The week before Easter, Anya had some appointments scheduled in Anchorage. Around that time gas went up to 15.99 in town. Yep. That's not a typo. $15.99/gallon. Gas is still $5.50/gal in Kotzebue, so we decided we could drive to Kotz and the girls would hop on the jet while the boys filled drums of gas and drove back to town. Our friend is a trooper in Kotzebue so we were able to stop in there to warm up and regroup. Brett went out to get gas and NONE of the pumps were working! It was such a bummer. He didn't even have enough gas to get home, but thankfully we have such kind generous friends that had some jerry jugs he used to fill the machines. Of course Oren ended up driving my machine back and was an absolute champ. It took us about 3 1/2 hours to get down there and about that for them to get home too. The Borough was working on making an ice road from Kotz to Noatak. We heard they didn't make it past this tricky spot and stopped to check it out. (The oper...
"Good Morning." Not really appropriate, considering its 800 pm, but its the only greeting I know :) Guess what I get to (have to) do this weekend? REFEREE volleyball games!!! Only here would I even be thought of for that. In no way do I qualify, for I hardly know the rules! Apparently, last year Timm, the volleyball coach, had to ref because no one else knew how to. I guess better me than him... It's been around 10 degrees for the last week, but we still don't have snow! The frost on the tundra sure looks like snow, but its just thick frost. With the time change, the sun is setting at about 5 now, so it's quite dark by the time I walk home. One of the girls in my class hurt her knee last week and was on crutches for a while. Finally, today she came in without crutches, so I was talking with her about it and how excited I was to see her walking on her own. She replied, "I sure pray last night for my knee to get better and I wake up this morning and w...
Thursday and Friday of this week were Inupiaq Days at the school. The entire school takes two whole days to participate in native cultural activities. Some of the activities that the elementary kids participated in were, story-telling, trapping and survival skills, NYO (native youth olympics), beading, Eskimo dancing, Inupiaq language, whale hunting video, braiding and doughnut making. The high school students participated in a few other things including, net setting (under the ice), Atikluk making (hoodie type shirt that is often decorative), mitten making, caribou/fish cutting, niksik making (jigging stick), and native cooking. In the native olympics some of the games are high kick, finger pull, leg wrestling, wrist pull, and bull fighting. I was put in charge of trailing the Kindergarten class around all day. It was pretty funny on recess when one of the students came up to me and said, "Percy boxed me in the face and look!" He had lost one of his teeth. Anothe...
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