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Sunday, October 30, 2011

October in Anchorage

Hello from October in Alaska. Hooray for St.Louis Cardinals.  What a World Series. The BEST in many many years.
  I went to send David a package at the post office and I couldn't resist taking a picture of the beautiful planter outside the post office. This planter has cabbage plants that measured 35 inches in diameter.  Spectacular. Again because of the cooler days and lots of sunlight produces huge foliage. 


This is out my kitchen window the other night  Our sunsets are very colorful because of such clear nights.  We are down to 12 hours of sunlight and the amazing thing to  me still is that darkness comes in the morning and sunlight stays in the evening much longer.  Our sun sets now about 7 pm.
I had to stop on the side of the road to take a picture of our snow as it rolls down the side of the mountain.  The upper elevations (Talkeetna,Hatchers Pass) all have snow.  The weather person is predicting sometime in the next 3 days we will have snow on the ground.  I made reservations for our lodging in Nome last week and the folks there have had 6 inches of snow for weeks on the ground.  The people on the East Coast are getting worse weather than AK.
 In case many of you are wondering what ingredients it take to make a Duck Fart here they are.
1/3 Baileys, 1/3 Kahlua and 1/3 Crown.  Down the hatch and it taste just like chocolate milk!
Now this is a sight I haven't seen before in Alaska.  Canadian Geese.  I think they took the wrong turn from Memphis and ended up here. I haven't seen these guys since playing golf at Memphis National.  I bet you all miss them. I will send them back South.

One of our favorite hangouts is the Birchwood Saloon. It is such a small local hangout.  Beers are cheap and the games are free. We play FREE darts ,hoolahoops, pool, Foosball, ping pong.  All free and then there is the karaoke machine which my friends can't seem to leave along. I took my picture with the ghost rider of the bar!
Beth's birthday party.  We had a wonderful time celebrating her big day.  We played about 5 different Minute To Win It games throughout the evening.  I use these games in my class room when the students need a fun activity to work on teamwork. This is the Bucket Pull.  You stand on a paint can and try to pull your opponent off their can.  A lot of strategy.  Cheryl, on the left, was the Queen of the Bucket Pull.
This is the Build a Tower of Dice.  With a tongue depressor in your mouth, stack 6 dice on top of each other and hold them for 10 seconds before they fall.  Not easy but there is definitely a strategy.  I love listening to the kids in my class help each other with strategies.
This is Build a Pyramid with plastic cups.  Pull the rubber band with 5 strings (one per player) and take the cup from one end of the table to the opposite end. At the end build a pyramid of 3, 2, 1 cups.  Not easy. 
Steady as you go.
This is Niki, Beth and I holding Niki's roommate, Abraham.  He is being deployed Nov 27.  We are going to miss him. I think he will miss us holding him up.  He is quite the prankster and is always pulling funny jokes on us.

Roommates in Eagle River.
Went to view the Bore Tide with friends.  As you will recall from a few years ago, Anchorage has the second largest bore tide in the world. The first is in Japan.  This evening the difference between low tide and high tide as 36 feet and a few inches.  Very powerful.
Here is short video of the bore tide.
We had 6 inches of snow last night.  This is the log cabin across the street from my house.  Can you see the pumpkins with the snow fall?
 This is Baldy Mountain at the end of my street. You can see the snow falling as I took the picture this morning.
 Yep, my Halloween costume. I am suppose to look like an elephant.  Actually is it my knee cold pack to help with my knee.  It is an electric pump that circulates cold water around my knee to keep the swelling down.  I took it off and my room mate took a picture of me.  A good looking elephant don't you think?
Well. It is hard to believe that October 2011 is over.  November is just a few hours away.  That means yummy Thanksgiving dinner is just around the corner.  I am staying in Anchorage for Thanksgiving this year. I leave the following week for Memphis to spend a lot of time at home.  If you have no place to go for Thanksgiving, please come and join us.  We are having a progressive Thanksgiving dinner.  Since my friends live within 1 block of our house we are sharing the cooking and clean up of Thanksgiving.  Appetizers at one home, turkey dinner at our house, and dessert at another house.  We hope to do a bit of x country skiing after eating a delicious dinner.
I hope all is well with you and your family.  My family is doing well.  David had a great weekend golfing with the boys, Tyler and Cara moved to Nashville, and Jensina had a wonderful trip to Hawaii.
Have a wonderful day.
Life is Good.
Hugs
Sheryl the Nanuq of the North

Friday, October 21, 2011

I can Curl can you?

