Month: December 2008

  • My Favorite Robert Service Poem

    Disclaimer:
    This is not my favorite Robert Service Christmas poem.  I'm saving that one for later, having already posted it before during my infamous and disreputable countdown to Christmas, and wanting to draw out the suspense and maximize the surprise for those who are not familiar with it.

    This is the first poem by Robert W. Service that I ever heard.  My father read it to me when I was very young, maybe no more than two or three years old.  There are parts of it that I know by rote, and yet I still feel the same delight each time I read it.  I think some of that is in the rhythm and rhyme of the piece, and part of it in the personal associations it has for me.

    That this is my favorite from the man's entire vast oeuvre (some of which I surely must have missed reading) says as much about me, I suppose, as his verse says about Robert W. Service and the culture in which he lived.

    The Shooting of Dan McGrew

    A bunch of the boys were whooping it up in the Malamute saloon;
    The kid that handles the music-box was hitting a jag-time tune;
    Back of the bar, in a solo game, sat Dangerous Dan McGrew,
    And watching his luck was his light-o'-love, the lady that's known as Lou.

    When out of the night, which was fifty below, and into the din and the glare,
    There stumbled a miner fresh from the creeks, dog-dirty, and loaded for bear.
    He looked like a man with a foot in the grave and scarcely the strength of a louse,
    Yet he tilted a poke of dust on the bar, and he called for drinks for the house.
    There was none could place the stranger's face, though we searched ourselves for a clue;
    But we drank his health, and the last to drink was Dangerous Dan McGrew.

    There's men that somehow just grip your eyes, and hold them hard like a spell;
    And such was he, and he looked to me like a man who had lived in hell;
    With a face most hair, and the dreary stare of a dog whose day is done,
    As he watered the green stuff in his glass, and the drops fell one by one.
    Then I got to figgering who he was, and wondering what he'd do,
    And I turned my head -- and there watching him was the lady that's known as Lou.

    His eyes went rubbering round the room, and he seemed in a kind of daze,
    Till at last that old piano fell in the way of his wandering gaze.
    The rag-time kid was having a drink; there was no one else on the stool,
    So the stranger stumbles across the room, and flops down there like a fool.
    In a buckskin shirt that was glazed with dirt he sat, and I saw him sway;
    Then he clutched the keys with his talon hands -- my God! but that man could play.

    Were you ever out in the Great Alone, when the moon was awful clear,
    And the icy mountains hemmed you in with a silence you most could HEAR;
    With only the howl of a timber wolf, and you camped there in the cold,
    A half-dead thing in a stark, dead world, clean mad for the muck called gold;
    While high overhead, green, yellow and red, the North Lights swept in bars? --
    Then you've a haunch what the music meant . . . hunger and night and the stars.

    And hunger not of the belly kind, that's banished with bacon and beans,
    But the gnawing hunger of lonely men for a home and all that it means;
    For a fireside far from the cares that are, four walls and a roof above;
    But oh! so cramful of cosy joy, and crowned with a woman's love --
    A woman dearer than all the world, and true as Heaven is true --
    (God! how ghastly she looks through her rouge, -- the lady that's known as Lou.)

    Then on a sudden the music changed, so soft that you scarce could hear;
    But you felt that your life had been looted clean of all that it once held dear;
    That someone had stolen the woman you loved; that her love was a devil's lie;
    That your guts were gone, and the best for you was to crawl away and die.
    'Twas the crowning cry of a heart's despair, and it thrilled you through and through --
    "I guess I'll make it a spread misere," said Dangerous Dan McGrew.

    The music almost died away . . . then it burst like a pent-up flood;
    And it seemed to say, "Repay, repay," and my eyes were blind with blood.
    The thought came back of an ancient wrong, and it stung like a frozen lash,
    And the lust awoke to kill, to kill . . . then the music stopped with a crash,
    And the stranger turned, and his eyes they burned in a most peculiar way;

    In a buckskin shirt that was glazed with dirt he sat, and I saw him sway;
    Then his lips went in in a kind of grin, and he spoke, and his voice was calm,
    And "Boys," says he, "you don't know me, and none of you care a damn;
    But I want to state, and my words are straight, and I'll bet my poke they're true,
    That one of you is a hound of hell . . . and that one is Dan McGrew."

