Locomotoring

Spending our time untethering the mind, getting the fidgets out, exploring the in-between ideas, and learning kintsugi.

Archive for September 2023

A mask and a rattle at the museum

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The photos above are from Alaska State Museum in Juneau. One on the right shows Tlingit ceremonial rattles. The top row first two are Raven rattles, often intricately carved with a combination of human, frog, hawk and other creatures. On the left are a pair of Yupik ceremonial masks, likely from Qikirtaq island, near St. Michael, they resemble the masks from Unalakleet, Hooper Bay and Nelson Island.

I have been totally swept off my feet by the ceremonial raven rattles. What follows is a fictional story of a woman child, Héen (in Tlingit, Héen means river), in the form of an imagined conversation between the ceremonial mask on top left and the raven rattle on top left.

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Written by Som

September 29, 2023 at 5:55 am

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Keeping the glass full

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It’s all perfectly clear now. Or maybe this clarity will only last the rest of the day. Fact is, my glass is full again. Fact is, I am just back from exploring the inner passage of south east Alaska. I continue to be filled with a sense of awe, I am feeling humbled, and privileged to be alive on this incredibly beautiful planet. Fact is, natural beauty heals me, fills my glass with clear cool sweet tasting water. Fact is, as time goes on, my glass will start to empty again, a little by little each day. Is there a way I can top up the glass, maybe enough to slow down the pace at which it empties? The clarity today makes me think that maybe I can.

Do you know Gordon, the audio ecologist who went searching for one square inch of silence in the Hoh forest? For the last several months, I have been meeting with him and a few other like minded individuals. All of us in our own ways, are searching for a one square inch of silence closer to where we live, in vertical and horizontal human sprawls. At the last meeting, which had happened before the Alaska trip, one of our team members, Tim, suggested that we take a moment of silence and visualize our quiet place. The meeting had happened at the end of a long day, I was tired from the general chaos of life, and I was hangry. But I knew that a minute wasn’t too much of an ask, and so, I decided to give it my best, and conjured up my quiet place. I remember noticing the transformation then. After that minute, I had felt a lot less tired, a little healed.

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Written by locomotoring

September 17, 2023 at 5:06 am

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A very blue glacier

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Big chunks of ice have calved off South Sawyer glacier

Between 1990 and 2013, the South Sawyer glacier has retreated at 120m/year, and between 2013 and 2022, the retreat rate has been 50m/year. As the glacier calves, it creates numerous bergy bits and icebergs that the harbor seals seem to love. I watched the James Balog documentary, Chasing Ice, right before our zodiac trip and I didn’t want this glacier to calve anymore.

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Written by locomotoring

September 8, 2023 at 7:46 am

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Walking a bear trail

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You probably knew all along that bears make trails. I didn’t know. So, when the expedition leader mentioned the opportunity to walk a bear trail at William’s Cove, I took notice. The trails in Sitka are beautifully maintained by forest services. A bear trail is not that, there are no convenient wooden planks over streams and bogs. It is created by repeated comings and goings of bears over the years. It is a rough trail, overgrown in some places, perhaps there a little more bear scat than normal. Otherwise, imagine the rainforest, the forest floor is bouncy due to years of fine leaf deposition, from the spruces and hemlocks, then the perpetual rain allows mosses of various kinds to flourish. The undergrowth still has occasional fruit on the bunchberries, watermelon berries, red -berried elders and devil’s clubs.

One of the zodiacs drop us on the shore of William’s Cove, the bear trail is just behind the camera
Apparently, bears like building trails next to waterbodies, just one tree deep into the forest. Our bear trail is just the other side of the first tree.
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Written by locomotoring

September 7, 2023 at 6:10 pm

Posted in Alaska, USA

Meeting Lulu

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Lulu was born in 2015. She is a friendly bear. You can see the road behind her, out of shot are several spectators taking photos.
Lulu and her two young ones. The young ones never left the shore. During our shared time together, Lulu once perceived a threat and was by the side of her cubs in a matter of seconds.

