Archive for the 'Alaskan' Category

Sep 07 2008

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mrssommerville

Saturday and Sunday Snot-o-Rama/What You Don’t Know About Alaska

Filed under Alaskan, politics

*That’s* graphic, eh?

I’m back to school.  I have fifteen kindergarten students.  Three of them have been a bit sniffly.  Nose-picky.  Wiping slime across faces with bare hands, sleeves, or shirt hems.  Naturally, I am now sniffly.  Snorky.  I sound like this: “I hab a code (snork, blow, wheeze, cough).”  Never fear, I use Kleenex.  Appropriately.  And I dispose of used tissues immediately. Ibuprofin and Sudafed have kept me company for the past twenty-four-plus hours.  Halls coughdrops (honey lemon) have stood on the nightstand at the ready.  I’ve been napping/sleeping between magazine browsing…Somerset Holiday, nap.  People Magazine, nap.  Good Housekee—-SNORE.

Next week three or four more students will experience nasal drainage issues too, necessitating bottles and bottles of hand sanitizer, boxes of kleenex, and strategically placed trashcans to be deployed throughout the room.  Blech.

*****

Being an Alaskan in Kansas, I’ve been asked by a few friends, parents, and colleagues about Governor Palin.  I’ve also heard (and read) a lot about Palin and Alaska via the news, tabloids, newspapers, blogs, emails, and chit chat.  There’s something I’ve noticed:  lower 48′ers (everyone living outside of Alaska or Hawaii) tend to believe that their romantic mythology of Alaska is the “real” Alaska. You laugh and smile as you tell me how much you love watching Northern Exposure reruns, or how you got to pan for gold with friends at some tourist trap in the Interior, and you express wonderment that Alaskan residents receive a “bonus check” from the state just for living there.

I’ve heard Republican representatives tout Governor Palin as being a “can-do” kind of woman because she has a “big gun, a moose gun.”  As many of you are NRA members, you should know this: it’s called a rifle.  You should also know that many Alaskans, Republican, Democrat, Independence Party or undecided/don’t care/don’t vote, male or female, own and use guns too.   Palin is not exceptional for her familiarity with or use of firearms.  She merely lives in a state known for its subsistence lifestyle and large man-eating animals.

Alaska is also full of people who purposely left the Lower 48, not just to find their riches, but to get away from the status quo, to get away from cookie cutter expectations, cookie cutter experiences, and in some cases, cookie cutter laws.  As a result, Alaska is full of diverse, socially colorful people, “characters,” you might call them.  Alaskans like the fact that their state constitution safeguards their privacy: Article I, section 22 states that the “right of the people to privacy is recognized and shall not be infringed.”  The Supreme Court of Alaska further expressed Alaskans’ “natural right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”  when it stated that “at the core of this concept [of liberty] is the notion of total personal immunity from governmental control: the right ‘to be let alone.’” Breese v. Smith, 501 P.2d 159, 168 (Alaska 1972).  (Thank you, Alaska Law Review)

Alaskans are not always team players- but they are individuals who will give you the shirt off of their back (or more importantly, your truck a “jump” at twenty below zero when you’re stuck on the side of the road) and will leave before you ever have the chance to thank them.  Instead of thanking or paying us, stop and help someone else when you see a person in need.  We don’t wear $300,000 worth of designer clothing and ritzy jewels to “attend functions,” we wear Carhartt’s and bunny boots to weddings.  We make poor financial choices just like you.  Our dividend check?  The heating fuel relief money?  Most of it was spent on new flat screen televisions or snowmachines, televisions for the long cold winter, and snowmachines for transportation and recreation.

Racist comments?  Yep, you betcha.  We’re human in that arena too.  Sexist? Not so much- after all, women have to be pretty tough in Alaska to make it through long, cold winters. A favorite event at the World Eskimo Indian Olympics is the tug-o-war between Native Women and White Men.  The women win every year, and they win it *fair and square.*

It will take you extra work, and extra research if you want to really get to know our present governor.  Like most, Alaskans feel state pride when one of our own is recognized.  But while our state is the largest in the union, our population is one of the smallest: we KNOW one another.  If we haven’t met one another yet personally, there’s a very good chance we know your Aunt Ethel and Uncle Bob from Anaktuvuk Pass.  Being outspoken Alaskans, we’ll dish the dirt.  Knowing your Aunt Ethel and Uncle Bob, we’ll choose to bite our tongues to outsiders- after all, we’re going to pass our neighbors, their family and friends in Fred Meyers, Dimond Mall, or at W.E.I.O., while journalists are far away via phone, e-mail, etc. and are merely seeking out cute, kitschy Alaskan-ey sounding taglines for their “reports.”

We have a state big enough in which to hide bodies folks.  Who needs concrete shoes when we can feed the fox and wolves?

Good rule of thumb for life and present-day elections?  Don’t believe everything you read or hear.  Don’t believe everything you’re told by a person whose job it is to sell him/her self to you.  Take some time, check a person’s public records, and question why she or he is trying to distract you with rah-rah’s and put downs when what you need and deserve to hear are the details of plans that are going to make your life better.  No, we don’t live in igloos.  Yes, there are peak months in which you can see the Northern Lights.  No, we don’t have a light switch to turn them on.  The mosquito is our not-so-inside-joke state bird (because the real state bird is the willow ptarmigan).  Yes, it’s pretty dark and cold during the winter, and sunny during the summer.  Our autumn and spring are short lived and can be identified from winter and summer by the amount of MUD that covers your vehicle and boots.  Eskimos are not the only “native Alaskans” that live in the frozen north. No, Governor Palin does NOT “control” the oil pipeline, nor will she “control” the gas pipeline once it is built. Yes, she probably does know Santa Claus, all Alaskans do: he lives in another famous tourist trap location called North Pole, Alaska.  My own children loved visiting him each Thanksgiving when out of state family came to visit.

