Lituya was generally much more interested in exciting new twigs and rocks than the expansive vistas that surrounded us.
In the past week and a half that I’ve been home, I’ve baked pies for Thanskgiving, enjoyed the crunch of last summer’s cabbages, spent money, eaten out of my own bowl, been overwhelmed by emails, used our washing machine, reconnected with friends and family, and reveled in the magic of light switches.
It’s good to be home.
Where I can hurry to start a fire in the wood stove to push back the morning chill. Where I can juggle two kids in a small living space. Where a day’s errands might involve walking a few miles in the cold pulling a sled full of kids and stuff. Or coaxing Katmai along a snowy trail as I try not to be impatient. Where I can step out my door to an amazing view of wild places, looking for the tracks of all the little animals that came past in the night.
Sometimes, it seems like my “real life” and “expedition life” are not so different after all.
Erin threads her way through stranded icebergs littered by Oily Lake.
But however primitive our everyday home, and however beautiful the next-door wilderness, it’s not the same. A real journey is a profound experience in a way that’s difficult to describe. Even at toddler speed. Even after we’ve done so many of them.
I can’t distill those 2 months into one blog post (expect more to come), but here’s a taste of what we learned along the way.
Ice-Locked:
A dozen yards ahead, a black furry shape paused at the foot of the slope. Its sleek fur and broad flat tail shone in a brief patch of sun, the first break in the rain we’d had for several days. Katmai and I stopped, watching the wolverine for nearly a minute before he noticed us.
15 miles of ice separates the Samovar Hills from the forests and rivers of the Gulf of Alaska coast. 5 miles of ice separates them from similar sets of hills. But in this ice-locked world, we saw bears and wolverines. We heard the whistling of marmots from their holes in piles of rock. We saw a lone canine track on a high slope, and watched finger-length Dolly Varden swim in the valley’s network of streams. I tried to picture a marmot hopping crevasses, a fish swimming underneath ice… All of these animals must have crossed a sweep of open glacier. But when?
History Repeats:
The stand of hundred-year-old trees on this ridge in the Samovar Hills seems out of place, but older trees appearing from beneath glacial till tell of another time when forest grew more widely heare.
Maybe the marmots hop crevasses. Maybe when they showed up, there were no crevasses to hop. Everywhere we went, we trod on new ground – muddy slopes where the ice has melted away, young thickets of alder and willow springing up at the edge of the mud. Malaspina Glacier is shrinking rapidly, melting along with most of the world’s glaciers in this period of rapid human-driven climate change.
But at the glacier’s edges, we found a few large stumps of spruce trees. Old, grey, and larger than any living trees around, looking out of place in the mud and rubble and young plants. Sometime in the distant past, the glacier was even smaller than it is today. Sometime in the not-so-distant future, the forests will grow here again.
Beasts of Burden:
We tried putting nearly everything in the packraft-rickshaw. We tried putting it all in Hig’s pack, leaving me to carry both kids. We tried letting Katmai walk on his own, coaxing him along with puddles, interesting pieces of driftwood, and the promise of dried pineapples. We tried pushing him over highway of white ice in the rickshaw. We tried stuffing all of us in the family-sized packraft. The first few times we moved camp, we tried every possible arrangement we could think of to move the four of us and all our gear.
Katmai walks over the shattered rock that covers this part of Malaspina Glacier, and Mt. St. Elias provides a backdrop.
By the end of the trip, we’d moved camp 28 times, covering about a hundred miles in the course of that two months (not counting all our various day hikes). I wish I could say we discovered a magic solution. We sent a few excess pieces of gear back with visiting guests. Hig spent a few days caching and retrieving heavy bags of food, rather than attempting to move with all of it. But mostly, we resigned ourselves to the awkwardness, and embraced the snail-like pace.
The Gift of Being Slow:
In 2007, we walked the same piece of coast we traveled this fall, covering in a few days what we just explored for over a month. The kids forced us to be slow. Slow enough to watch how the super-cooled ice springs changed over the course of a day. Slow enough to explore icy crevasses opening up in a mossy forest floor. Slow enough to wait for a high tide storm to sweep waves into Sitkagi Lagoon, sending trees tumbling out into the maw of the surf. Slow enough to creep around all the hidden lakes a few miles back from the shore, where trees and rocks tumble over cliffs of ice, and the world is rapidly changing shape. Slow enough to see a dozen feet of erosion in a chunk of coast we walked several times. Slow enough to follow the seals up into to Malaspina Lake with the tide, and to discover an ice cave where a river disappeared off the map. Slow enough to follow the tracks of the wildlife following our own tracks.
Before the kids, we never would have imagined planning a trip like this. Now, I can’t imagine missing everything we saw.
