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Tag Archives: AK life

It came early this year, but we’re officially in the 20 below club at my house!

Temp outside my front door, north facing.

Solstice has arrived (yesterday) and we are eagerly counting our daylight gain. While only in seconds currently, we will soon move up to minutes!!

With the current events, there’s a lot of talk about folks not getting their SNAP benefits and going hungry. I’ve seen a lot of back and forth online, finger pointing and “get a job” type quotes but I’ve also seen several people posting recipes and “struggle meals” ideas and offers to help.

I love seeing humans being humane. Regardless of political or philosophical differences, being united in caring for each other through a crisis situation is always going to be beautiful to me. Just like during the recent events with the typhoon hitting western Alaska. Reach out a helping hand and stand alongside our Alaskan brothers and sisters during their time of need.

Now we can talk at length regarding the source of the crisis at another time, but suffice to say that if someone is expecting to have food assistance and then not having it abruptly can be and is a crisis in the moment. Let’s get through this one and then make sure we don’t have a repeat.

As a kid we had plenty of feast/famine cycles in our family life. When times were good we ate normal food, maybe even got to eat out occasionally  but also when times were lean we had plenty of struggle meals. Ramen noodles, hotdogs, often served up beinie-weinie style, spaghetti, *gag* goulash, hamburger/tuna helper types, salmon patties (from that nasty pink salmon in a can! 😧) eating bread cereal, grilled cheese with canned tomato soup, bologna  sandwiches, oatmeal and cornmeal mush.

I remember buying food with old fashioned food stamps, that were actually individual tear-out style in a booklet with a fixed dollar amount printed on them. You used to get change when you didn’t spend the entire amount! (Way back in the day!), but there were limits as to what you could use them for, a novel idea.

I think that I might even qualify for SNAP assistance now, or during the winter months at least, but I haven’t actually tried. I’ve benefitted from the WIC program when I had eligible children. I’m not a stranger to needing and using food assistance when necessary. But like any assistance program I shy away simply because I loath the paperwork and feel like there is always someone in worse shape than myself that could use the help more. I don’t begrudge someone getting the help they need. And I don’t go around judging folks for finding themselves in such a position. But I do want to encourage folks to try and achieve food security. And if you don’t know what that is or don’t think you can do it I’d like to help you figure it out!

Where there’s a will, there’s a way!

Growing up I also had the benefit of having grandparents and Aunties who believed in having a fully stocked pantry. Both with home preserved and store bought staples. Shelves full of colorful home canned tomatoes, green beans, pickles and beets plus buckets of flour, sugar, beans and rice. And of course a full freezer accompanied the pantry, with meat and garden produce galore. This was and still is normal for me. Obviously all these items purchased at once would be cost prohibitive, but starting small and working your way up during sales and deep discounts (think end of season or bountiful garden harvest) and you can have a full pantry before you know it.

For the current crisis situation, in our own area we have a couple of those little mini food pantries that good hearted folks share food with whomever needs it. There’s one across from the Borough Building in the school parking lot, and one outside of the Pentecostal church on the Spur highway. We also have local churches offering free meals, the Methodist church on Binkley street does once a week on Wednesday I believe, as well as the one in Kenai. We also have the local Food Bank on K- beach that supplies once a month food assistance  and the Fireweed diner serves lunch daily for anyone M-F, I believe it’s suggested donation as you can, and there also Love, INC a little farther down the road that serves as a Clearinghouse to local churches and charities.

Social media offers groups where you can reach out with requests for food or other needs and our community is usually pretty helpful. Asking your friends and family for help may not be easy but sometimes it’s necessary. My Grandma always taught me to offer something of my own in return, time and effort usually.

Besides getting stocked up on food staples, as one can afford to do, knowing how to prepare these foods is also needed. Adding strange or different foods to your diet when it’s not your choice isn’t easy, especially for kids or adults who haven’t developed a broad spectrum of their taste buds. But you can do it! Pick a new food to try and make it a few different ways. Don’t care for beans? What about mashed, refried, and served as a Mexican style side dish? Or add some seasonings and make it a bean dip. Instead of a pot of only beans toss a handful of soaked beans into a pot of slow simmered soup. Soup is probably the best and easiest way to stretch your food dollar. Vegetable beef soup (with ground beef) is fairly inexpensive!