We’d like you to know: Alaska is a real state, full of real people.  It is not an election prop.  While many of us are proud to see “our” governor out there playing with the lower 48′ers, just as many of us are wondering why anyone bothered asking her to come outside in the first place.

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Nov 24 2007

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mrssommerville

Mother Nature’s Holiday Encouragement

Twenty-four hours have certainly made a difference! Perhaps this is Mother Nature’s way of getting us in the mood for December.

Before: desert1

After: desert2

Alaskans have to “remember” how to drive with each first snow of winter, sliding through a few red lights or stop signs before getting their winter rhythm down, but here in the Bordertown, I’m guessing we’ll be limiting our driving to post *only* today, since most drivers here don’t understand the equation:

snow+rain+ice+4 lane highways+ 60 mph speed limits= TROUBLE.

Reading sounds like a good idea today. Here are some of the stories we’ll be enjoying with the toddler this month:
poinsettiamorrispeterrabbitgrinchjinglebellsdreamsnow

…and oh, dear Santa, if you could find this book to add to my collection, you’d make my Christmas!
12days

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Nov 23 2007

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mrssommerville

The Day After, Happiness is…

cookies
Mincemeat stars, mini-cranberry bread muffins and coffee…

and

temperature
cooler temperatures. I’m sure the “cold” won’t deter the holiday shoppers today, and my husband and I are even braving the mob in an attempt to replace the Christmas tree the last set of movers “misplaced” somewhere between Kansas and Texas. I’ve already purchased some holiday trees from Target along with some birchbark ornaments and decor, but until we have the tree up (not until December 1), I have some time to pack away the harvest decor, do a good winter cleaning around the house, and get our annual holiday letter typed up and printed for our Christmas cards.

This year I discovered the best way to prevent the fridge from being stuffed to the brim with leftovers from turkey dinner: invite five soldiers away from home over for dinner and set the twenty-five-pound turkey with all of the fixin’s in the middle of the table between them. The meal was delicious, the company was good, and I even managed to add “new mixer” to my Christmas wish list after my husband broke ours making REAL smashed potatoes. To think, several of our guests, including my husband, were deployed overseas this time last year. “Thankful” is just the beginning of the description of emotions the kids and I have been feeling since June.

One of our dinner guests was a soldier from Singapore. He’d never had pumpkin pie, so I was very pleased that I made the pie myself, cinnamon crust and all (sorry Mrs. Stouffer) for his first experience.

We’re off to Lowe’s. Enjoy a turkey sandwich for us, will you?

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Nov 20 2007

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mrssommerville

Forecast

Filed under Alaskan, humor

happyeskiimo
I’m so happy!!!!!

“SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO AND FAR WEST TEXAS WILL ENJOY NEAR RECORD
TEMPERATURES TODAY AND PLENTY OF SUNSHINE BOTH TODAY AND
WEDNESDAY. BUT LATE WEDNESDAY EVENING A STRONG COLD FRONT WILL
MOVE ACROSS THE REGION. HIGH TEMPERATURES ON THURSDAY WILL BE 15
TO 20 DEGREES COOLER THAN WEDNESDAY’S HIGHS. ALSO ON THURSDAY A
WEAK UPPER LEVEL STORM SYSTEM WILL BRING THE THREAT OF LOWLAND
RAIN SHOWERS NORTH OF LAS CRUCES AND SNOW SHOWERS IN AREA
MOUNTAINS. ON FRIDAY WE WILL CONTINUE WITH TEMPERATURES WELL
BELOW NORMAL. AGAIN THERE WILL BE A SLIGHT CHANCE FOR A RAIN OR
RAIN SNOW MIX IN THE LOWLANDS…WHILE AREA MOUNTAINS COULD SEE
SOME LIGHT SNOW. ON SATURDAY A SECOND STORM SYSTEM WILL TEAM UP
WITH A SECOND COLD FRONT TO BRING A MIX OF WINTRY WEATHER TO THE
BORDERLAND. THE EXACT FORECAST TRACK OF THE STORM SYSTEM IS STILL
A BIT IN DOUBT…AND THIS COULD LEAD TO SIGNIFICANT CHANGES TO
PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS AND TYPES. BUT RIGHT NOW IT LOOKS LIKE MUCH
OF THE LOWLANDS WILL SEE RAIN OR A RAIN SNOW MIX EARLY ON
SATURDAY WHILE AREA MOUNTAINS COULD SEE SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF
SNOW…ESPECIALLY THE SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS. BY SATURDAY AFTERNOON
MOST PRECIPITATION ACROSS THE LOWLANDS WILL CHANGE OVER TO SNOW
AS THE SECOND COLD FRONT PUSHES THROUGH. SNOWFALL TOTALS COULD
RANGE FROM A TRACE TO A COUPLE OF INCHES IN THE LOWLANDS WHILE
THE SOUTHERN SACRAMENTO MOUNTAINS COULD RECEIVE SIX INCHES TO A
FOOT OF SNOW.”

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