Our Titanum Goat tent on the ice of Malaspina Glacier
Fire Saves Our A**:
Part of the load we lugged through those 28 camps was a 10 foot circular tent, floorless but double-walled, with a small cylindrical titanium stove, and around 7.5 feet of titanium stovepipe. At 6 pounds, it was a huge jump up from the 1 pound pyramid we’ve been carrying for years. And that extra 5 pounds was what made this trip possible.
On cold dark mornings, we barely had to leave the bed to start the fire, having the tent comfortably warm and water on the stove before the kids even woke up. On stormy days, when blowing sleet battered the tent, we could sit inside and cook pancakes while the kids played happily, all kept dry by the double walls. We could dry laundry and wet gear on a line hung from the pole holding up the tent.
Lituya lounges in the warm tent
Over the months of increasing cold and dark, we burned that stove for over 300 hours. Without it, we would have needed to carry at least 5 more pounds of clothing between us, and would have been much less comfortable for it.
“I Am Not A Climbing Surface!”:
This was Katmai’s most repeated quote of the trip – applied to his sister, seemingly every other minute as they jockeyed for space in the limited confines of the tent. My version was usually: “Don’t climb on me right now Katmai, I’m doing an important job.” (feeding the fire, packing our stuff, really anything at all).
Two months without stepping indoors was by far the longest we’d gone. At first, Hig laughed at me when I said the thing I missed most was a chair. Then he understood. In some ways, our yurt is still a small and crowded space. But I can sit somewhere out of child climbing range.
Katmai is always a big fan of playing on the beach.
Bubble Fish, Running Mud, and Dinosaurs:
As we stepped off the ice after crossing the expanse of Malaspina Glacier, I was awestruck by the springs at Fountain Stream, where thick grey supercooled water boils up from nothing – great cauldrons immediately springing into a full-fledged glacial river. Katmai remembers our campsite on the silty mud flats, where he spun our bicycle wheel to make little holes in the sand for his pretend ants to live in. The vastness of the ice, the power of the storms, the transformations of the rapidly shifting landscape – all of those were lost on the kids.
So what did they get from the journey? A toddler’s world is small. Finding berries in a patch of tundra. Making “bubble fish” by splashing in a tiny stream. Climbing every boulder, and turning smaller rocks into boats. Dropping rocks into deep blue holes in the glacier’s ice. Looking into moulins. Marveling at a seagull following the packraft. Making tracks in the sand. “Paddling” the raft. Feeding driftwood “dinosaurs”. Wading through sea foam. Chasing snowballs. Examining a dead sea lion. Learning all the animals and plants seemingly effortlessly. Imitating every camp chore.
A baby’s world is even smaller. Eating fistfuls of sand. Mouthing smooth rocks. Crawling on smooth mud. Investigating camp gear. Watching the world from a perch on mama’s back.
And we wonder why our lens is always so dirty…
Spending 24 hours a day with their parents, without the distractions of computers and phones and errands and work to suck our attention away. Seeing things that almost no adult has ever seen. And being happy and compliant about as often as small children are in any situation.
Wildlife:
At Malaspina Lake, the snow was perfect for tracking. Lines of our tracks went back and forth along the snowy beach for the past several days – some light marks on top of a hard frozen crust, others sunk deep into the slush on a warmer day. And each morning, we watched closely as we left camp, looking for tracks not left by human feet.
Bear tracks in the snow near our camp at Malaspina Lake
Nearly every day we found them. First the bears, making us nervous with tracks that passed uncomfortably close to our camp, and leaving us puzzled as to their motivations. By the middle of an unseasonably cold November, it seemed like all the bears ought to be heading to sleep. And even if they weren’t, we expected them a couple miles away on the coast, feasting on the untouched carcass of a dead sea lion. Not up here at the icy edge of Malaspina Lake, wandering across a snow covered delta, eating only lupine roots.
As we traced our tracks further, we found the footprints of more bears, a small canine, and a wolverine. All checking out our tracks, as we later checked out theirs. On all our older faster trips, the animals must have watched us just as much, as we hurried forward, never seeing their signs.
Every Trip Is Exactly Long Enough
The last time we set the stove up, Hig banked sand around the edges where the cylinder had started to burn through. We didn’t think that piece would have survived another packing. The ice and snow were closing in – ice closing off the packraft travel options, as snow closed off the walking options. Our gear was set up for fall, and we shivered as the early winter closed in. A few hours after landing in Yakutat on a cold sunny morning, a storm moved in, dumping a heavy load of snow.
Six inches of snow covered the beach, and Katmai was fascinated.
I don’t know if it’s coincidence, or many years of training our own expectations. On an expedition, I almost never wish for it to end early. And at the end of an expedition, I almost never wish it could stretch longer.
P.S. – You can now buy our movie! (from the 4,000 mile walk from Seattle to the Aleutians – on sale through December)
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