Last Steps
Posted by Erin on 28 Jun 2008\em> | Tagged as: trip reports, southwest alaska

Foggy point
End of the Line
We went to Scotch Cap because it was the closest to where we couldn’t go.
In 1946, a tsunami swept the shores of Unimak Island, destroying the Scotch Cap lighthouse at its southwestern tip.
From our viewpoint at the ruins, blue-grey smudges of land appeared on the southwestern horizon - the next few islands in the chain. Huge container ships cruised past, heading back and forth to Asia. The Aleutian chain was only beginning. But for us, it was the end of the line.

Sorting food
Unimak Island is the outer limit of the bear’s range, the outer limit of the caribou’s range, and the outer limit of the packrafter’s range. Twelve treacherous miles of Unimak Pass, with strong currents and the Aleutians’ ever-present winds, stood between us and the next island’s shore. It was beyond the reach of our tiny yellow packrafts.

Packraft and misty spires
Scotch Cap was a goal we’d been thinking of for over a year. But it was never really the goal. Just a wiggle in the coastline, a sea stack with a screaming eagle defending its nest, an arbitrary ‘farthest point’ in a journey that has been its own goal. Unremarkable even compared to this last leg’s adventure.
Rescued by Dental Floss

Launching
As I said in the last post, the crossing to False Pass was the last expected obstacle of the journey. But this is an adventure, after all - even in June, even on the “Victory Lap”. And adventure is all about the unexpected.

Beach walking
It was dusk, nearing midnight on our third night out, as we chatted around the cook fire. We were sitting on one of Unimak’s black sand beaches, listening to the gurgling of a small creek, the crackling of our fire, and the humming engines of fishing boats parked just offshore, running their giant lights. There were three of us now. Our friend Eric had flown out from Anchorage to join us on this last leg of the journey.

Foggy beach
We were only kidding when we said we should take knives to all his gear, to give him a real sense of all the wear and tear we’d seen on a 12 month journey. The bear wasn’t kidding.

Lava sea cave
Eric was the first to head up towards our shelter.
Eric: “Guys - we have a problem.”
Hig and I hurried to follow Eric up the small rise that separated our cookfire from the already-set-up tent. On Unimak Island - a place where the 900 bears vastly outnumber the 60 or so people - I knew what a “problem” was likely to be.
Erin: “We don’t have enough thread!”

After the bear
Staring down at the tattered mess that minutes before had been our happy home, that was my first reaction. The bear had managed to slash holes in nearly every panel of our 8-panel pyramid shelter. It had punctured all three Thermarests, gleefully shredding one into at least a dozen little pieces. One packraft was torn open. Several drybags were bitten through, leaving toothmarks in our passports and credit card. Inside a pouch of Eric’s pack we found shattered glass and dark stains, all that remained of his iodine bottle. The bear stepped on a paddle blade (cracking it). The food that was up there was largely ignored, save for one bag of mangoes and half a package of red chili tortillas.

Shelter repairs
The bear retreated as soon as we discovered him. But it was quickly getting dark. Raining. And we were left with the fragments of our gear. Even had we decided to cut the trip short, the several-day walk back to False Pass in the rain was hardly a good option with no shelter. We briefly considered paddling one of the intact packrafts out to a parked fishing boat.
Eric: “What are we going to ask them for? Thread?”
Hig: “A tarp. But lets first see what we can repair…”

Eric
Spring was progressing into the first hints of summer. No high passes or wide crossings lay before us. I had been hoping, here at the end of it all, for an easy, pleasant finish. But instead, we were left where it seems like we always are - solving our problems with whatever we have at hand. Luckily one spool of dental floss (which we carry for repairs) contains an amazing amount of thread.

Creek and waves
Hig took the first shift, sewing until he couldn’t hold his eyes open. Fearing the bear might return, lured by pleasant memories of tearing Thermarest, at least one person was awake all night. The two other people tried to sleep curled under packrafts on the sand, slowly getting wetter and wetter. When I woke up the first time, I could squeeze the water from the hood of my puffy coat. But like all long nights, the night did end. With the arrival of daylight, we had three pairs of busy hands, needles flying along bear-claw gashes, slowly whip-stitching fraying tears into new tough scar tissue. I sat crosslegged in one corner of the shelter, sewing hole after hole. Eric lay on his back on the other side, working from the inside out. Hig was outside, carefully sewing the packraft back together. Slowly, amazingly, our gear began to take shape again. We heated sand by the fire, then stirred it with cooler sand until it was below boiling - to warm us and dry gear beneath the increasingly waterproof shelter.

Next island
The rain even let up by early afternoon. In 31 person-hours of repairing we had two feet of tear sewn on thermarests, two feet on the raft, a crack over a foot long repaired on the paddle, and a total of 24 feet of tear sewn shut on the shelter. One thermarest was beyond our rescue, and we let the dry bags go - stuffing our gear into the remaining intact ones. By 7:00 we we ready to go.
Cliffs in the Fog

Grassy bluffs
What would there be to see on Unimak Island? By the time we left False Pass, a good part of my mind was already straying towards the future, itching for a life with a little more than a worn out piece of fabric between me and the weather. After walking the entire Alaska Peninsula, would the first Aleutian Island offer anything new?