We also invested in a pressure canner years ago, and have bought jars to meet our storage needs. Over the years I’ve paid retail, on sale, thrift and second hand, I’ve had some jars given to me and traded for others. Cost can be a factor but it doesn’t have to be prohibitive. Start small and work your way up. Also, find a friend who cans and learn how to, ask if you can use their equipment, you’ll never know if you don’t ask. Also don’t forget that we have the Cooperative Extension office on K- beach which has canning safety information available free for the asking.

Start small, using things you know you like. If you’re making beans and you’re not used to eating them, be sure you rinse and soak them well, cook them thoroughly adding flavorful cuts of meat to help your palate be receptive! This is where you buy one package of smoked or cured meat and use it as a seasoning instead of the main dish. A little goes a long way! And if you’re eating beans or lentils have a side of rice to go with them, it provides a more rounded protein profile and improves taste & texture for many. Think Red Beans & Rice! Or Hopping John, oops, I’m letting a little Southern show. Speaking of southern, what about some grits and greens, the original struggle meal?? Lordy mercy I’m getting hungry now.

Use spices abundantly! Now spices can be expensive but I’ve found the staple pantry spices fairly inexpensive at the Kenai Walmart. Garlic, pepper, onion powder, parsley, cayenne, etc can be had very inexpensively. Salt and healthy fats are your friend when it comes to taste! Butter on sale (I won’t buy it at full price!) is a great addition to the diet.  Sometimes it’s worth “splurging” on a healthier choice like butter or olive oil instead of canola oil. Find a friend and split the cost of a bottle, divide into separate containers and now you’ve learned how to divide and conquer! Buy whatever you can tho, there’s no judgement.

Knowing what foods are good “fillers” and will help you and your kiddos feel full are important. Things like potatoes, sweet potatoes, whole grains like brown rice are great additions to a meager diet. Foods high in fiber are what keeps us feeling satisfied for longer. Fiber is in the peel and bran of food items, if you’re only eating white rice or russet potatoes you’re missing out on nutrients and feeling full longer. If you like apples make sure to eat the peel!

Frozen vegetables, especially when on sale, are usually a good way to boost your veggie intake. I try to keep broccoli, cauliflower and a few others in the freezer so I always have something available. Canned corn, green beans and peas are easy as well. Buying these when on sale is always the best way.

Shopping local stores “clearance” items is the way we make our grocery budget stretch. Early morning hours are the best for finding the widest selection. Meat markdowns, bakery, vegetable and miscellaneous markdowns are usually abundant at Fred Meyers early in the day. (Definitely do not count on this during tourist and fishing season. 🙄) For my family, buying sweets or dessert items is a rarity, but this is the way we do it. I prefer locally baked items to package shelf stable items for my kids to have a sweet treat (think less preservatives). So the occasional bakery donut or cookies are a well deserved addition to their diet.

Being able  and willing to fish during dipnet season is a great way to start filling your pantry. If you haven’t done so yet, I highly recommend it. Also regular old pole fishing is fine too if you have the time and skills. Learn how to hunt, we have ample spruce hens & rabbits locally for those who enjoy wild game besides moose. If you’re capable of retrieving a moose you can sign up for the animal salvage program with the state of Alaska and get called for pickup when one becomes available and you’re next on the list. Can’t do it alone? Team up with a friend. Even roadkill moose have plenty of salvageable meat left, these animals are huge. Not all of the animals offered in the program are roadkill. Other animals are those surrendered due to illegal hunting, animals becoming dependent on humans, over harvest limit, etc. Have a friend that hunts? Offer to help them pack out their animal and process it in exchange for some of the meat. This is the Alaskan way. Put in some sweat equity!

Once you’ve figured out a way to harvest abundant game, forage for berries or growing garden produce then you’re going to be freezing, smoking, drying, canning, etc to preserve it. All of these skills can be learned and there are many local folks who would love to pass on the knowledge.