    Then I ducked my head, and the lights went out, and two guns blazed in the dark,
    And a woman screamed, and the lights went up, and two men lay stiff and stark.
    Pitched on his head, and pumped full of lead, was Dangerous Dan McGrew,
    While the man from the creeks lay clutched to the breast of the lady that's known as Lou.

    These are the simple facts of the case, and I guess I ought to know.
    They say that the stranger was crazed with "hooch", and I'm not denying it's so.
    I'm not so wise as the lawyer guys, but strictly between us two --
    The woman that kissed him and -- pinched his poke -- was the lady that's known as Lou.

  • Not my Favorite Robert Service Christmas Poem

    I'm saving the favorite for nearer to Christmas.  Meanwhile, enjoy--

    White Christmas
        by Robert W. Service

    My folks think I'm a serving maid
    Each time I visit home;
    They do not dream I ply a trade
    As old as Greece or Rome;
    For if they found I'd fouled their name
    And was not white as snow,
    I'm sure that they would die of shame . . .
    Please, God, they'll never know.

    I clean the paint from off my face,
    In sober black I dress;
    Of coquetry I leave no trace
    To give them vague distress;
    And though it causes me a pang
    To play such sorry tricks,
    About my neck I meekly hang
    A silver crufix.

    And so with humble step I go
    Just like a child again,
    To greet their Christmas candle-glow,
    A soul without a stain;
    So well I play my contrite part
    I make myself believe
    There's not a stain within my heart
    On Holy Christmas Eve.

    With double natures we are vext,
    And what we feel, we are;
    A saint one day, a sinner next,
    A red light or a star;
    A prostitute or proselyte,
    And in each part sincere:
    So I become a vestal white
    One week in every year.

    For this I say without demur
    From out life's lurid lore,
    Each righteous woman has in her
    A tincture of the whore;
    While every harpy of the night,
    As I have learned too well;
    Holds in her heart a heaven-light
    To ransom her from hell.

    So I'll go home and sweep and dust;
    I'll make the kitchen fire,
    And be a model of daughters just
    The best they could desire;
    I'll fondle them and cook their food,
    And Mother dear will say:
    "Thank God! my darling is as good
    As when she went away."

    But after New Year's Day I'll fill
    My bag and though they grieve,
    I'll bid them both good-bye until
    Another Christmas Eve;
    And then . . . a knock upon the door:
    I'll find them waiting there,
    And angel-like I'll come once more
    In answer to their prayer.

    Then Lo! one night when candle-light
    Gleams mystic on the snow,
    And music swells of Christmas bells,
    I'll come, no more to go:
    The old folks need my love and care,
    Their gold shall gild my dross,
    And evermore my breast shall bear
    My little silver cross.

  • Two Patriotic Poems - Giving the Authors their Due

    The two sentimental patriotic Christmas poems below have been widely circulated in print and on the web, sometimes in significantly altered form, and often attributed to different authors.  The versions I'm posting, and the authorship information given here, are backed up by Snopes.com and/or statements of the authors themselves.


    A SOLDIER'S CHRISTMAS

    The embers glowed softly, and in their dim light,
    I gazed round the room and I cherished the sight;
    My wife was asleep, her head on my chest,
    My daughter beside me, angelic in rest.
    Outside the snow fell, a blanket of white,
    Transforming the yard to a winter delight;
    The sparkling lights in the tree, I believe,
    Completed the magic that was Christmas Eve.

    My eyelids were heavy, my breathing was deep,
    Secure and surrounded by love I would sleep
    In perfect contentment or so it would seem,
    So I slumbered, perhaps I started to dream.

    The sound wasn't loud, and it wasn't too near,
    But I opened my eye when it tickled my ear;
    Perhaps just a cough, I didn't quite know,
    Then the sure sound of footsteps outside in the snow.

    My soul gave a tremble, I struggled to hear,
    And I crept to the door just to see who was near;
    Standing out in the cold and the dark of the night,
    A lone figure stood, his face weary and tight.

    A soldier, I puzzled, some twenty years old,
    Perhaps a Marine, huddled here in the cold;
    Alone in the dark, he looked up and smiled,
    Standing watch over me, and my wife and my child.

    "What are you doing?" I asked without fear,
    "Come in this moment, it's freezing out here!
    Put down your pack, brush the snow from your sleeve,
    You should be at home on a cold Christmas Eve!"

