Monday, October 24, 2022
HOW DID I GET HERE? MY LIFE LIST AT 75!
Saturday, October 8, 2022
#3. THE AURORA BOREALIS LEGEND
In the 7th grade I wrote the first entries to my Life List: places to explore, people to meet, and things to experience over the arc of my lifetime. Actually, this was a homework assignment given to us during an assembly and inspired by the famed explorer John Goddard, click HERE for more. I did that homework assignment life list using the Encyclopedia Britannia my mother had just bought for me and my beginners collection of National Geographics. Since those early years I have been moving down that list but cannot help adding more to do as I meet other travelers and read about far away places. I feel like the character depicted in the Flammarion engraving discovering the wonders beyond the heavens: click HERE.
MY LIFE LIST
#1 Walk Olduvai Gorge, into a steep-sided ravine where Mary Leakey discovered a skull fragment of Zinjanthropus Boisei, dubbed the "Nutcracker Man" because of his huge molars, who lived 1.75 million years ago.
#2 Walk the Inca Trail down into the ancient city of Machu Picchu to feel the echoes of its people.
#3. Experience the Aurora Borealis. 60 years it took from that day to this week at Borealis Basecamp, Latitude 60.10323 degrees North, 28 miles above Fairbanks Alaska. There's a legend: if you whistle under the borealis, it will shift and dance for you.
#4. Click HERE for the whole list.
Since we're about to travel to Alaska...
Is it Denali or Mount McKinley?
Photo credit: NPS
It's worthy of mention to note that in took 100 years of debate to change the name of Mount Mckinley back to it's original name: Denali just in time ...
"On the eve of the National Park Service’s 100th anniversary in 2016, the name of the highest peak in North America changed from “Mount McKinley” to “Denali.” The timing of the change not only helped mark the agency’s centennial, it shines a light on the long human history of the park, and illuminates a naming debate that has lasted more than 100 years."
Sagarmatha
Now back to the Borealis..
It was a wait worthy of the years, but like most expeditions, there were the stops, both planned and unplanned, along the way that gave the journey an energy and life of its own.
Here be the journal of that journey between September 27, 2022 and October 10th.
The 10 DAY BOREALIS EXPEDITION on a single page.
Below photo credit: Jaeseop Song
Arrangements had been made for 4 days at the Aleyska Resort a few miles from Anchorage, in the little town of Girdwood Alaska.
I'd return in a New York heartbeat especially for a family ski trip.
Though our Borealis Expedition had many parts, they are placed solidly in context by the pristine clarity of the documentary below. It weaves many stories into our journey, the Anthabaskans, caribou, salmon, wood bison, black-taided deer, musk ox, grizzly bears, bull elk Klondike gold, all within the story of the Yukon River. Take a look.
She is a native Anthabaskan from Stevens Village less than a day away. She radiates a purity from living in the arctic according to its laws, steeped in her culture, a strong sense of honor, and strength of body and mind required for life under the Northern Lights. Later, we are standing outside, when another elder walks by, she greets him with a broad smile and tells him: "Will you dance with me?" His face radiates a shy happiness from her kind flirtation. Though I came to Alaska for the Northern Lights, I found the luminous treasure in Anne from Stevens. Click on the video link below and listen to her wisdom.
Her 47 year old son, Ron Gossal Junior, is the artist who designed this hoodie which Patricia quickly scoops up to show her design student in Santa Ana California.
He is a competitive musher with his own team of sled dogs which he races when the snow comes. We learn about him and his way of life as he tours us on his sled, his dogs pulling eagerly on there harnesses. He is very attentive to their needs, their health well cared for as their lives are interdependent.
To double our chances of experiencing the Aurora Borealis, we reserved two nights in a dome at BOREALIS BASECAMP. After dinner and a short walk we fell into a cozy sleep under a starry canopy: the Alaskan night sky... then awakened to a chime (a service to clients who which to be notified when the borealis appears). See the 3 photos below.
Dome photo courtesy Borealis Basecamp
** From https://www.saltwire.com/newfoundland-labrador/opinion/whistling-at-the-northern-lights-135097/
Sunday, May 1, 2022
THE CONGO
Long on my list: photographing the gorillas of the Congo. I read Daniel Quinn's very moving novel: Instinct which was made into a stirring movie starring Anthony Hopkins as an anthropologist studying mountain gorillas in the Congo.
My wife Patricia had a Design student a few years ago that one day will be a renowned travel photographer: Elissa Title. She recently took a gorilla trek.
Click HERE for Elissa's safari to photograph Gorillas in the mist.