowing so hard that I got "blown" about 20 feet or so. Still managing to stay on my feet, I am looking at the trash can and the snow next to it, thinking to myself," I am only going to be able to stop by either falling or making it to the trash can!" I swear it was one of those moments that if anyone else had been around, they would have laughed so hard they would have cried! I was laughing anyway! Managed to stop by finding a patch of snow that had not been iced over. Life in the Arctic, you find fun where you can!
However the weather has still been unseasonably warm. The sound is starting to show signs of it. When the tide moves in and out, under the 5-6 feet of ice in thin spots, it has been causing pressure ridges. It is "weak" spots in the ice that shift up and cause something that almost looks like a crack. It is really kind of neat to see. It then becomes this "ridge that can be anywhere from a few inches high to several feet high. These are like cliffs of ice that suddenly show up and are pretty dangerous if you are on a snow machine. We have literally been getting 8 minutes of extra daylight every day. It doesn't sound like much, but when you think about it, that is almost an hour a week. The sunrises and sunsets are always beautiful here. I mean literally everyday there is a beautiful display of oranges, reds, purples, and pinks. They last for about two hours each.
I saw my first sight of the Northern Lights last night! We were flying at night and the pilots are great about pointing things out to me. It was not the colorful display you see pictures of, but it was at a low activity level. It was this amazing, very distinct light green "wave of cloud" kind of thing. It was truly indescribable!

3 comments:

Rowan said...

Hello!

What an amazing post! The flight and weather sound incredible.

I have witnessed the Northern Lights once, a green shimmering and pulsating ribbon of light above my old house in Sinclair Bay, up in Caithness in the far North of Scotland. It was quite a disconcerting sight - a little spooky, but then I am a cowardy custard.

Looking forward to reading more! All the best to you. Don't get blown away!

Dr. Bob said...

I can really see you getting blown away -- you are not very heavy, you know. Thanks so much for keeping us abreast of changes. Do you need cleats or something? Hey -- email me again with your care package requests. Love you lots, sweetie.

A mom in the 'burbs said...

You must somehow tell polar bears that blondes taste gamey. Not tasty at all. You are not the snack they are looking for. :)