    For barely a moment I saw his eyes shift
    Away from the cold and the snow blown in drifts
    To the window that danced with a warm fire's light,
    Then he sighed and he said "It's really all right,
    I'm out here by choice. I'm here every night.

    "It's my duty to stand at the front of the line
    That separates you from the darkest of times;
    No one had to ask or beg or implore me,
    I'm proud to stand here like my fathers before me.

    "My Gramps died at 'Pearl' on a day in December,"
    Then he sighed, "That's a Christmas 'Gram' always remembers;
    My dad stood his watch in the jungles of 'Nam,
    And now it is my turn and so, here I am.

    "I've not seen my own son in more than a while,
    But my wife sends me pictures, he's sure got her smile;"
    Then he bent and he carefully pulled from his bag,
    The red white and blue ... an American flag.

    "I can live through the cold and the being alone
    Away from my family, my house and my home;
    I can stand at my post through the rain and the sleet,
    I can sleep in a foxhole with little to eat.

    "I can carry the weight of killing another
    Or lay down my life with my sisters and brothers
    Who stand at the front against any and all,
    To insure for all time that this flag will not fall.

    "So go back inside," he said, "harbor no fright,
    Your family is waiting and I'll be all right."

    "But isn't there something I can do, at the least
    Give you money," I asked, "or prepare you a feast?
    It seems all too little for all that you've done,
    For being away from your wife and your son."

    Then his eye welled a tear that held no regret,
    "Just tell us you love us, and never forget
    To fight for our rights back at home while we're gone,
    To stand your own watch, no matter how long.

    "For when we come home, either standing or dead,
    To know you remember we fought and we bled
    Is payment enough, and with that we will trust
    That we mattered to you as you mattered to us."

    Michael Marks
    December 7th, 2000

    If you liked that one and want more, in 2003 he wrote, The Sands of Christmas.


    MERRY CHRISTMAS, MY FRIEND

    'Twas the night before Christmas, he lived all alone,
    In a one-bedroom house made of plaster and stone.
    I had come down the chimney, with presents to give
    and to see just who in this home did live.

    As I looked all about, a strange sight I did see,
    no tinsel, no presents, not even a tree.
    No stocking by the fire, just boots filled with sand.
    On the wall hung pictures of a far distant land.

    With medals and badges, awards of all kind,
    a sobering thought soon came to my mind.
    For this house was different, unlike any I'd seen.
    This was the home of a U.S. Marine.

    I'd heard stories about them, I had to see more,
    so I walked down the hall and pushed open the door.
    And there he lay sleeping, silent, alone,
    Curled up on the floor in his one-bedroom home.

    He seemed so gentle, his face so serene,
    Not how I pictured a U.S. Marine.
    Was this the hero, of whom I'd just read?
    Curled up in his poncho, a floor for his bed?

    His head was clean-shaven, his weathered face tan.
    I soon understood, this was more than a man.
    For I realized the families that I saw that night,
    owed their lives to these men, who were willing to fight.

    Soon around the Nation, the children would play,
    And grown-ups would celebrate on a bright Christmas day.
    They all enjoyed freedom, each month and all year,
    because of Marines like this one lying here.

    I couldn't help wonder how many lay alone,
    on a cold Christmas Eve, in a land far from home.
    Just the very thought brought a tear to my eye.
    I dropped to my knees and I started to cry.

    He must have awoken, for I heard a rough voice,
    "Santa, don't cry, this life is my choice
    I fight for freedom, I don't ask for more.
    My life is my God, my country, my Corps."

    With that he rolled over, drifted off into sleep,
    I couldn't control it, I continued to weep.

    I watched him for hours, so silent and still.
    I noticed he shivered from the cold night's chill.
    So I took off my jacket, the one made of red,
    and covered this Marine from his toes to his head.
    Then I put on his T-shirt of scarlet and gold,
    with an eagle, globe and anchor emblazoned so bold.
    And although it barely fit me, I began to swell with pride,
    and for one shining moment, I was Marine Corps deep inside.

    I didn't want to leave him so quiet in the night,
    this guardian of honor so willing to fight.
    But half asleep he rolled over, and in a voice clean and pure,
    said "Carry on, Santa, it's Christmas Day, all secure."
    One look at my watch and I knew he was right,
    Merry Christmas my friend, Semper Fi and goodnight.

    ©Copyright circa 1991 by James M. Schmidt
    (As printed in the December 1991 issue of the USMC magazine, Leatherneck)


    Support any soldier.