Happy October,

 I talked Niki into going to "Learn to Curl" class with me.  It was on the other side of Ship's Creek and we had a lot of fun.  After a quick introduction to the sport and the instructors we entered the ice.  Okay for all of you who think curling is weird it is fun but the vocabulary is a learning experience all by itself.  Stone, Skipp, 1st, 2nd, 3rd (the second most important person) and the last, Biter ( a touching stone to the outside circle), bonspiel (tournaments), button (1 foot circle), hack (an immovable brace for foot in or out delivery), hammer (last rock to be delivered, Hog (stone fails to clear the line), House, Keen ice (less effort to deliver stone), off the broom, on the broom, shot rock, sheet, etc.  It keeps going and going and going.

Here I am with my one slippery slipper on the right foot and I am holding the stone in the left foot and the right hand is the "steady" stick for me to keep my balance.  You can't put any weight on the stone in the left hand and you glide on the slippery slipper foot.  Strange to get used to at first.
Then once I managed not to fall using the "steady" stick I learned to balance myself (put my weight on my right side) I advanced to the broom.  Not bad huh?  Notice I am still standing and not falling down and I released the stone "just fine" said the coach.
 Releasing another stone before I reached the "hog' line.  The stone weighs 42 pounds and made our of granite.  Each team gets to throw 8 stones to equal an "end" or what I call an inning.  The captain kept correcting me all night. What I found interesting is when teams travel to other cities and rinks (sheets) to play they play with the "hosting" rink's stones.  The team does not have to "lug" these heavy stones anywhere.  So you don't have to worry about a carrying case or broken toes from dropping your equipment!
After getting the hang of the delivery, I had to learn how to sweep.  This is the HARDEST job!  Wow, you better be "Johnny on the spot" and have quick feet and a pair of eyes behind your head.  The brooms sweep the ice only 6 - 8 inches wide in front of the stone to help it go faster on the ice.  It looks easy here because there wasn't any other stones for me to trip on.  I am so worried about sweeping fast and steady I forgot to look around.  And I am sure you can guess - you can't step on any other stones.
 Niki and I took a turn together.  We were pretty awesome sweepers.  The only problem with sweeping is that you are constantly being yelled at by the Skip.  "Sweep faster, sweep right, go faster" and then all of a sudden the Skip says "Stop sweeping"!  My brain and muscles don't work that quickly.  Don't forget there are at least 16 stones on the sheet that I don't want to trip over so it is complicated.
Well then there is the learning curve.  One must fall to learn how to reach new goals!
If you think keeping score is easy look at this score board.  If you can figure it out Hooray for you!
1st End : The Blue Team scores 2 points and the Yellow scored zero.  2nd End: Yellow scores 1 points and the score is yellow 1 and Blue 2.  And so on.  The most important thing to know about scoring no one has to understand how to score EXCEPT the 3rd.  I never was the 3rd for a reason!!!!  Niki was so good she scored our two points.  I was proud I didn't fall which is more than I can say about two of our team mates.  Sweeping is hard and takes a lot of coordination and the ability to hear the Skip yelling at you.  Well, that is what curling is all about.  I had fun!!!

The last weekend in September I met up with my entire family for the joyous event of Chris and Kerry's wedding. The bride was simply gorgeous and she glowed all night long.  Chris has his own company "Sage Enterprises" which makes beautiful wooden "Bags" game sets.  The groomsmen all received a personalized Bags set.  My brother, Chip, and Patti were so proud. 

 Aren't they happy.  Wishing you many many year of happiness.
 Proud parents of the groom.  My brother couldn't hold back the joy and tears.  Patti looked spectacular for this proud moment.
 Aren't these wonderful Bags Sets?  You too could have a set.  Check out Chris Sage's web site.
 My wonderful and dapper husband danced the night away.
 Cousin Tyler was so proud of Logan catching the Bride's garter!
My children are all grown up.  Gosh they grow so fast. 
Jenna and Jason had a fun night dancing as well.
My beautiful mom.  She was such a proud Grandma of all her 12 grandchildren, who loves to golf, sing karaoke, line dance, and have girls afternoons out.  Way to go mom! 
 On Sunday we all arrived at Chip and Patti's house for a family gathering.  Just my family, which I so fondly refer to as "The Crazies", is 37 people big.  It was so wonderful having siblings and our children together in one spot.  My brothers and husband are fantastic grill chefs.  That is a 16 pound beef fillet and a 6 pound of pork loin.  These were grilled outside on the Weber and smoker.  It was gone in no time.
 And here is the cooking crew!  I am sure they used some of the bottles for cooking!
Here is 12 pounds of my Alaskan Halibut!  Chip is awesome at grilling fish.
 So back to school and routine on Monday.  The military is a huge part of the Alaskan life and Alaska  has come kind of military activity weekly.  Eight of our elementary schools, including my school, collected candy in September to send to our servicemen in war.  I want you to see how much candy we collected.  1,154 pounds of candy was shipped to the airmen all over the world.  Boxes were put on military flights that had available room for the airmen to receive these treats.
This is the airmen that received the candy. They wrote the most wonderful letter back to our students.  I have included two paragraphs from their letter telling about Afghanistan and what they do.

