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edited by: Linda Kellen, Alaska Editor

northern flux

  • glaciers, grizzlies, and Alaska's big city





    I have to admit I'm warming up to Anchorage. I still think the city itself is kind of a dump, but the land around it really' [...]
    Posted: October 20, 2009, 12:28pm EDT
  • yukon fish

    Yay! Jesse and I had a story come out over the weekend in the New York Times. It's about the poor runs of king salmon on the Yukon in recent years and how they're affecting people. Be sure to check out the slide show. Both can be found here.[...]
    Posted: October 05, 2009, 6:32am EDT
  • mighty mighty yukon


    We're done! After 50 days on the river and about 935 miles in the canoe, Jesse and I made it to the ocean on August 31. Against the advice of nearly everyone we met and despite a stern warning from a' [...]
    Posted: September 06, 2009, 5:56pm EDT
  • yukon paddle

    For the last several weeks, the floor of my cabin has been cluttered with gear: waterproof totes and bags, buckets, cooking pots and rubber boots, tent stakes, sleeping bags, wool clothes, bug nets. Yesterday I finished making a pair of canoe paddles, cut the handle off [...]
    Posted: July 05, 2009, 12:52pm EDT
  • fishing for fish

    In the end, the money worked out about the same. Fred Meyer was selling whole Copper River reds for $3.99 a pound Thursday afternoon when we left for the Copper River, the truck loaded with empty coolers, long-handled dipnets, sleeping bags, a hand truck, and enough [...]
    Posted: June 22, 2009, 4:02pm EDT
  • immediate action report

    The silence on climate change here in the capitol has been deafening, as the saying goes. I spend a good chunk of my time in the building, and aside from a few side mentions from the public during testimony on energy-related bills, there has literally been no mention of the [...]
    Posted: March 31, 2009, 2:29pm EDT
  • dan moller


    This is why Juneau is amazing. Drive across the bridge from town to Douglas Island and up the hill about half a mile, then hike for a few hours and you end up here.
    [...]
    Posted: February 22, 2009, 9:19am EST
  • jumbo, and other news

    Sorry for the delay. I had a story about renewable energy run in the New York Times, with photos, video, and a blog post to boot! More on that later. And yesterday afternoon I climbed a small mountain on Douglas Island. The snow was [...]
    Posted: February 20, 2009, 10:41am EST
  • soggy juneau

    Alas, I missed the powder day at the mountain this weekend. That was yesterday. I got out today, when the sky was so thick you could hardly see across the channel, and hiked up to the tram. It was only a few miles, but offered a [...]
    Posted: February 02, 2009, 9:34pm EST
  • wind-powered gas line?

    There was a funny moment today in the Capitol when a VP from Canadian pipeline builder TransCanada updated lawmakers on his company's proposed $26 billion natural gas pipeline from the North Slope to Alberta. Trying to demonstrate the small footprint of the pipeline's compressor stations, which pump gas down the [...]
    Posted: January 27, 2009, 7:53pm EST
  • dan moller



    It's been another weekend of beautiful weather and marginal snow. I skied Saturday above the Dan Moller cabin, atop a ridge on Douglas Island with views down Seymour Canal and Stephens Passage. Tonight we're all hoping [...]
    Posted: January 25, 2009, 12:57pm EST
  • mt troy

    Well, the boots are out. I've been a little busy lately, but did get outside this weekend. On Saturday, I hiked up to the tram with my snowboard, although I didn't bother with the heavy, wet snow. On Sunday, I skinned up Mt. Troy with some [...]
    Posted: January 20, 2009, 4:53pm EST
  • stuck in a cold place

    I made it to Juneau.
    I mention this because for a while there, I thought I might not. I left Fairbanks on Friday, a little later than planned, and promptly got stuck a few hours down the road in Tok, the place that was so [...]
    Posted: January 13, 2009, 11:35am EST
  • how to tan a caribou skin






    I finally tanned my caribou skin this weekend after putting off the project since early November. I did one last year, [...]
    Posted: December 30, 2008, 8:45pm EST
  • calculating your carbon hoofprint

    In Planet Slayer’s carbon calculator, you start out as a pig. A pig with a charming face and long eyelashes, but a pig all the same. A dog in a white lab coat named Prof. Schpinkee is watching over you with arms crossed, ready to help you figure out how [...]
    Posted: December 29, 2008, 12:06pm EST
  • real cold

    Here's the iPhone weather forecast for Fairbanks.
    Current temp: -42
    MON: Hi: -30 Lo: -45
    TUES: Hi: -33 Lo: -44
    WED: Hi: -29 Lo: -44
    THUR: Hi: -33 Lo: -42
    FRI: Hi: -32 Lo: -44
    SAT: Hi: -15 Lo: -44
    Which is to say, it's cold [...]
    Posted: December 29, 2008, 10:04am EST
  • coal - clean enough to bring inside?