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    Would you like to make a mess you won't have to clean up?  Here is a little Christmas gift for you:  JacksonPollock.org.

  • More Robert Service for You

    I'm Scared of it All

    I'm scared of it all, God's truth! so I am;
    It's too big and brutal for me.
    My nerve's on the raw and I don't give a damn
    For all the "hoorah" that I see.
    I'm pinned between subway and overhead train,
    Where automobillies swoop down:
    Oh, I want to go back to the timber again --
    I'm scared of the terrible town.

    I want to go back to my lean, ashen plains;
    My rivers that flash into foam;
    My ultimate valleys where solitude reigns;
    My trail from Fort Churchill to Nome.
    My forests packed full of mysterious gloom,
    My ice-fields agrind and aglare:
    The city is deadfalled with danger and doom --
    I know that I'm safer up there.

    I watch the wan faces that flash in the street;
    All kinds and all classes I see.
    Yet never a one in the million I meet,
    Has the smile of a comrade for me.
    Just jaded and panting like dogs in a pack;
    Just tensed and intent on the goal:
    O God! but I'm lonesome -- I wish I was back,
    Up there in the land of the Pole.

    I wish I was back on the Hunger Plateaus,
    And seeking the lost caribou;
    I wish I was up where the Coppermine flows
    To the kick of my little canoe.
    I'd like to be far on some weariful shore,
    In the Land of the Blizzard and Bear;
    Oh, I wish I was snug in the Arctic once more,
    For I know I am safer up there!

    I prowl in the canyons of dismal unrest;
    I cringe -- I'm so weak and so small.
    I can't get my bearings, I'm crushed and oppressed
    With the haste and the waste of it all.
    The slaves and the madman, the lust and the sweat,
    The fear in the faces I see;
    The getting, the spending, the fever, the fret --
    It's too bleeding cruel for me.

    I feel it's all wrong, but I can't tell you why --
    The palace, the hovel next door;
    The insolent towers that sprawl to the sky,
    The crush and the rush and the roar.
    I'm trapped like a fox and I fear for my pelt;
    I cower in the crash and the glare;
    Oh, I want to be back in the avalanche belt,
    For I know that it's safer up there!

    I'm scared of it all: Oh, afar I can hear
    The voice of my solitudes call!
    We're nothing but brute with a little veneer,
    And nature is best after all.
    There's tumult and terror abroad in the street;
    There's menace and doom in the air;
    I've got to get back to my thousand-mile beat;
    The trail where the cougar and silver-tip meet;
    The snows and the camp-fire, with wolves at my feet;
    Good-bye, for it's safer up there.

             To be forming good habits up there;
             To be starving on rabbits up there;
             In your hunger and woe,
             Though it's sixty below,
             Oh, I know that it's safer up there!

  • Putting the New Yard Light to Work

    These shots were taken at about a quarter to nine this morning.  I had been up for an hour or two and Doug went to bed shortly after he finished splitting firewood.

    Here, he is up in the woodpile pulling rounds from under the tarp, and has just heaved a big one out behind him.

    Here, he is splitting that big round.  It was knotty and didn't go down easy.  It split into some interesting shapes that could be challenging to burn.

    We are both very happy with the new floodlight, made possible by the new wiring Roger did for us last month.  It makes splitting firewood much easier and safer than it had been by flashlight.

  • High-speed internet doesn't come easily to remote Alaska.

    On Sunday, four technicians working for Kodiak Kenai Cable Company were dropped by helicopter near the top of Sharatin Mountain, on Kodiak Island.  The mountain is 2,800 feet high and its peak is a popular 3-hour hike for locals, not a particularly challenging climb.  The workers were there for a four-day job preparing a site for the construction of a proposed microwave tower that is to bring cell service and internet to Kodiak's Native villages.

    A winter storm came up and blew away some of their tents and supplies.  Three of the men became separated from the fourth and ended up sheltering in a snow cave.  The lone man sheltering in a surviving tent was first to call for rescue, about 5 AM Monday.  The three in the snow cave contacted the Coast Guard, asking for rescue, about 7:45 the same morning.  Some were reporting frostbite and/or symptoms of hypothermia.

    High winds prevented a helicopter rescue, but eventually volunteers from Kodiak Search and Rescue were dropped lower on the mountain and hiked up to the cable workers' campsite, reaching them about twelve hours after their calls, with water, food, and warm clothing.  Last night they all started hiking back down the mountain, prepared to make camp if weather worsened.

