Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Second Softball Game

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Here are some more softball photos. I bet your all excited. Uyaana's team, the Maniilaq Bulldogs did much better this time around. They WON! I forget the score, but they won by one run.




Woo baby! He hit it!




He made it to first base, but the next batter struck out and that was three outs. Oh well.




Hmmm...does anybody's else's kid play softball while wearing an NRA cap?




During this game he played second base.




Oops. That one went between the legs. He did have a pretty good play later in the game where he stopped the ball and threw it to first for the out.




So this turned out to be a pretty good game. The kids were happy after last weeks big loss.





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Monday, June 29, 2009

Kotzebue Clean Up 2009

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Saturday June 27th was the annual Kotzebue spring clean up. After eight months of snow and wind there is a lot of trash lying around. The city of Kotzebue pays the kids $1 a bag for trash they collect. Here's Uyaana with his haul. He had forty bags.




Here is another kid hauling his bags to one of the tree drop off sites.




People spent the day picking up trash from their yards and all around town.




One of the drop off sites was at city hall. A volunteer counts the bags as they are thrown into the dumpster. They then give the kid $1 and a raffle ticket for each bag they turn in.




The clean up was held about two weeks later than usual this year because we had so much snow. There were still some snowbanks in town well into June.




The yellow bags are donated to communities all over Alaska by Alaskans for Litter Prevention And Recycling (ALPAR)sponsored in part by ConocoPhillips Alaska, Inc.




The city of Kotzebue, the Northwest Arctic Borough, the Lion's Club, and other local businesses contribute the money towards the $1a bag.




For the raffle Alaska Commercial Co. store donated several bicycles, Rotman's store donated eight $25 gift certificates and Maniilaq Injury Prevention program donated several bike helmets. All the tickets were put int he big red tumbler and Ernie drew names for the prizes. Here are the bike winners....


















Congratulations to the kids who won prizes and thanks to everyone who helped out cleaning up our town.

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Sunday, June 28, 2009

Black-legged Kittiwake

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Saturday, June 27, 2009

Random Shots on a Beautiful Day

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These photos were taken on Jone 23rd. The official high temp for that day in Kotzebue was 69F degrees.




As far as I am concerned anything above 60F degrees is excessive. I didn't move to the arctic to sweat.




By the time these photos were taken at around 8:30pm it had cooled down to about 62F. As you can see the tundra is turning green and the flowers are blooming. Here is some Dwarf Fireweed.




This is the blossom of Labrador Tea. If you take a few sprigs of Labrador Tea leaves and a couple of Lipton Tea bags and throw then in a pot of boiling water for a couple minutes it makes a delicious tea.




Cottongrass.




This is the flower of a Cloudberry plant. Around here people sometimes call them "salmonberries" but that's not what they are. Salmonberries actually grow on a bush. The Inupiaq word for cloudberry is Aqpik.




As you can see the tundra is finally getting green, although there is still some snow here and there.





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Friday, June 26, 2009

3rd Base

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Thursday evening was Uyaana's first softball game. He was playing third base.




Of course being totally new to softball he has barely any idea idea what to do.




His team lost 10-2.




But he said he had fun and that's all that matters.

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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Birdseye View of Kotzebue

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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Hazy Midnight

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Taken just before midnight 6/20/09











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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Snacktime

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Yummers!

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Monday, June 22, 2009

Fresh Trout

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This weekend this nice fella was catching trout in his net.



Nice ones.




Ask and you shall receive. Thanks Ray.




This is a Dolly Varden trout. This time of year they return from the sea to spawn in the rivers.




And they are good eats.




I'll show you one of my favorite recipes for trout...but first we have to fillet the fish.












Put the whole thing in a foil lined pan for easy clean up.




Some Johnny's and Mrs. Dash.




Sprinkle the fish with some Johnny's and lots of Mrs Dash.




Then mix together one cup of mayo with 1/2 cup of grated cheese. I used a cheddar Monterrey jack combo.




Plop the mixture onto the fish....




...and spread it around like frosting a cake.




Top it with some onion slices, back at 350F degrees for about 30-35 minutes. It's delicious and this recipe works great for salmon too.

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Sunday, June 21, 2009

Name That Flower

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Saturday, June 20, 2009

Practice

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Last night was Uyaana's first day of softball practice.




It is a good mix of kids.




Some played last year but some have never even held a bat.




This is Uyaana's first year playing so he has a lot to learn. Here Coach Ernie is showing him how far he should stand from the plate.




How to hold the bat. The kids are using a tee for this first practice. During the actual games the kids will get 3 tries to hit a pitched ball. If they miss all three they are allowed to hit off the tee.




