Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Spring Break in Sitka

For many university students in North America, Spring Break is a time to go to the beach somewhere warm, get drunk, and act in irresponsible ways (see photo to left of text). Even though airfares were ridiculously expensive, several UAS students I know undertook a pilgrimage to warmer climes (Las Vegas, CancĂșn, etc.) and came back just a shade darker and (I presume) significantly poorer. One of them actually told me this:

“Man, the booze was so cheap!”

Well, I didn’t want to rain on his parade, but I don’t have to be a math major to figure out the following equation: $1000 plane ticket + $400 hotel - $257.32 in beer money saved = a ridiculously expensive week of drinking.

I have been missing Sitka, so I spent my Spring Break there. It was really nice to get out of Juneau, and I really loved riding the ferry out there and back. We now have a very fast ferry, the M/V Fairweather, which makes the trip between Sitka and Juneau about twice a week in just 4.5 hours instead of 12, which is almost better than flying these days. And I got to see all kinds of wildlife on the way, such as humpback whales, a sea otter, a small pod of killer whales, pigeon guillemots, 2 brown scoters, lots of surf scoters, three black scoters, a few oldsquaws, five black oystercatchers, many common birds, and cool landscapes.



My main activity there was to do volunteer work at the Sheldon Jackson hatchery, a place that raises salmon and has been going through really tough times financially. The SJ hatchery is a non-profit organization which was created to train people in Alaska for jobs in the hatchery business. There are many hatcheries in this area, including one in Silver Bay at the end of the road in Sitka. Their purpose is to raise salmon until they get to a size where mortality is fairly low, so as to ensure greater returns to the streams. In the photo below, I am putting a 1.1 millimeter steel wire tag into the nose of a king salmon which is about the size of a finger. This wire tag is minuscule, and yet it has a long code printed on it which a biologist would read after he has extracted it from the adult fish. Before tagging the salmon, we cut off its adipose fin (the one on the fish’s back behind the dorsal fin) so that tagged fish are easy to spot amidst the catch. There were several of us volunteers present, and we tagged thousands of fishes while I was there.



I wanted to find a piece of property that I could buy, but housing prices are still really high in Sitka, so I decided to wait a little longer. Every piece of property under $200,000 has a problem. Either it is raw land in locations that are difficult to access, or a mobile home (and then I’d have to rent a place to put it on), or something that cannot be bought with a traditional loan because it doesn’t meet building codes (such as a World War II bunker for $150,000). Hopefully prices come down a little, or something will come up that is more reasonably priced.

I had been planning to do a lot of hiking, but in the end I spent very little time on the trails. This is too bad, since the weather was pleasant overall, and even when it snowed and rained it wasn’t too bad, as in this hike in the muskeg by the Starrigavan Estuary:



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