    A story I helped write is out in the New York Times. Click here to see it. There's even a slide show. The story is' [...]
    Posted: December 28, 2008, 10:47am EST
  • when climate change isn't a future threat

    Remember Gov. Palin’s sub-cabinet on climate change? Remember its Immediate Action Work Group? Well, that group is still at it, and excuse me for venturing my thoughts after observing only a few hours of a meeting this week in Anchorage, but here goes.
    The IAWG seems to be undergoing some [...]
    Posted: December 28, 2008, 10:24am EST
  • the hunt




    I'm not quite sure how it happened, but I'm getting pretty into hunting. I bought my first shotgun last month and have been out after ptarmigan, grouse, and hare when I [...]
    Posted: December 26, 2008, 5:44pm EST
  • bernie karl's vision for alaska

    Can Alaska become energy independent?
    That was the title of a talk tonight put on by the university's energy research center. It was supposed to be a panel discussion, but no one wanted to debate Bernie Karl, so it became a talk. Local author Niel Davis started with a brief' [...]
    Posted: December 18, 2008, 7:43pm EST
  • climate spending

    Gov. Palin released her 2010 budget plan yesterday, and while she hasn't exactly pitched a plan for tackling climate change, there is a fair amount of climate-related spending. Palin is proposing to spend about $6 million to deal with coastal erosion ($3 million for Shishmaref, $2 million for Newtok, $800,000' [...]
    Posted: December 15, 2008, 12:54pm EST
  • the power of green building

    John Davies, a geophysicist and research director at the Fairbanks-based Cold Climate Housing Research Center, got a little choked up today talking about green building. Well, to be fair, he got choked up recounting how Desmond Tutu, at a green building conference last month in Boston, explained to a bunch [...]
    Posted: December 12, 2008, 12:37pm EST
  • the reasons i'm here





    Excuse my delinquency. I've been taking advantage of a flexible schedule and some outdoorsy friends to get outside and enjoy the best of Alaska. Over Halloween' [...]
    Posted: November 10, 2008, 11:57am EST
  • temperature change

    No, not global warming, just coming back to Alaska from Virginia. I got back Sunday night and pretty much stayed inside all week. It's been unusually cold for October -- this weekend the high is about 10 degrees -- and I've been a bit of a [...]
    Posted: October 26, 2008, 11:13am EDT
  • wild. wonderful. coal.



    Larry Gibson isn’t impressive in stature. He’s not much more than 5 feet tall, has a bit of a belly, and was wearing Velcro shoes and a bright yellow T-shirt when we met him Thursday – [...]
    Posted: October 18, 2008, 7:44am EDT
  • Haul truckin

    Posted: October 16, 2008, 8:33am EDT
  • Coal country

    Misty mountains, grazing cattle, golden fall colors, and rocky streams. I'm in West Virginia today on a field trip with the Society of Environmental Journalists to learn more about mountain top coal mining. We're getting a somewhat lopsided perspective on the issue from local academics and others, namely that mountain [...]
    Posted: October 16, 2008, 3:31am EDT
  • winter

    Back on the skis!
    [...]
    Posted: October 10, 2008, 8:10pm EDT
  • source or sink?

    UAF prof Chien-Lu Ping has published new findings about the potential for arctic tundra to spew huge amounts of carbon dioxide and methane. Basically, Ping went around the state with a jackhammer (and willing helpers!) and dug test pits in the frozen ground -- more than [...]
    Posted: October 08, 2008, 12:18pm EDT
  • critical habitat on the way - maybe

    Conservation groups have reached agreement with the feds on one big issue related to the polar bear listing -- the designation of critical habitat -- although it's still unclear what will come of it. The agreement came Monday in the form of a settlement between the Center for Biological Diversity' [...]
    Posted: October 07, 2008, 6:20pm EDT
  • parsing palin's language

    Palin offered a few more clues last night on her position on climate change, although she spoke so generally as to not really say much at all.
    In response to Gwen Ifill's question, Palin first acknowledged that the climate was changing. Then she said she's "not one to attribute every" [...]
    Posted: October 03, 2008, 9:54am EDT
  • palin v polar bear

    Palin might point out that her beef is with the Interior Secretary (for listing the bears as threatened) and not with the bears themselves, but here's a witty analysis from the Guardian on how Palin might fare in a battle with a bear -- pretty well,' [...]
    Posted: October 03, 2008, 9:27am EDT
  • palin and climate

    I was too busy grabbing quotes from folks at the Big I tonight to hear Palin's comments on climate change, but I did write something yesterday about her record on the subject. Basically, I argued that her hesitation to blame human activities could partly be populist politics, and that, whatever [...]
    Posted: October 02, 2008, 5:32pm EDT
  • waiting for walrus

    Last summer, the sudden shrinking of sea ice and subsequent haul-outs of thousands of walrus caught scientists somewhat off guard. This summer, they were ready.
    Chad Jay, a research ecologist with the USGS in Anchorage, had lined up a hunter in Point Lay and was ready [...]
    Posted: October 02, 2008, 8:58am EDT
  • fairbanks emissions

    Fairbanks got a report card last week in the form of a borough-wide greenhouse gas emissions inventory. How'd we do? Depends on how you look at it. Borough residents produced the equivalent of about 39 metric tons (about 85,000 pounds) of carbon dioxide per person per [...]
    Posted: October 02, 2008, 6:42pm EDT
  • the noatak!