"You see, this particular box of candy flew from Anchorage Alaska all the way
to Kunduz Afghanistan.  Kunduz is 5,844 miles from Anchorage and is in the
northern part of Afghanistan near the border with Tajikistan.  The box of
candy found it's way to my mailbox here on our tiny US Army military
installation.  I live on a FOB, that stands for Forward Operating Base.  My
Soliders and I currently work with the Afghan National Police (ANP).  We
work to train the ANP in policing skills and also work with them to make the
community better.

Kunduz is about the same size as Anchorage.  It sits in a river valley and
is rich in agricultural products.  Farmers grow wheat, corn, cotton, and
other vegetables here.  Like Anchorage Kunduz is surrounded by mountains and
some of those mountains have snow right now.  We have been lucky because it
has been warm through the winter.  It was 60 degrees today."
The children of Kunduz who will receive some of the candy that was sent to our airmen.

This past weekend I took a mini birch bark basket making class.  Let me tell you all how difficult this craft is to make.  I will never complain when I see the prices that are charged for larger sized baskets.  This was NOT my basket.  My basket has not found a place yet.  I completed it and it was fun but very challenging.  This lady choice a difficult piece of bark and then artistically placed the flaking bark outside of the basket.  I have lost all my fingernails because you have to tear away the many layers of birch bark (my piece had 7 layers) until you have about 2 - 3 layers thick.  It took me almost 90 minutes of a two hour class just to strip my bark.  I knew it was going to be a challenge when I was still stripping and many students were already sewing. 

Just so you can see how mini out baskets were, that is a clothespin next to the basket.  The clothespins hold the damp bark in place while you sew.  My fingers are a finally healing from the needle stabs to them.  You try to force a needle through a bark with no thimble!!!

Now for real neat information.  The Alaskan Natives have begun bringing in the whales for food for this next year.  Unfortunately I will not be able to attend one in person.  If you remember I have eaten mukluk (whale meat) last year.  I have had 4 young students who have attended the whale catch in their northern village. Please take a minute and view the video of the whale harvesting.  It really is quite a bountiful and communal event for the village.  The Natives are such proud people. 


Wasn't that amazing!!??!!!
I have had a few days of rest with the flu.  I am finally back to myself and teaching.  The children made me get well cards.  I have a great substitute and loving students.  I am getting rested for my knitting class this week.  The snow is creeping down the mountain and I predict first snow fall will be by end of next week.  We have a "pool" at school for the first snow fall.   We had flurries (about 12 of them) last week but to win the lottery the snow has to accumulate on the highway.  I have a good feeling about my date.  Anchorage has never had a Halloween without snow on the ground. 

I hope you enjoyed my last few adventures.  I look forward to my last 6 months in Alaska.

BUT before I say good night, I have WONDERFUL NEWS!!!!!
My son, Tyler, asked Cara to marry him and she said YES!!!!! I don't think I have stopped smiling yet.  I will be smiling for a long time.  Congratulations Tyler and Cara.

For now, I will bid you all a good night.  Have a wonderful day. 
I will close with a quote from Emerson,
"What lies behind us and what lies before us is small compared to what lies within us"

Enjoy,
Sheryl the Nanuq of the North

Sunday, October 9, 2011

My big fish tale!!!



I hope you all had a wonderful day.  I have had another great adventure to check off another item from my bucket list.  I had the opportunity to ride in an 18 wheel truck in Anchorage.  I have always heard stories about an 18 wheel truck and now I can let you all know all the facts.  This is the Lilac Lady and I rode in her as she went to her weekend parking space.


 The seats are on a suspension system so they don't feel the bumps.  It was weird being so high up you can look down at all cars or trucks.  Be careful what you are doing as a drive!
The inside had a double bed above and double bed below.  The cab had a refrigerator, microwave, VCR, and about 20 cubbies holes all around the cabin of the truck.  This is the gear shift which does not require a clutch.  There are three different positions so all 18 gears are easily maneuvered.  When his rig is fulled loaded the truck weighs 18,000 pounds.  The gas tank holds 300 gallons and gets 4 miles to a gallon loaded.  If the rig doesn't have a trailer it is called a bobcat.  The bobcat gets 7 miles a gallon.  This rig has 475 horsepower.  That is even more than David's car!