OK kid, hit it over there.













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Thursday, June 18, 2009

Rain on the River

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Noatak River















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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Blowing in the Wind

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Kotzebue Wind Farm Project
















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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Working on Ugruk, Part 2

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After yesterday's butchering, today it was time to kuvrak the blubber off the skin. The easiest way to do this (in my opinion) is to lay the whole skin over an a-frame, but everyone has their own favorite way to get it done.




It was nice to have lots of help. We are all wearing rubber gloves because working on Ugruk is a very oily, messy job. The advantage of wearing gloves is if you need clean hands in a hurry all you have to so it pull your gloves off.




We had plenty of ulus to go around. Even people who have no experience can cut blubber into strips to we put everyone to work.




Uyaana is learning. He has watched many times but this is his first time cutting blubber.




To make seal oil you need to take the blubber off the skin.




You do this by scraping slabs of blubber off with your ulu.




The goal is to leave no blubber on the skin, but that's much harder than it looks. If you slice to shallow you leave lots of blubber on the skin. If you slice too deeply then you will ulik (cut/tear)the skin.




Maija and I took turns kuvrak-ing. It's lots of hard work so it's nice to have a partner.




Maija has a nice big piece almost ready to be cut off.




Here is Maija with a big slab of blubber which she is going to put on the table behind her.




The folks at the table cut the blubber into smaller strips and throw them into a bucket.




Cutting it into strips helps speed up the process of rendering.




When you cut up the blubber and put it into the bucket it will self render without heat. You just stir the blubber a couple times every day. The oil just melts out of the fatty tissue and makes seal oil. How long it takes to render out depends on the size of your strips and how warm out it is.




Here Saima and Stacey are helping us Kuvrak. It was nice to let them take over so we could have a break.




Almost done.




I also finished cleaning out the ingaloks and hung them up to dry for a while.

So this concludes part 2 of working on Ugruk. We're not done yet. We still have lots of work to do to finish this one.

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Monday, June 15, 2009

Working on Ugruk, Part 1

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So as I said before, Maija and I spent the day working on Ugruk. See previous post if you don't know what an Ugruk is. This is not a post for the squeamish, so if you are and you choose to continue reading that's your own fault. Maija has a post about our day also.




Ugruk, like walrus, have whiskers that are very stiff. They are almost like long strips of fingernail like stuff.




They also have long sharp claws for scratching on ice.




This is the meat shed over at Maija's where we will hang the meat after we cut it.




First you have to separate the blubber and skin from the meat. You need to cut around the head, flippers, and back legs and all the way down the front from neck to back legs.




Then you remove the blubber and skin from the meat. You don't want to leave blubber on your meat and you don't want meat on your blubber so you gotta be careful.




Here's my Alaska pedicure. No I didn't cut myself. I accidentally stepped in the carnage.




As you can see here we have removed the blubber and skin.





Here is the blubber. It still has bits of meat attached to it.




It is important to cut all the meat off the blubber. If you leave meat on there it make the seal oil funny. Taking the meat off the blubber is a crappy job so we make the kids and the inexperienced do it. That meant it was left to Zack...





...Elsa and Maddie.




So while those three are schlepping over the blubber Maija and I are cutting slabs of meat off the carcass.




Then we cut the slabs into large strips and hang them in the shed. We will let them dry a bit and cut them down smaller each day until they are the size and dryness that we want.




Here is the stripped meat hanging in the shed. We spread stinkweed on the floor to keep in fresh in there.




Here's a close up shot of the strips.




While we were working we threw a pot of meat, blubber and ingaloks (intestines) on the camp stove to boil.




Dinner.




Here are the ribs and the back legs hanging in the shed. We will take care of them tomorrow. Tomorrow I will teach you how to make seal oil.

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Sunday, June 14, 2009

Ugruk


(Photo from noaa.gov)


Today Maija and I will be working on ugruk. We will be cutting and hanging the meat to dry and cutting up the bllubber and putting it into buckets to make seal oil. So we will be busy all day with that. I will try and take a few photos during the process to post another day.

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Saturday, June 13, 2009

He May Be Dumb..........

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...but he's got his good looks to fall back on.

