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Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Well La Niña has certainly been Exciting

We are just finishing up the third of three back-to-back storms. The first, which came before Christmas, was a two-foot snow dump. The second was an inch of ice, which coated everything with, well, an inch of ice. And the third was another foot of snow--so far! It's still coming down, although the meteorology folks are saying that we're mostly done with the snow, and the next Exciting Thing will be wind all night.

The ice storm brought a power outage, but for us it was only brief. The storm had started Christmas Day, while my ham was on the oven! Oh, the suspense! But we didn't lose power until the following day, and we got it back by the following morning (the 27th). Others in my neighborhood were less fortunate and stayed off for 2-3 days.

Photo credit: Amanda Bohman/News-Miner

DL and I had always hand-shoveled, until I broke my leg right before a snowstorm, and we were worried about keeping the driveway cleared for me to get to my surgery Monday morning. DL decided to buy a snowblower last summer, and boy howdy, this was the year to do it!

The snowblower could even handle the thick, wet snow that came during the ice storm! I was super impressed! The parts that we had to hand-finish (the tight corners and walkways near the house) were very frustrating. The wet snow stuck to our shovels. UGH!

The last storm had nice fluffy powder again. Shoveling a foot of it was no problem! Nothing makes you appreciate what you have (electricity, fluffy snow) like having it taken away and then returned!

Anyway, here are some photos from our Christmas adventures.

Our last, clean-out-the-fridge pre-Christmas meal: A tiny bit of baked spaghetti, a tinier bit of chicken curry, pork buns from the frozen section of the Chinese grocery store, and some miscellaneous veggies:

My Very Enthusiastic Kitchen Helpers!
The ham made it with no power outage! Yay!
Post-dinner snuggles:
Then the next day came the ice storm + power outage! We have both Coleman and battery-operated lanterns for our main lighting, but I love this candle because it was a gift from one of my Sili Valley bosses, and I've kept it all this time because it's so stable and un-tip-over-able.
OK let us talk ham leftovers. My favorite ham breakfast so far: Grilled ham, egg, and cheese sammiches:
My favorite ham dinner: Mac n cheese with ham and broccoli:
Mmmmm!
Ham and veggie noodles:
Miss Thistle is So Kind as to make sure the bok choy is Acceptable:
And Miss Cricket is So Kind as to check the carrots:
Apparently they are both okay!
Thank you, Your Royal Highness!
Here is Cricket channeling Linden: Curled up batting her eyes like a baby caribou:
Here is what we woke up to this morning. Remember, we had freshly cleared two prior storms within a week!
DL had just cleared the snow off the porch roof overhang, so this is from the one storm:
It's up to my mid-calves!
DL almost always clears a path to the outhouse first. I remember doing this myself before DL came along. I'm very grateful to have a good partner who helps share the burdens of life.
I'm sure glad that they are comfy and undisturbed by any of the storms! I would hate for them to be inconvenienced in any way!

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Happy Solstice!

Yesterday was the Solstice. We'll be gaining daylight now! I'm always a bit astonished that the Solstices are regarded as "the first day of Winter" and "the first day of Summer". They always come when it feels like winter and summer have long begun.

My friends in the Pavva Iñupiaq Dancers have an annual tradition where every Solstice, they do some drumming and dancing on top of Troth Yeddha' ridge to welcome back the sun. In Dec of 2020, we still did not have a good understanding of how COVID spreads, so they streamed the event online. However, in Dec of 2021, we know that the virus does not spread outdoors if you stand far apart, so we went to go watch.

Three generations here! Grandpa, son, and grandson, singing together.

Here are some words from my friend.

"Tatqiġġuuq suli nuiḷġaaqami auraġnaġiaylaitchuġġuuq. Siqiñiġmiñ iŋaiġuti’ami, ukiuq takiraqtuq. Aasriiñ siqiñiq nuiḷġaaqami auraġnaġiaġaqtuġġuuq. Iñuich niqaiqsuat auraġnaġiaqman quyaraqtuq. Aasriiñ auraġnaġianġitman, taragguuq nagliksaaġaqtut, iḷaŋich kakkaaqhutiŋ. Taimani taatnaqhutiŋ ittuatlaiññiqsuat. Taatna niqi katinniuraqługu ataramik piraqniqsut.”

"There are four days in December when the sun will be completely gone from the sky in our area [Northwest Alaska]. After these four days, our people watch the night sky to see if the moon comes up first, our people know that the winter will be long. Summer will be late if the moon comes up first. If the sun comes up first, the people will be happy. They know that there will be an early spring. Winter will be short and summer will soon be there. Food supplies are usually short by the beginning of spring so an early spring is an event to be happy about. It will mean that the birds and the fish will soon be in our area for us to hunt and catch. In the event that winter will be prolonged, we take extra caution to ration our winter supply of food during the second half of the winter season. We make sure that we do not starve before summer comes.”