    My sources: 
    KNBA 90.3FM Native American Radio
    tmcnet.com/news
    and Fort Mill Times, Fort Mill, SC (And can anyone tell me why a South Carolina newspaper is so often the earliest source I find for Alaska news?) 

  • Why postpone the joy?

     

    Christmas is a time for sharing.  That's where the joy is:  in the giving and sharing, certainly not in the shopping.  For me, anyhow, there is little joy, at any time, in shopping.  Occasionally, I feel a burst of pleasure at finding an unexpectedly low price on a staple such as the one on Super Lucky Elephant jasmine rice from Thailand at Three Bears last month.  Any time I find grapeseed oil at a reasonable price in the regular cooking oil section and don't need to go to the gourmet section and pay exorbitantly for it, that is cause for joy.  Other than for groceries, I seldom shop at all.  Going into debt to keep eating tends to discourage shopping in general.

    When I was a kid, during December each year, newspapers reminded readers of how many shopping days were left until Christmas.  Shopping days at the time came six to the week, and for the after-Christmas sales the countdown would begin again with a number close to 300.  My mother decried the practice, which seems to imply that it had been an innovation coming after her own childhood.  I couldn't see why she was such a curmudgeon about it.  I had two Christmas lists:  one listing things I wanted for myself, and another of people for whom I wanted to buy gifts.  I loved shopping and window shopping.

    Each year I would save some money from my allowance to buy gifts.  It was never enough, so I depended on supplemental handouts.  Unless an aunt or uncle sent xmas cash early, the money for everything came from my mother, whose finances were not quite as tight as mine are now, but were tight enough that I knew I would not get everything on my list and I would have to do some careful shopping to find appropriate and affordable gifts for everyone on my list.  I approached the task with enthusiasm, and genuinely enjoyed the seasonal crowds, decorations, and background music in the shops.

    That was then.  This is now.  I haven't sent Christmas cards in so long that I have been taken off nearly everyone's lists.  The company that collects our garbage sent me this one:

     

    ...and the author/artist of Schlock Mercenary sent this one to Doug:

     

    Sharing them with you gives me a warm feeling that has been missing from my Christmas since Greyfox and I decided that family gift giving was too fraught with resentment, disappointment and pathos.  I don't think I'll wait this year until just twelve days before xmas to start my upside down and backwards holiday celebration.

    Some of you may recall that my favorite Christmas poem is one by Robert Service, the Scots-Gaelic-speaking (plus French, Italian and English) English-born Canadian poet that Alaska would like to claim as its own.  I will repost that poem sometime between now and xmas, but for now I'll joyfully share with you another of Service's poems that I love.

         The Men That Don't Fit In

        There's a race of men that don't fit in,
            A race that can't stay still;
        So they break the hearts of kith and kin,
            And they roam the world at will.
        They range the field and they rove the flood,
            And they climb the mountain's crest;
        Theirs is the curse of the gypsy blood,
            And they don't know how to rest.

        If they just went straight they might go far;
            They are strong and brave and true;
        But they're always tired of the things that are,
            And they want the strange and new.
        They say: "Could I find my proper groove,
            What a deep mark I would make!"
        So they chop and change, and each fresh move
            Is only a fresh mistake.

        And each forgets, as he strips and runs
            With a brilliant, fitful pace,
        It's the steady, quiet, plodding ones
            Who win in the lifelong race.
        And each forgets that his youth has fled,
            Forgets that his prime is past,
        Till he stands one day, with a hope that's dead,
            In the glare of the truth at last.

        He has failed, he has failed; he has missed his chance;
            He has just done things by half.
        Life's been a jolly good joke on him,
            And now is the time to laugh.
        Ha, ha! He is one of the Legion Lost;
            He was never meant to win;
        He's a rolling stone, and it's bred in the bone;
            He's a man who won't fit in.

    It was hard settling on just one out of his many works.  I'll probably drop in a few more in coming days.

    Recently, I posted a shot through the window of my lighted ivy plant "Christmas tree."  Below is a photo of it from an indoor perspective beside the woodstove, followed by a picture of a few of the things that will be missing from my "tree" to keep them from being damaged by, and in turn damaging, the cats:.
     

     

     

    Happy-happy-joy-joy.

