This is the window of the guesthouse, I think the window itself came from a boat because it looks like it would have. It's beveled like that so you have a wider range of motion to shut your gun out of, you know so you can defend yourself from bears, Russians, dragons, drunk Aleuts, magpies, rabid foxes or anything else that you might come across.
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
This is a jig we use and can you believe it works like a charm, I mean fish seem to fight over the chance to hit it. When we first got here I thought "Yeah right", when I saw it, I mean it's lead weight with a hook, but no joke it works great. In the back there are some hand lines wrapped around little wooden reels, we haven't had a chance to use them yet but I want to sometime.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Apparently a bear broke into a shed down the beach at another residence last year trying to find a dennning site. This bear walked south on the beach sniffed a little by the greenhouse, and kept going. We forward tracked it for about a mile then called it quits when we got scared by a large rock that looked like a bear. Everybody is brave tracking, until you actually see the animal, or a rock resembling it. It was quite comical.
Stonewall from the water. (From left to right) the greenhouse, the tool shed, the sauna/ wood shed, the smokehouse is on the stilts, the guesthouse with the root cellar and batteries below, the wheelhouse, and up the hill is the main house and chicken coop. The moving water, the source of our power, comes from two draws directly behind the house.
Caribou, Moose, Bear, and wolves frequently choose to swim the pass...perhaps the tundra really is greener on the other side. Here Josh just happened to look out the kitchen window at stonewall at the right time. He/she went into the water up to his/her neck, then decided to go south on the beach and disappeared over the hill behind the greenhouse. This healthy looking wolf, and the other wolves on the Alaskan Penninsula, have been blamed for the decline of the caribou. Apparently there is high mortality in calves less than two weeks old. Due to the high price of other meats like beef, our locale, and culture, many families depend on the caribou herds. Times are tough for both parties.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
I am pleased to report that Roo's hunting skills have increased exponentially with each outing. He now flushes and retrieves...well, he sort of retrieves...well, not really, he just finds them and sits by them...but he will soon enough. For a while we could spot the ptarmigan from quite a distance since they starting turning white while the landscape was still brown. I think they sighed in relief when the snow finally came.
ahh, the many uses of bull kelp...The long stem or "stipe" (which can be up to 50 yards long!) we cut up (after soaking in fresh water overnight) and made into pickles and relish...the bulb we boiled, stuffed and baked just like one would a pepper...the leaves we dehydrated, crushed and made into a salt substitute
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Containers and deep beds in late October hold crowns of rhubarb (left) turnips (right) and four more plots of potato, kolarabi, and mint. There are two large white doors at the north end of the tool shed. The doors provide a way to get large projects, like a boat, out of the work space when completed. A small family of fox has made one of their entrances below the doors.
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
After making the traditional jams, wines, and sauces of rhubarb, salmonberry, and blueberry we looked to the sea for more nurishment to put up for the long winter. Bull Kelp, after soaked in fresh water, makes an excellent alternative to cucumbers. We made all sorts of dill and bread and butter pickles as well as some relish.
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
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