--Minnie Gray and Ruthie Sampson

Atautchikun Gazhee (We are celebrating Gazhee together)! Pavvamiut naniurapiaqtuqtugut (Pavva is using an oil lamp [hundreds of years old passed through the generations]). Our ceremonies and celebrations are sacred. My great-uncle shared about Gazhee which was a seven-day event around this time of year. Ceremonies evolve over time, and we do not want to forget our connections to our ancestors. Today we remember Gazhee by singing to the Winter Solstice Siqiñiq (Sun). Though the ceremony has changed, it is not forgotten. Today, we feel our ancestors present, and we look forward to a new year with family and friends.

I had never thought about a place where the sun disappears for four days. I mean, I knew that in Utqiagvik there are 65 days without sun, but four days seems tolerable and countable, and yet also very mysterious. Four days of darkness, and then the sun comes back. How fascinating!

Well, the drumming and the singing must be working, because the sun is rising. Some Chinese tourists on their way to the museum stopped to watch, too.

A poem for you, from Hafiz of Shiraz, as relevant today as it was in the 14th century:
My first covid-era haircut. It was only a bit of a stretch, as I generally only get a haircut every 3 or so years anyway so I can donate it. My friend M found a hairdresser who is vaxed and boosted, insists on masking, and will give you upon request an early-bird appointment when the shop is otherwise empty. So I took this opportunity while my booster is fresh and omicron has not taken off here yet. I feel light as a feather! Wheeeeeeeee!
I ran the girls on the road by headlamp this morning before my early appointment, so when I got home, it was still midday. We had had a rather big storm! Last Sun through Mon, a foot of snow came down! After breaking my ankle last spring and having a snowstorm threaten my ability to get to my surgery, DL bought a snowblower, so he tested it out after this storm. Not bad! We were able to clear out in about half a day, which also includes hand shoveling the tight areas that the snow blower wouldn't work.

Anyway, today, I decided to go snowshoe to break our spur to the trail system, so maybe we could go skijoring! Alas, the main trail was still not broken. Hmmmm... Would the girls like to break this? I think they would! But I was already feeling lazy just looking at it!

However, I did successfully break our own spur!
On the way back, I widened the trail further by stepping outside of my own steps out.
\
Nice work, huh? The girls will be so proud when they see it!
OK time to go back inside and ask the girls, would they like to go skijoring and break trail the whole way, or just call it a low-activity day?
Hmmmm... LOL. We stayed home after that.
Here is a selfie from skjoring the other day. Another skijorer has been spotted on our neighborhood trail system wearing a helmet! I'm so pleased to be part of Promoting a Culture of Safety!

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Brrrrr-tacular weather images

Yup, that brrrrr-tacular weather arrived! It came Sunday and left Wed night. When I first moved to Fairbanks, cold snaps of a week or longer were more common. Now a cold snap of three days feels punishing. I suppose I have gotten soft.
But not as soft as Miss Thistle!!
Cricket is actually the more enthusiastic snuggler, but here is a photo of her looking contemplative.
Do ya loooove me? (Do ya love me?) I can mash potatoes! (I can mash potatoes!)
"Hello! We are ready for our breakfast!"
Brrrr-tacular!
Even they dash back to the porch!
When I cover my face, I grow even more frost!
But they still want to go! They are very committed to routine!
Could you ignore this face?
Or this pouting?
On Wed at 10 a.m., it was -40. By the time we went to bed, it was 0 degrees F! This photo is midday.
They waited very patiently for me to be willing to get out!
I'm skiing strong now. On Thurs I skied about 3/4 of our 5.5-mile loop and hooked up to the girls for the last bit, just to practice balance and core strenght. On Sat I skijored the whole way. Today I skied myself the whole way! I can now do both! Yay!

Saturday, December 11, 2021

More Brrrrrtacular weather coming after a week's reprieve

I mean! Brrrrrrr!!! (The weather map always makes me giggle; there are no features!)
But look! I found a beam of sunlight!
So I rushed out to sunbathe!
At least it has been windless, per usual Fairbanks. The flamingos have knives of snow on top of their narrow backs!
And the combined sunrise/sunset is always beautiful:
I pulled the turkey carcass back out of the freezer and made a giant pot of stock. The first night, we had classic chicken noodle:
The second night I added collard greens and corn:
And ya just can be healthy all the time! So I fried up some postickers, frozen from the Asian grocery store. Hey is this the first time I've had a photo of junk food on this blog? I believe so!
I sure hope they are comfy. Do you think they are are comfy?
Thissy sofffffff and sweeeet:
Cricket looking contemplative: