I do not know that there is a tremendous amount going on right now, but I was threatened with dire consequences if I did not put of pictures of the baby.
Here is the baby.
Sunday, December 30, 2007
IMG_2252
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Watching the baby
So I have come up with the idea of trying to take a picture of Brady every day for a calendar year. Now, I know this won't happen as I get sent out of town for work, so the idea is flawed from the beginning, but at least I have a goal. There are three pictures from today.
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Stockade
Brady is really starting to crawl now and fortunately Christmas provides quite a number of boxes with which to build a baby stockade. Our best efforts are largely in vain though, she figured out already that she can push the boxes out of her way and break free from the lonely confines of the "safe" area.
Christmas went as well as possible when so far away from family. We had a number of friends over for a Christmas feast. Sorry, but there were no pictures taken during the event.
Though there was some documentary evidence of mere and buddy checking out the new bedding.
And finally one more Bradana shot from Christmas.
Saturday, December 22, 2007
Santa
Brady got to meet Santa for the first time today. She hit it off with him immediately. For some reason she seems to have a native trust for portly men with long hair and beards. I'm sure that is something that will serve her well as she goes through life.
The good news is that she did not ask for anything other than wrapping paper and the option to swap stuffed animals with the dogs at will this holiday season. I do not think that these modest demands will survive the year though. Oh well, take what you can get.
Thursday, December 13, 2007
High Voltage
I wind up seeing a lot of interesting signs doing various jobs, most of which are rather explicit about their message. The funny thing is that there really wasn't any threat of high voltage in the area unless there was an electrical storm.
But, the weather is holding which is something that I really don't know if I should be talking about. There is always the chance that bad weather is just waiting to pounce on hubrous, but I'll take my chances. We haven't had any meaningful wind here the entire week which is absolutely amazing in as much as the area is completely flat and there isn't a tree within a hundred miles.
Though the weather up here is something that I've been thinking about more lately. One of the people we were doing a job for up here this trip is purchasing a few acres of land from his neighbor's property and we were subdividing and marking the new lot. His intentions for the land is to expand his suprisingly large organic farming operation. As we were finishing off the job he gave a quick tour around his operations and talked about the plans that he had for expanding.
The newest building is his farm is a small, unassuming looking structure that appears to be a small barn. He has maximized the utility of the building though and is hoping to have an almost entirely self supporting chicken farm with a composting system that requires very little energy to heat or power. The barn is three stories, the lowest completely undergound, a ground floor that houses the chickens, and then the enclosed hayloft. The entire ground floor has been surrounded by a rock wall save the main entrance.
The hayloft is used for the usual functions, storing hay and hanging dried herbs. There is a hatch in the floor for dropping the hay down to the chickens. The ground floor houses the chicken operation. Since the building is surrounded by the rock wall very little insulation is needed. The farmer ran ducts through the rock wall and channeled those ducts into both the chicken area and the basement. The rock wall stays around 31° in the winter, so he has to warm the air less than otherwise.
The basement also serves to supply the water for the chickens and irrigation for his crops in the summer. He dug a sump that is constantly filling up and he simply holds the water in a storage tank until he can use it. This area also is the home for ten plastic totes of earthworms that are working over the leavings from both his house and the chickens.
The reason those whole system is so damned amazing is that this is being done in an area where fresh foods, especially fruits and vegetables, are not simply prohibitively expensive, but require a tremendous amount of energy to simply deliver them to western Alaska. If you think about the amount of resources that is required to deliver a crate of lettuce from the field in California, or even further afield, to a village on the western edge of Alaska it really is not practical. However, if communities could begin to produce their own produce, the effects on the community and missed oppurtunity costs would be fantastic.
Alright, no more ranting for the night.
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Pjonjar
So I am out in the field yet again, this time to the frozen swamp that is Bethel. Bethel is the largest village in western Alaska, over 5,000 souls live here, but more importantly this is the major hub for all of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta.
I don't care for Bethel. It has almost nothing working in its favor as far as surveying work goes. Most of the town was surveyed by a person with very little in the way of professional ethics who was one of only 2 surveyors in the history of Alaska to have his stamp revoked. It is not at all uncommon to find one of his property corners dozens of feet from where it should be when you can find one of his corners at all.
Regardless, I am out here again with Ralph and the Pjonjar. The pjonjar is our gas powered jackhammer that we use to bust through the frozen roadbed and fill while searching for corners. This is one of the nastiest inventions ever. It belches oily exhaust while pounding away making a tremendous racket. Frost settles in very thickly in compacted fill though you have to use the pjon to get down through the fill.
Well, I'm running late getting out the door, so I'll drop a couple more pictures and write more later.