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![]() ![]() Wild Alaska PART IV. The Kongakut
The Kongakut, July 9 - July 24
60 pounds granola 3 pounds Milkman powdered milk 3 pounds of my best trail mix: crunchy peanut butter, honey, and powdered milk 100 each multi vitamins and vitamin C 24 instant oatmeal packs 12 pounds cocoa 10 pounds raisins 60 Power bars 40 Balance bars 24 NutriGrain bars 36 loaves of dry, German bread 60 pounds dried fruit (blueberries, strawberries, peaches, apples, prunes, pears, bananas) 65 freeze-dried dinners from Mountain House, Alpine Aire, etc. (My favorites are sweet and sour pork, chicken enchiladas, and turkey tetrazzini.) 12 pounds summer sausage 50 ramen noodles that I never ate 6 pounds turkey jerkey 10 pounds peanuts 1 gallon dried spaghetti sauce 50 pounds dried vegetables (peas, carrots, broccoli, green beans, and onions) 3 pounds onion soup mix 17 pounds couscous 10 pounds mashed instant potatoes 13 pounds instant black and pinto beans 10 pounds tabouli mix 5 pounds instant brown rice 1 gallon dried applesauce 10 pounds chocolate -------------------- July 20 I went into the valley where I met the grizzly last week. The males have large territories, which encompass those of several females. He was probably long gone, but there's no harm in looking. Well, there's no harm in looking carefully. The weather was cold and all clouds again, but it warmed up to about 50 by late afternoon. The sun even peeked out briefly. In case anyone is wondering, the mosquitoes are doing fine. They lay low during the cool days, and now they're back with a vengeance. A snowy owl warned me that I was approaching her nest. I have little interest in experiencing a big snowy owl clawing my head, and I gave her a wide berth. I just spent the last five minutes teasing a mosquito. I put one finger by the tent's mosquito net. One critter senses there is a meal nearby and pokes her proboscis through the net. My finger is right there, but she can't reach it. I can feel the stinger penetrate my skin, and then I pull back. Anything for a little camp fun at midnight, I suppose. July 21 I feel sorry for the washing machine that will get my clothes in a few weeks. It will back up from all the mosquito parts. But life keeps happening. There is a quote that goes something like, "You can't leave your footprints on the sand of time if you're sitting on your butt. And who wants to leave butt prints on the sands of time?" It's a mushy notion, but I see some good in it: live fully. So despite the perfect hypothermia weather, I headed out late this morning. The clouds were only 200 feet above the river, but I felt like a hike. Or so I thought. I went just a mile south along the river and had a revelation: I felt tired! Plain pooped. I sat by a ground squirrels' den for a while, listening to them bark at me, watching the gulls swoop low across the tundra, listening to the river, and laughing quietly as mosquito hordes tried to solve my head net riddle. The sighting for the day was a big pile of grizzly scat. It was pretty fresh, probably from yesterday evening. There was nothing interesting in it, though: all foliage. An old wolf scat nearby was nothing but ground squirrel hairs. July 21 Today's hiking song was "Ding dong the witch is dead." Why? I woke at 5 a.m. to an eerie silence, and I knew life in the Brooks Range had changed: snow! There wasn't much, and the rain came later. There was one great moment on the return hike. It dawned on me that I had not taken any photos of the caribou migratory route. This place is called Caribou Pass, and I was standing right on it. The caribou, in some years, move across the river, up a hill, and down into the next valley, which leads out to the coastal plain a few miles away. They are moving east all this time, and the Canadian border is just 10 miles from here. I crossed the little trails made by the caribou. There were 33 trails crossing one another over a low spot in the hill only 20 meters across. This was the heart of Caribou Pass. I was looking for a good position to photograph both the trails and the river. Suddenly, as I looked through the viewfinder, here came one caribou up the trail! He was a mighty lost young male. He approached me for a look, stepped off the trail, trotted around me, and disappeared over the hill as he rejoined the trail. In the 60 seconds I took to get over to follow him, he was already down the hill. Following him would be like me running to chase a speeding car. But what luck to see him right there! He must be the last caribou of the year to move through here. I've seen only one other in the nearly two weeks I've been here. July 22 Should oil companies drill here? No. Ninety percent of the northern border of Alaska is already available for drilling. The coastline of the Arctic Refuge is the only untouched area remaining. History will judge us as fools if we degrade this unique area for oil. We don't need the oil that badly.
Do we need wilderness? Many say that is a strong argument to oppose drilling. I feel it is not humanity's right to view this place solely in terms of our needs. I don't want to protect this place just so people can come in here to hike or raft or photograph. I want to know that such a place still exists. No more. Who are we to alter it? Walt should come tomorrow, in theory. The Kongakut has been tough but good. I'll enjoy talking to a person rather than the grizzly and arctic ground squirrels. I didn't see a person for almost two weeks. Among others lessons learned here, I am no misanthrope. I'll be a little more gregarious when I'm back in my regular world. These hills are making me stronger not only in my legs, but, more important, in my heart. July 24 There is a temporal anomaly in the Arctic called Walt. On three occasions, he has said he would move me to the next location on a certain date. When that day arrived, Walt did not. I'm happy to give him the benefit of the doubt, though. He may have arranged another flight for tomorrow that he can couple with mine, and this would save me good money. Even though I only need to move from point A to point B, Walt normally charges for his entire flight time round trip from Kaktovik. But if another person flies near here, he starts the mileage for my flight from that location. I hope this is his scheme. The frustration is that I have no way to contact him. The only possibility was a satellite phone, and I didn't feel like paying the $4,000 for one. My radio can contact Walt if he's flying within 25 miles of here, but that's all. Regular cell phones don't work from here because there's not a receiving tower within range. Not knowing if he'd show in an hour or a day, I couldn't go on a good hike. So I went on several little ones in the hills again. I looked for the red fox den again, to no avail. I watched the clouds move, the gulls chase each other. I trimmed my beard with my Swiss Army knife scissors. At least the weather was perfect.
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