  • Thanks anyway, Dr. Heimlich.

    Just before 1 AM today, I was asleep in my bed in the corner of the front room, and Doug was on the couch next to the woodstove that takes up the center of this big room that makes up most of our living space.  He had cooked some ramen (the kitchen is the other end of the same room), and was eating.  He might have been playing Fallout 3 on the Xbox, too.  He often doesn't stop playing to eat.

    The sound of his cough woke me.  Without sitting up, I asked if he was okay.  The only answer was more coughing/choking noises.  I was on my feet before I knew it, reaching out toward him, asking, "Can I ...?"  Before I'd gotten out the word, "help," he was on his feet, turning away from me, facing the woodstove.  Instead of, "help," I said, "Heimlich," reached around him, put my left fist under his diaphragm, grabbed it in in my right hand, and pulled.

    One thrust was enough to clear his airway.  While he went for a paper towel and cleaned up the ramen he had spewed, he said he had never been so frightened in his life, and admitted that he probably hadn't chewed that bite well enough.  Ever the mother, I said, "Chew your food."  That's really a family in-joke, along with, "Don't play with your food," and several other such admonitions that have been repeated ad infinitum.

    He was back in the game within minutes, but I was still awake an hour later, and two hours.  The adrenaline finally faded enough to let me sleep, but the incident was on my mind when I awoke.  I realized I knew very little about the eponymous Heimlich, so my first move when I sat at the computer was to Google.

    Henry Judah Heimlich MD has apparently changed his middle name to Jay, earned the public resentment of his colleague Edward Patrick MD by claiming full credit for the anti-choking maneuver, has a cousin who played Potsie on Happy Days, and has given one of his sons a strong raison d’être in discrediting the old man.  Peter Heimlich and his wife Karen claim, among other things, that old Henry has heartlessly performed research on third world people by infecting them with disease, and that his Heimlich Institute is no longer engaged in research but exists only as a website and fundraising front for Deaconess Associations, Inc.

    Henry Heimlich reportedly promoted "his" abdominal thrust maneuver not just for choking, but for asthma and drowning, and several cases have been documented, of death resulting from use of the maneuver on drowning victims who then vomited and fatally aspirated the vomitus.  Meanwhile, several official sources have dropped the Heimlich name from the abdominal thrust maneuver, and in 2006 the American Red Cross stopped teaching it in first aid courses as the primary response to choking.

    Besides all that, the man is seriously ugly, looks definitely evil, and I'm tempted to say that his mother dresses him funny, but that lame joke might be too old and obscure for my audience.  In the last few decades, I have used abdominal thrusts to stop several people from choking, and did no damage in the process as far as I know.  I had not even been aware that the maneuver had been recommended for drowning, and if someone were to squeeze my diaphragm when I'm in an asthma attack, they'd probably get my elbow in their ribs.  Anyway, I probably saved my son's life last night, so, thanks anyway, Dr. Heimlich.

  • Mushing Update

    UPDATED
    at bottom

     

    Yesterday, Jeff King, who came in second to Lance Mackey after a hotly contested 2008 Iditarod, was fined $4,000 and ordered to pay $750 in restitution to the National Park Service, for killing a moose 600 feet inside the boundary of Denali National Park.

    "With tears running down his face as he addressed Federal Magistrate Judge John D. Roberts near the end of the 4 1/2-hour sentencing hearing at the federal courthouse in Fairbanks, King described himself as 'humbled and emotionally spent.'

    'I’m ready for it to be over,' the four-time Iditarod champ from Denali Park said, his voice cracking. “This has turned my life upside down and has caused me countless nights of sleepless worry. I am deeply embarrassed by it all.'"

    Judge Roberts sided with the defense, against a prosecutor who claimed that King had lied about a problem with his GPS, and wanted to put Jeff in jail.  King's lawyer, Myron Angstman, said, "The only way you go to jail if you shoot a moose in Alaska is if you waste a substantial part of it or you are somehow commercially involved in profiting from that moose."  The judge ruled that, "shooting the moose inside the park boundary was a case of poor judgment, not blatant disregard."

    -----

    This year during the off-season here in Alaska, one of the smaller races, the Kuskokwim 300, has been getting more media attention than the Iditarod.  The former race manager, Staci J. Gillilan, was fired by the race's board of directors after it became known that she had failed to pay the state over $20,000 in taxes the organization owed on the income from pull-tab gaming they do for fundraising.  Shortly after that, she was arrested for embezzlement of an estimated $13,000 to $15,000.