The weekend of September 17 we headed to Homer, Alaska.  Homer is a 5 hour drive down the Kenai Peninsula.  It was a bit wet but the fall colors were starting to show.  We were to go Halibut fishing on Saturday and Salmon fishing on the Kiselof River on Sunday.
We headed to the fishing docks early (6 am) and met Captain Mike on the boat called Beau Soleil.  It was a bit chilly but we had our fishing gear on.  I love my Healy Hanson fishing gear! 
We started our fishing adventure very very early - 6:30 pm.  The sun rise was fabulous but the whales that escorted us out to the ocean was even better.  There was a few puffins and sea lions with their pups.



 The ferry going from Homer to Soldotna cruised by our boat.  The ferry ride is about 2 hours.
We caught a glimpse of the Deadliest Catch boat "Time Bandit" getting a few repairs before it heads back to the cold Bering Sea.
Niki caught the first halibut. It was a gig one!  Way to go Niki.
 Next Beth caught another big one!  Way to go Beth.
 I caught one and it was fighting me all the way.
 At one point I had to ask for help to keep me from going over the side of the boat.  Beth lent a helping hand to keep me inside the boat versus being fish bait in the freezing cold water!

 25 minutes later this is what I brought in the boat.  It was a lot of work. My arm was so sore.  The captain and ship mate gave me all sort of advice but all I wanted was help reeling in this fish.  I was told if the captain touched my reel I would be DQ from the Halibut Derby.  At one point I said, I don't care my arm was so tired.  I kept with it and we brought a 178 pound halibut to the boat.When Captain Mike went and got his gun and shot my big fish I was scared it would get away.  Then he told me to have faith in him - since he has been doing this for a career.    While I was bringing in the big halibut Beth's father was bringing in a huge King Salmon. 

We purchased our ticket for the Halibut Derby and hopefully one of us will win something.  Beth caught a 98 pound halibut and the last catch of the day I caught the 178 pound halibut and Beth's father brought in the KING salmon at 38 pounds.  Yum,  All I can think about is the yummy fish we will feast on for a while.


 This is a halibut gun.  It makes a really loud "bang" when shooting something only a few feet below the deck.  I asked the Captain if he ever missed and shot the boat.  He looked at me with a look of "Are you kidding me?"  He replied, I might have missed the fish early on my career because it kept fighting but I don't shoot my boat!
So when our boat was full - 12 halibut and 1 King salmon it was time to head back to the dock to weight our two large halibut and show off our king!  The female anglers completing another fun adventure.


 The funny part was bringing all the fish up to the slaughter area.  It is a very steep ramp.  The men loaded the large fish on a low dolly and tied a rope to the tail up to the truck.  It kind of kept the fish on the dolly.  This is both of the large fish coming to the Halibut Derby scales hoping to win some money.
Filleting of the big fish.  YUMMMMM

So as one day closed and lots of smiling faces on the four of us, we followed the fish to the cleaning, freezing shipping processing plant. We had 280 pounds of halibut and salmon.  We had to go and purchase another cooler because it didn't fit in the ones we brought along.  PLUS we are going salmon fishing tomorrow and will probably catch some more fish.  Boy we were so optimistic and positive after this wonderful day at sea.

We stayed at a lodge in which the owner built the log cabin. It was very nice.  Had a lot of nice personal touches.
This wood burning stove was what interested me most.  I watched intently as he cooked us bacon and eggs and pancakes.  I was thinking this would be great at my house.  Then I realized we don't have the abundance of trees like they do in AK.


Boarding the boat on  the Kiselof River and we weren't sure what we saw in the river at the dock.  Upon closer look we found this!  There was a family reunion at the campground and they must have roasted a pig.  What the funny item to see early in the morning.
This is the beautiful Kiselof River and we are fishing for salmon today.
More wildlife greeted us along the River.
Beth caught the first silver of the day.  She worked hard for this one.  He gave her a good fight.  I had to turn my head when he was clubbed.  As human as it is for the fish, I think it looks mean.
A mouth full of teeth.

 Beth's father caught the second silver of the day.  Doesn't he just look like a fishing pro?  He was so much fun to have along on our fishing adventure.
 Another wonderful photo of the Kiselof River.
Then I caught my glove!  Today we only caught two wonderful silvers.  Add these two our fish catch and we have a lot of fish to eat this winter.  Yahoo!!!

Sunday was the end of our great fishing adventure.  It was a blast, fun, exciting and challenging.  I enjoyed every minute of it.  Watching these gentlemen fillet the fish was amazing.  I appreciate the fish we buy in the store so much more since we don't have bones in the fish.
I hope you all are doing well.  David informs me that Memphis is having the best fall ever.  I hope you are taking part in the wonderful fall.  Next weekend I will meet up with my entire family to attend my nephew's wedding. I can hardly wait to see everyone and see the beautiful fall at Starve Rock, IL. 
Until then.  Enjoy life.
Nanuq of the North
Sheryl