Saturday, February 28, 2009

Armageddon of White

Yes, this is Alaska....and yes, this is ARCTIC Alaska, but we, like everywhere else, have our typical weather. We pretty much know what to expect. I say this because people like to say "Gee, what do you expect?? You live in the Arctic!" And I think to myself "No shit genius, of this I am aware". But even here, in the arctic, we are allowed to be amazed at the over the top extremes of our already, at times, severe weather. Even for the arctic 7 blizzards in two weeks is not typical. It is certainly not unheard of, but it is NOT typical. It would be like New England getting 6 nor'easters in one month.

On Thursday morning, the 6th blizzard, school was closed, Maniilaq and other businesses closed and the morning Alaska Airlines flight cancelled. Then around 10am the skies cleared and everybody began digging out. The afternoon Alaska Airlines jet, the one that I was on made it in, Maniilaq reopened, and the school called the teachers back into work (so that they could call it an "in service" and therefore not have to make the day up).


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The 7th blizzard, the one that stuck me and many others at work, was no surprise. The morning started relatively calm with a bright pink sky. You know, pink sky in the morning, sailors take warning? The big low pressure system had been forecasted. The problem was (in my opinion, anyone can feel free to correct me if I am wrong), with all the business and school closures that we had in the past 2 weeks, the powers that be seemed reluctant to close up shop. It was like they wanted to wait until they knew that this blizzard REALLY meant it before they sent people scurrying for cover. Well, they waited too long.


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At around 1-1:30pm the school finally closed and they started calling parents to come get kids. By that time the weather was so bad that visibility, according to weatherunderground.com, was already considered "zero".


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In reality visibility was fluctuating somewhere between 50-100 feet. I was able to get to the school, pick up my mom and my son, and head back to work. Just barely.


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I thought about staying home but I really didn't want to take personal leave for the rest of the afternoon. I went back to work hoping that Maniilaq would close right away.

At around 2pm we got an email saying that we need to park all non essential work vehicles and they would know by 3pm whether or not Maniilaq would close. I was thinking "Gee, what happens at 3pm that is so different from now?". Then around 2:25 pm we get another email telling us to go home. Well thanks, that was a nice thought, but a little too late. By then visibility was, I kid you not, about 5 feet, a situation that is quite dangerous even here in town. Bree and I decided to stay put. Usually there are breaks in the heavy snowfall and you can try to get somewhere quickly. Not this time. By around 4:30pm we were getting concerned that if we wanted to get home it was now or never. We began scrounging around work for all the winter gear we could find and were able to outfit ourselves quite well. I knew that I would not be able to make it the 3/4 of a mile to my house down 3rd ave. There would be too many drifts and with my bum knee I would be doomed. Instead I decided to walk to my friend Kathy's house, about 4 houses upwind. We left work at 4:45 pm. I gave Bree my cell phone because she had farther to walk than me. I hollered to Bree over the howling wind, half jokingly, "Well, it was nice knowing you!" and then we went our separate ways.

I encountered my first obstacle about 30 feet into my walk. There was a 4 foot snow drift with a Honda 4-wheeler (atv) embedded in the opposite side. I tried to climb over the drift but sunk in up past my waist. I was wearing ski pants but I had short wussy North Face boots on and my boots filled with snow freezing my ankles. I figured if I went to the right towards the garage door I might find the short side of the drift and be able to wade through. With some effort I made it thru and found clear road. I knew Madeline's house was next but I could only see it intermittently for a second a time, the wind threatening to topple me over. I followed the tire tracks in the hard packed road, this part hadn't yet drifted over. My face was soaking wet and starting to freeze. At that point I didn't care.

I knew my next goal was the 150 feet to Chip and Cindy's house. I slogged on one step at a time into what I now know was a 64 mph head wind. I could just make out Chip and Cindy's house when I hit a deep snowbank and a gust of wind caught me and made me fall to my knees. Every time I tried to get back up the wind would knock me down. I struggled and bogged down in the almost 4 foot drift. Every breath I tried to take was getting sucked out of my mouth by the wind and I started to panic. I realized that I needed to calm down. I knew the Chip and Cindy's house was 25 feet away, and one way or another I could make that 25 feet, even if it took me a half an hour. Even if I had to I would roll across and through the drift. Then I thought shit, I would hate to have them look out the window and see me thrashing around in that snow drift like a beached friggin' beluga. It was at that point that I realized I wasn't totally in fear for my life yet because if I was I wouldn't be worried about people thinking I looked foolish. I kneeled in the drift for about 4 more minutes waiting to catch my breath, be calm, and wait for a tiny break in the gusts and then stood up and waded the rest of the way through the drift to clear road.