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Thursday, June 11, 2009

More Fun With Ducks

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Last night Uyaana and I took the dogs for a run out on the old base road behind Kotzebue. The dogs love to run along the road and through the tundra while Uyaana and I ride in the truck. Their favorite thing is hunting for voles. They search and sniff through the tundra til they find them. And then they eat them. Yum. So last night it looked like Kaija had found one and Uyaana wanted to jump out of the truck and go see. He ran off and left the passenger side door open. He started yelling that Rush had one so I got out to look and Rush comes running over with his prize in his mouth, jumps up into the cab of the truck and drops the vole onto the driver's side seat. Poor little bugger was still heaving it's last breaths. I holler at Rush and he jumps out of the truck leaving his tasty goodie behind. So I find a piece of paper and flick the little beast off the seat and onto the ground where Kaija snaps it up runs off a few feet and chomps it down. This whole story has nothing to do with ducks by the way, I just thought I'd share.

Anyway...onto the ducks. Since you guys are so good at this here are two more...



#1




#2

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Wednesday, June 10, 2009

10 PM

This is my town at....


10:03pm,




10:17pm,




10:18pm.


How about yours??

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Name That Duck...Again

Since you guys did so well the first time....












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Pickled Herring

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Spring break up signals the return of Herring To Kotzebue Sound. I hooked a bucket full to make a local favorite...pickled herring. Now everyone has their own recipe and everyone thinks theirs is the best. I'll have you know that MINE is actually the best pickled herring. I will share with you the secrets of it's awesomeness.




The first step is to scale the herring. The scales flake off quite easily so you can use the back side of a butter knife.




Take off the heads and the tails.




After you pull all the guts out wash off the fish in cold salty water.




I salt my fish before pickling them. Some people salt, some people don't. I think that salting them helps the fish hold up better to brining. I take a bowl and put some rock salt in the bottom and then layer fish, salt, fish, salt.




Layer the fish til a few inches below the top of the bowl with salt being the top layer. Then I take a plate and put it on top and weigh it down. This draws out moisture from the fish. I usually leave it in the fridge overnight. The next day I wash all the salt off the fish and then soak the fish in clean cold water for eight hours changing the water twice. If you cut a little piece of fish off and taste it you want it to be a little salty, but not too much.




I place 1 tsp pickling spice in the bottom of the jar and then layer in herring, onion, cauliflower, and carrots and then another teaspoon of pickling spice on the top. I also put in about 6 slices of fresh jalapeno pepper. This spices up the brine.

The brine another area where most people have their own thing. Some people use vinegar and pickling spices and brown sugar which they boil and then cool and pour into the jars.




Me, I simply cut the vinegar 50/50 with water and pour it into the jar. No fuss no muss.




Keep the jars in a cool place (mine are in the fridge) and it is ready to eat in a couple days.

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Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Camp Coffee

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Monday, June 8, 2009

Reflect

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I'm back from a great three day weekend out at camp. First boating trip of the summer. We boated around the Noatak River, ate way too many s'mores, stayed up all night and slept all day. Good times. Took lots of photos. I'll post them through the week along with some other stuff.































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Saturday, June 6, 2009

Back in a Few

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I won't be posting new photos for a couple days. I am out of town and forgot to bring my USB cord for my camera. I should be home on Monday night.

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Friday, June 5, 2009

Wooly Lousewort

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Thursday, June 4, 2009

Yellow Wagtail

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Eastern Yellow Wagtail

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Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Name That Duck

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Combat Fishing Kotzebue Style

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People have been getting herring on and off all day today. The herring usually run for about a week. They come and go, here and there during that time.




I went out this evening to see if the fish were running.




As you can see by the action they certainly were.




People were filling they buckets and sacks.




The kids have a great time climbing around the ice and hooking fish.




Sometimes if the schools are really thick you can catch two or three on your hook at the same time.




But one at a time is ok too.




Another way to catch herring is with a cast net.




It's a good way to catch a lot of fish at once.




But it requires a little finesse...something I don't have.









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*Front Street is actually named "Shore Ave" but most of us call it "Front Street" or "out on front".

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Breakup Continues

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Here in Kotzebue breakup is trucking along.




Everyone is enjoying the spectacle of the ice breaking up and floating out to sea.




A favorite spring activity is hooking herring. People will line the shore snagging buckets full.




Here is Tanya multitasking.




For the most part breakup is a fun time, but every now and then things get out of hand. Here the ice has pushed up over the shore.




Sometimes things get smashed Like things that have been parked or stored along the shore....




....like snowmachines....




...and boats (bummer) ...




...and rusty old barges. Sometimes it's somebody's house, but not this particular time.

I'll try and get some photos of people hooking herring tonight if the fish are still running.

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Monday, June 1, 2009

Bird Fight

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These are Tree Swallows.




Yup, even though we don't have trees in Kotzebue we have tree swallows.




I guess they are well known for these mid air shenanigans.





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