Exploring ruins
Of course. After four thousand miles of looking, there’s only more to see. We notice the calls of the birds, shifting along with each transition in the landscape. As we walked to the far end of the island, the last scrubby bushes gave way to sweeping fields of tundra and broken lava, and deeply incised gullies in hills of grass and wildflowers. We watched each new plant finally coming out to bloom. Crisscrossing bear tracks on the black sand beaches. Seagulls and eagles nesting on sea stacks and lava cliffs. Bright green springs bursting from volcanic hillsides. Just in the last week of travels, the grey-brown branches of the alders finally burst into green. The only thing that gets old is the wind, and the rain.

Scotch Cap
On the map, Unimak Island is dominated by the imposing presence of four major volcanoes. On the ground, we hardly saw them. Swirls of mist and fog draped our world, shrouding spires and columns of volcanic rock in a blanket of moody grey. With the warmth of the “summer” came the arrival of the rain.

Cape Sarichef White Alice site
Light calm mist turned to pelting wind-driven rain, and back to mist again. We cheered the dry times. We were eternally grateful for the success of the shelter repair. It was the wettest we’d been since last fall, before the snows came.
Dismal Fortress

Wildflower bear trails
It was at the end of one of the wettest days - a day of pelting wind driven rain - a day where we’d been packrafting around the southwestern tip of the island until the winds got too strong - a day when everything we owned was sodden - that we reached the dismal fortress. We were at least three miles from the old White Alice site when we saw it. Giant towers and radar dishes rising in the mist on the crest of a distant ridge. And to us, it meant only one thing: the possibility of walls and a roof.

Cold and wet
We dried out by a fire built of old doors and planks on the landing of a fifth floor stairwell, wind drafting so hard that a piece of plywood released into the air would fly out a hatch in the roof, vanishing upward into the dark. It was an old military communications site, crumbling into spooky decay. The huge concrete building didn’t just creak in the wind. It shrieked like a banshee. It howled and crashed, groaned and thrummed, throbbed and knocked. It pounded as if a whole company of ghostly soldiers was sprinting up the stairs to kick us out.
The End of Hunger

Under grey skies
I wish I could blame the bear for our food troubles. It did eat one bag of mangoes, took one huge bite out of a package of tortillas, and cost us nearly a day’s travel in repairs. We think it may have eaten some cheese. But mostly, I blame the sun.
When Eric arrived in False Pass to meet us, it was a brilliant day. The gorgeous sun shone down upon us in a light breeze, with the peak of Roundtop Mountain poking out of the clouds. We’d been waiting all day for his Pen Air flight to come in, and when it finally did, we were eager to leave as soon as possible.

Surf under fog
We spent days on this last leg dissecting the possibilities. Could Eric really eat that much more than us? Had we really all pigged out so much the first three days? How had the food calculation that had served us so well for the past year (2 pounds per person day) have failed us so badly? Did the bear eat some other food we didn’t remember we brought? In the end, we were left with our own hasty stupidity: Piles of food to stay in False Pass, piles of food to come with us, hastily arranged on the lawn, and easily mixed up.

Sandlocked ship
Not that it mattered. All our piles of wonderful spring greens added flavor but few calories to our meager meals, and we carefully rationed the food we had remaining: this bag of Buttery Goodness and bit of pasta to get us through Fisher Caldera, another few meager ziplocs for another piece of terrain, a last meal of mashed potatoes and a few gulps of lemonade to get us home.

Home
Hunger is so rare in our wealthy American world. Not dieting, not fasting, but hunger - where the thing you want most in the entire world is food, and there’s absolutely no way to get it. It seems strange to me that I won’t have to worry about it any longer. I wonder how long it will take me to lose my taste for a stick of butter per pot of food, to lose the instinct to calculate price per calorie every time I’m in a store…
Don’t leave yet

How far to False Pass?
This is the final leg of the journey, and I’m leaving you with a post relatively empty of reflection - few hints of the future. I’m typing this from a computer in the library of a tiny Alaskan village that I just walked to, reveling in eating our new stashes of food. We still haven’t stepped on any form of motorized transport for over a year. To me, this is all very normal. And the end of the journey hasn’t really sunk in yet.
The walking may be over, but we aren’t done. And this blog isn’t done. With a more continuous connection to the outside world, I have so much more to say. Stay tuned for reflections on the journey, as well as lots more photos (including larger ones) and videos, gear reviews, recipes (don’t you all want Buttery Goodness?), more on the places and issues we’ve been exploring. And of course, on the larger scale, you all want to read my book and watch the movie.
(one of the reasons Eric came out here with us is that we’ll be working on making a film with him). And we have plans already forming for our future adventures…

Drifted bottle
I’ll probably update this about once a week from now on.
Of course, as I’m sure my publishers are eagerly anticipating, my biggest next job is turning this journey into a scintillating book. It’ll be a little while, so click to email me at mckittre@gmail.com with “book” in the subject line if you want me to let you know when it comes out.

Dwarf willow

Water on oysterleaf

Lupines on cinders

Marsh flowers

Bog and hill








































































