I could not see, my glasses were crusted over with ice. The wind was whipping the snot out of my nose and smearing it down over my chin and the left side of my face. The right side of my face was plastered with snow. The eyelashes on my right eye were frozen shut. At that point I could just see the phone pole near Kathy's house. I said a prayer that there were no more drifts and pressed on. I made it.


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It took me almost 15 minutes to walk 389 feet. That was the hardest won 389 feet of my life.

Bree's stroll home was as bad as mine only longer. There were many of us last night that were stuck at our various places of work. There were kids stuck at the school until midnight...but hey, they sure don't have to make up a snow day and that's what counts....right??

I know there are others from last night with crazy stories like mine. Go check out Maija's blizzard story

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Here is what my work looked like this morning when I stopped by to pick up my truck and try to make it home.


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Luckily the side door wasn't blocked.


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My neighbor's buried house. I have heard several people say that this is the worst storm they have seen in the last 25 years.

So I learned a couple valuable lessons in this storm. The first being that I should trust my instincts. That just because you have been through a bunch of storms in the last 2 weeks doesn't mean that the next one isn't gonna be the mother of them all. I should have gotten my mom and my boy out of school when I first had a bad feeling about the whole thing. I shouldn't have left these decision up to other people who may or may not have our best interest at heart.

The second lesson is that when it comes to keeping my child safe or not making up a school day, the school district will pick not making up a school day. Pretty sad that a bunch of kids, some with special needs , were stuck at school until late into the night because the school district didn't want to have to make up that day. We all know that is the reason they waited until after 1pm to call off school. If someone disagrees with that assessment feel free to comment here. I have no problem eating crow, it tastes ok with ketchup.

So that's my story for those of you who asked to hear it. I know a lot of Kotzebue folks have stories of last night like mine, or worse. It would be great to hear about them so post me a comment if you have the time. You can be anonymous if you want. How did you get home or where did you spend the night???


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Here is the weather chart for Kotzebue during the period of time that this story took place. While it may have been pretty breezy here, mother nature tried to blow the village of Savoonga off the map...during this same storm they had sustained wind of 84 mph with gusts to 99mph.

26 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi! I'm reading your blog everyday. I live in sunny South Africa and enjoy it very much. Really want to visit Alaska sometime. Thanks for the great pictures also! Jaco Kleynhans, Pretoria, South Africa

Karen Travels said...

Wow!! Glad you are okay!!

LoveANewIdea said...

Holy cow! Unbelievable story, and now that you're safe, an incredible adventure. I just can't get over how high the snow drifts against the houses.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Posted some blizzard pictures of Kotzebue last night too: justinrummel.com.

Anonymous said...

meh. I've been in a few blizzards: Flagstaff, Arizona, one week back in the late nineties we couldn't get off the ranch for a week. Had to dig trenches for the dogs to get to the yard to poop, trenches for the horses to get to water: I know about blizzards.
And, I've had enough of 'em! You go and enjoy that snow, now, y'hear?
:P

Allmycke said...

I'm speechless. How can the School Board decide to keep kids and staff at school under such circumstances just to avoid having to work an extra day? What if someone had perished - would that have been a price worth paying for them?
So glad you and yours are safe!

Ms. ~K said...

We close schools down south (Georgia) at the mere mention of snow, which is kind of funny...
But I agree w/ you, safety of the kids should be the number one priority.
Stay safe,
Kit

Anonymous said...

I agree that the decision makers at the school should receive an "F" when it comes to calling days off. Good thing we still have some rights as parents and we can keep our kids home when common sense says to. It doesn't take a village to raise a kid, just a loving parent.

Anonymous said...

why didnt you just wait out the blizzard at your workplace?

Ilive in North Dakota and have a huge amount of respect for mother nature. I would never even consider walking in those condictions.

I enjoy reading your blog.

Anonymous said...