    I'm back! Actually, we've been back for a few weeks; I've just been a lazy blogger. But hey, it's summer in Alaska. Here's one of my favorite pics from the high peaks up at the Noatak River headwaters. And here's the account I penned for [...]
    Posted: September 29, 2008, 10:13am EDT
  • climate change in Alaska

    My opus on climate change in Alaska is finally out in the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. It looks at four different areas that are already changing or might see big change in the future. It's just a start at that, and also skips completely any talk of what the state is [...]
    Posted: August 01, 2008, 9:22am EDT
  • renewables

    I got to write about renewables today. Here's the story, but first...
    This is pretty amazing.
    For one, these aren't small projects. I looked mostly at the ones sponsored by Golden Valley up in Fairbanks, two of which top out at 50 megawatts. GVEA's entire load is a little over [...]
    Posted: June 27, 2008, 6:19am EDT
  • summer

    What better way to welcome summer than with some snowboarding?
    Here's Gold Ridge at 6:45 a.m. It's been light since about 2:30.
    [...]
    Posted: June 22, 2008, 8:29am EDT
  • gold ridge

    I hiked up the ridge again yesterday, this time with a friend and my ski-swap snowboard. We went as high as Gold Ridge, then turned around and came down in soft snow and steep terrain. Julie fell in a crevasse and I crashed hard, but otherwise [...]
    Posted: June 12, 2008, 8:09pm EDT
  • treadwell ditch





    Another trip report here.
    I tried this one last week, and it turned out to be kind of a disaster. I told someone about if after [...]
    Posted: June 11, 2008, 8:15am EDT
  • my sunday




    I've been wanting to do this trip for weeks, so this morning I tried it -- hiking up past the tram to Gold Ridge, past Gastineau Peak, and over Mount Roberts [...]
    Posted: June 08, 2008, 12:31pm EDT
  • palin on bears

    Gov. Palin was on Fox News Wednesday talking about the state's decision to sue over the polar bear listing. A few things of note:
    -She's openly expressing concerns about impacts on development now, instead of just criticizing the scientific evidence.
    -She's using the claim that U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens has [...]
    Posted: May 30, 2008, 9:04am EDT
  • the science according to murkowski

    How do you explain climate change to a skeptical public?
    U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski spoke at the Alaska Municipal League's climate change conference yesterday, largely about the details of the Lieberman-Warner climate bill and recent changes to it, but also about her reasons for supporting some kind of climate bill [...]
    Posted: May 30, 2008, 8:39am EDT
  • sun and other news

    It's been sunny and warm in Juneau for almost a week now. People are getting burned and tan, a little puzzled, and some even uneasy about the amount of sun. Instead of chance of rain 100 percent, it's chance of rain 20 percent.
    Anyway, excuse the [...]
    Posted: May 29, 2008, 9:04am EDT
  • will the listing help?

    Much of the response to the polar bear listing -- from many sides -- seems to involve a viewpoint justifying incomplete information and exaggerations. Here's a column that's at least cool-headed and seemingly well-researched about the potential impact of the listing. It's by Chanda Meek, who's working on her [...]
    Posted: May 26, 2008, 9:04am EDT
  • gov to sue over bears

    A week ago, I wrote that Gov. Palin was being rather conciliatory about the polar bear listing. The statement from her office said the state would work with the US Fish and Wildlife Service to designate critical habitat and develop necessary conservation measures. "While the state is disappointed with this [...]
    Posted: May 21, 2008, 11:21am EDT
  • polar bear suits

    Lawsuits, not fur suits.
    Conservation groups are suing the Interior Dept over the refusal to use the new polar bear listing to address greenhouse gases, according to this AP story by Dan Joling.
    Also of note is Gov Palin's statement on potential litigation, which came out a few days [...]
    Posted: May 21, 2008, 8:10am EDT
  • polar bear seas

    If you type "polar bear" into Google News, you'll get a few links and an offer to see "all 1,671 news articles" about the listing.
    Um, no thanks.
    Today I got another statement from some environmental groups and Congressional folks that starts like this.
    Washington, DC - In response [...]
    Posted: May 15, 2008, 8:00am EDT
  • polar bear listed as threatened

    OK, so today the bears were listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
    I honestly haven't been tracking this that closely, but here's what I do know. The state -- including the AK Legislature, Gov. Palin, and the Congressional delegation -- was pushing hard against it. Palin stuck with [...]
    Posted: May 14, 2008, 2:58pm EDT

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