Lulu is daughter of Speedy and was born in 2015. We were in the middle of Chilkat river, where the river is barely waist high. The cubs are too young to get in the river, so Lulu is fishing for them. The river is turquoise green, colored by the glacier melt, making it harder to see the salmon. Salmon, mostly pink salmon, are trying to spawn and we are trying to flyfish. Our flyfishing guides were experienced and cautious, making sure we were out of harm’s way. But once I realized that Lulu won’t go too far from her cubs, I relaxed. During the 90 minutes of fishing, we saw Lulu and her cubs on both sides of the river. They crossed over the Weir. It was a few hundred feet behind us. We eventually saw her catch a salmon and take it back to her cubs. In the same time, we caught a salmon each as well.

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Written by locomotoring

September 5, 2023 at 6:49 am

Posted in Alaska, USA

Without the whacking …

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Somewhere near Battery Point in the Haines Borough

If I were to say we went bushwhacking on Battery Point trail, the Haines Borough folks would roll their eyes. But we got off the trail with our naturalist, storyteller and photographer, Jim. Now, Jim is the kind of person who gets caught up in the little plants and flowers, and doesn’t mind poking around in scat and loses track of time. Of course, who needs to track time when one is on vacation. This trail was new to him as well and he is decidedly one of those who likes going off-trail. After the morning flyfishing in Chilkat river and a hearty lunch, the zodiac dropped us somewhere from where we could hop on the Battery Point trail.

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Written by locomotoring

September 5, 2023 at 5:54 am

Posted in Alaska, USA

The shapes of Tongass rainforest

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Written by locomotoring

September 4, 2023 at 7:41 am

Posted in Alaska, USA

Blues of Southeast Alaska

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Written by locomotoring

September 4, 2023 at 12:41 am

Posted in Alaska, USA

The Expedition

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Colors of Holkham Bay, at the mouth of Tracy Arm.

The reason we were in Sitka is because it was start of a 500 mile expedition. One with National Geographic and Lindblad, one of their smaller ships, Sea Lion, that is able to navigate south east Alaska’s inside passage. We started from Sitka and then made our way to Hanus Bay via Sergius Narrows and Peril Strait. From there, we moved to the northernmost entrance to the inside passage by Cross Sounds. We explored George Island and the Inian islands. Then we made our way to Haines and explored further. From Haines, we cruised south via Stephen’s passage into Holkham Bay, the entrance to Tracy Arm-Fords Terror Wilderness. We visited Williams Cove and South Sawyer Glacier. And finally landed in Juneau for our flight back. The forest that tied that 500 mile journey was Tongass.

We had the sun, not rain, beam down on the rainforest everyday. We were fortunate to see a dozen humpbacks feeding, a hundred sea lions frolicking and a thousand harbor seals napping. Being surrounded by the sound of whales as they gracefully breach and breathe was watching a dance of a lifetime. And then there is a big blue glacier that is perpetually calving, creating growlers, bergy bits and icebergs. The sound of a ten thousand year old glacier cracking is like a deep belly grumble. I wanted to give the ice a big hug, apologize for global warming and ask it to stay safe. And finally, there is fly fishing. Did someone say fly fishing takes skill? If it does, it is not in these parts. The water is turquoise blue from the glacier melt, the river is full of salmon, the salmon are weary and simply want to spawn and die. We see a mother bear with two cubs while we fish. We catch a salmon and we watch the mother bear catch a salmon. We would learn later that while there is a bear every square mile, they are not commonly observed on these short visits. Did I know that bears make trails? You bet, I didn’t.

In a trip like this, there are always a few regrets. Like sleeping through an aurora borealis. Or, not hiking the rainforest in rain. But here, I had a lot more regrets. I wanted to soar like a bald eagle and survey my land, breach the ocean like a whale, frolic around in arctic waters like a baby sea lion, snooze on blue ice like a harbor seal, be a salmon in search of my river, sit immobile on a rock like starfish. But most of all, I wanted to be a bear and walk the trail my mother and her mother made through the mossy rainforest floor that is bouncy as a silicone mat, protected by fifteen foot tall devil’s club and covered by snakeberries as far as eyes could see.

(Clearly, Octavia Butler’s patternist book, Wild Seed, has left a lot of wants in my mind!)

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Written by locomotoring

September 3, 2023 at 11:30 pm

Posted in Alaska, USA