Oh yes, that's a very valid question.I certainly don't think anyone should feel sorry for me and my little ordeal. I brought it upon myself. There were many of us who did walk home and we were all lucky. Yes, I should have stayed at work. It's one of those situations where after experiencing a hundred blizzards over the years you think to yourself "eh, whats a couple hundred feet?" I truly thought I could make it especially with the left side of the road being bordered by a chain link fence the whole way. Then you get halfway there and you either have to continue on or turn back. Back was worse.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the quick response. I understand where your coming from but please dont doit again!!!

Every winter you hear of someone found "only feet' from their front door.

Have a great day.

Ishmael said...

Lay the smack down on that school district! So did the little one enjoy playing in the drifts the next morning?

gpc said...

I am glad to hear you're safe -- I wondered.

Becky said...

Wowza! What an ordeal, Cathy! It reminds me of Laura Ingall's descriptions of the big blizzard in The Long Winter...I thank the Good Lord you all made it home safe and sound and your boy was safe and sound...even if they DID keep him at school, the jerks.

Anonymous said...

So interesting a Cultural Diversity in an area whose population is natives, one would feel the impulse to gravite more towards ones gutteral instints. Has white mans ways clouded the natural instincts of the native?
Follow your cultural insticts always. Always follow your gut.. Wonderful story my dear, continue with your writings, where you live is a very special place of which I hope to return someday.
God Bless. Bonks
P.S. Kotz is closer to the Angels!

Anonymous said...

To anonymous at 8:20 AM-
I won't speak for everyone culturally as I am not Inupaiq, but I can speak as a person in general. I think that people, in general, have an idea of what is normal weather for where they live. That normal includes the good, the bad and the really bad. We generally know what to expect from bad weather. We, for the most part, know not to travel during the bad, but within the confines of town we can still get around. This was not "normal" bad. At least it wasn't for the couple dozen people, both native and non native that I have spoken to. Because of that many of us got taken by surpise.

I think that it is probably similar to people who live within an area that experiences regular flooding each year. And then one year they happen to get a huge flood that is well beyond expectations. Sometimes even the old timers are taken by surprise.

This was definately a lesson for me not to take things like bad weather for granted and expands my defination of "bad".

Anonymous said...

W.O.W. I'm speechless...


CD

Unknown said...

I am glad that you, and your family are ok. Since my son and daughter in law just moved to Kotzebue, I have been following your blog. They arrived just before the blizzard started. Told us all about how he and his boss got stuck in this last one, had to walk to his boss's house, barely making it.
Thank you for posting the pictures, all your pictures are great!

Anonymous said...

I love your blog. You are so good at describing with words and documenting with pictures. I'm a southern gal and life in the artic is so incredibly foreign to me, but you make it more accessible. Your blizzard was brutal. I'm glad you made it okay.

Cathy said...

By the way, since a few people asked why I deleted that comment above I just thought I would let you all know that I didn't delete it. The person who wrote it did, which is strange because it was in no way a negative comment.

Cathy said...

Oh wait...I think Justin deleted his duplicate comment. That solves the mystery. Haha..I knew it wasn't negative!

Anonymous said...

oops sorry for the confusion. Posted a link w/o the < a > junk.

scojo said...

Heh, I wandered out in this storm around 4:30. Tried to make it from Bibbers B&B to Bayside to get some dinner. Getting to Bayside wasn't too hard - the wind was at my back. Getting back to Bibbers though was pretty similar to your story.

I was all bundled up except for my eyes, which turned out to be my downfall. The wind was going in my face and started freezing my eyelids shut. I couldn't see the houses on either side of me going up Lagoon. I got knocked down my the wind and some drifts, and started to freak out when I got turned around and couldn't tell which way I was supposed to go, until I thought "gee, you need to walk into the wind, remember?". I did end up in somebody's back yard at one point, and almost through of knocking on their door to come in. Instead I pressed forward a little bit more as I caught a glimpse of what I thought was the stop sign on Second, which it was. Then I saw the Wells Fargo and knew I could make it. Took 30 minutes to go from Shore and Lagoon to Bibbers on Second.

Worst storm I've ever seen, but I did learn one lesson - bring my goggles!

Anonymous said...

this is your best work--it should be published--the calif. guy

Anonymous said...

While you were enjoying your
winter blizzard.

Honolulu, HI was getting ready
for a possible tsunami ~ tidal wave.
It didn't appear the way it was
predicted. Just a few swift feet
of tide in and tide out.

scroll down to the 5th image, take a look :

http://www.daylife.com/topic/Honolulu/photos

We never never never never
enjoy your whether, wish we
would!