    It was a setback for the race, and for a while there was some question whether the 2009 K-300 would be run or, if it did run, if the purse would be reduced.  Fans and mushers pitched in with fundraisers, and at latest report all 3 Kusko races will run on schedule with full prize purses:

    Kuskokwim 300 - Friday, January 16th, 2009 - $100,000
    Bogus Creek 150 - Friday, January 16th, 2009 - $25,000
    Akiak Dash - Saturday, January 17th, 2009 - $10,000

    Kusko 300 organizers are also planning the Holiday Classic, a 45-50 mile race, between Christmas and New Years.

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    A stamp issued by the U.S. Postal Service, commemmorating the 50th anniversary of Alaska's statehood, features a photo by Alaska Stock Images of Dee Dee Jonrowe and her team going through Rainy Pass.

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    Jon Van Zyle's new 2009 Iditarod print, Ghost Rider is in stark and spooky contrast with most of his other work.  One of my favorites among the Iditarod prints is "Catastrophe," below, from 2006.

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    January 25, 2009, the John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon in Minnesota starts.  Three weeks after that, the other great long-distance race (along with the Iditarod) Yukon Quest, the 1,000 mile international sled dog race, and the dog race that gets my personal prize for best website for its dog photos, starts February 14 in Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada, and will end up in Fairbanks, Alaska, U.S.A., whenever the last team crosses the finish line.

    But even before then, just next weekend, December 13-14, the Sheep Mountain 150, first mid-distance race of the season, will run from Sheep Mountain Lodge, out past Eureka Lodge and back to Sheep Mountain.  The field there is limited to 50 teams, and those already signed up include Jeff King (4-time Iditarod champion), Aliy Zirkle (Yukon Quest champion), and Ken Anderson (2005 Sheep Mountain champion).

    Finally, this announcement from dogsled.com:

    The Wyedean Quest Stage Stop Sled Dog Race to be held in the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire England UK on February 27 through March 1, 2009.

    It's the first ever Wyedean Quest Stage Stop Sled Dog Race, a 4 stage, 3 day dryland sprint race. 2 night stages and 2 day stages.

    UPDATE:
    Because I love my readers, and for laughs, I suggest you download the audio of this week's "AK" and hear what the loonies of Crab Bait Radio in Petersburg have to say about how it is ROUGHER IN ALASKA!

  • Yikes!! It's raining.

    Anyone who thinks that weather warm enough to bring rain to an Alaskan winter would be more pleasant than the usual cold, hasn't spent a rainy winter here.  One rainy winter that immediately comes to my mind is the year that my neighbor Duane Wetherell got his truck stuck in my driveway on Christmas.  He wasn't coming to visit me or trying to leave my place.  He was going around a corner on his way home and slid into my driveway, then couldn't get enough traction to get out of it.

    The temperature is hovering around 33°F, and could go either way:  down so that the wet layer becomes a slick glaze under a new snowfall, or up for a while so that the glaze layer will be thicker and slicker when it finally freezes.  Freeze it will.  Winter hasn't officially started yet, and this is still Alaska.

    I posted half a dozen new photos today and added a new profile pic, all taken yesterday while Doug and I strung wires and put up a floodlight for his chopping block and the side of the woodpile where he delves under the snowy tarp for wood to split.

    In the shot above, he is standing on snow we have shoveled from the area around the chopping block, with a tray under his feet to spread his weight so he doesn't just sink into the snow, which is about armpit-deep at that point.

    For a brief moment around noon, as Doug was putting up a little hood over the light fixture to keep snow off it, before we broke for food and moved on to shoveling the driveway, the sun broke through below the clouds and just above the treetops to the south.  Next week, it won't rise above the trees at all.  Then, next month it will be up again and by mid-February I'll be able to feel its warmth on my skin.  It will rise higher and higher, and farther east, then north, until June, when it will stop getting dark and the sun will set only briefly beyond the northern horizon before coming up again a few degrees west of its setting point.  I love the way that works, can't help marveling over it.

    Above is the shot I promised, of my "snow gauge," one of the railroad ties standing in my yard.  I'm glad I captured that yesterday.  If the rain persists, it will be warped and distorted or gone entirely by the end of this day.