Building your own pantry at home doesn’t have to be expensive or fancy. If you don’t have a physical pantry in your kitchen think outside the box. Is there room for a small wardrobe type cabinet or even open shelves in or near your kitchen? If not, what about under bed storage? An unused  corner in a living room or even bedroom, under the stairs, in a coat closet, someplace that can serve as a safe place to keep your food storage. I do have a pantry in my kitchen but I also have shelves scattered around in various locations to keep my salmon and other  canned and dry goods.

In the short term, there are several options for folks needing food right now, some of which I’ve mentioned. I’m sure there are others that I’m not aware of, feel free to share in the comments. I hope that if you find yourself in need that you find the resolve and resources you need to get through this crisis and that you’ll go on to build your own food security reserve for the future! It’s not necessarily easy nor is it free but with determination and a steady budget you can be food secure, even when things are super tight!

If you’re blessed and not in a position of need right now I hope that you can help others as you’re so led to do and be a blessing in our community. It will be a worthy investment.

#alaska #foodsecurity #pantry#snap

Power is out.

Again.

Wind storm tonight, first quarter moon and overcast so it’s really dark. Odd day it’s been,  started off with a pretty good little earthquake. Temp got up to 44° today, really Old Man Winter?? First time I’ve seen the end of October this warm.

Felt this one really good.

We were working up the last of our meat chickens, that we slaughtered on Sunday evening, we were on the second to last one when the final flicker happened. Thankfully I had filled some reserve jugs of water earlier and with what capacity we have in the lines/pressure tank we had enough water to finish the job.

I already had the canner prepped with a batch of canned chicken meat (I had run a batch of chicken broth this morning!). Propane cooktop still works, just have to manually light the burners. We know how to make do!

Chicken broth in progress, made 2 gallons.

So here I sit in the darkness, with a headlamp on for light when I need it, a phone with half a charge, listening to my canner weight dancing around its 11# psi. Watching the blue glow of the burner flame faintly illuminating that portion of the kitchen. While the dog prances around wondering why it’s so dark. Waiting for my 90 minute timer to go off.

Power should be restored by 3 am the Power Company says. Not that I’ll care at that point, hope to be sound asleep before then.

I probably should consider a generator for times like these. However inconvenient losing power is, it kinda brings a sense of calm, a slowing down, a moment of pause . I’m not so sure I want that generator after all.

I remember back when we were kids, living on 6th street, when the power would go off we’d get so excited! We busy ourselves with grabbing the candles and lighting them only for the power to always come back on within very few minutes (our close proximity to the hospital meant we were never down long).

Awww, those were the good old days.

#alaskalife #canning #poweroutage #foodpreservation

We were pushing it but thanks to Old Man Winter for delaying his arrival we managed to get all of our birds dispatched and into the coolers! We started at Mo’s house and her 30 birds then moved over to ours and our hodgepodge of  18 or so birds. Nearly 50 birds done, mess cleaned up and only one minor boo-boo. (I cut my finger a little!) All finished before it started to freeze.

Good job!

#Relieved #grateful #fillingthefreezer #stockingthepantey

Mo’s happy hens

Summer has been a whirlwind of activities for us. Mostly work activities, but still. We’ve spent most of every available day starting new projects, finishing old ones, yard work, garden work, tending our animals, renovations, new school year and little time for extra fun or adventures. Such is the life here occasionally.

The latest project that the littles and I have been working on since mid August is finishing the kitchen floor.

Our foundation is slab-on-grade and the entirety of the main floor is unfinished concrete with the exception of Lil Bit’s room being laminate. Well we did have laminate in the kitchen, but three days after it’s completion we had the chimney fire which ruined the laminate. 🥺 And we have been living with it ever since.

The main kitchen had essentially become a storage space for all our excess: tools, job materials, renovation materials, food storage and junk. Our first order of business was to empty the space out and tear up the ruined laminate. The kiddos were great at this and had it done rather quickly after the arduous task of moving out the stuff which took us a number of weeks.

This kitchen is large, roughly 17′ x 16′ floor space. There’s appliances, including two freezers, that I cannot move out so we had to do the floor in halves. Everything that can’t go outside was shifted to the west side and the eastern half was completely cleared out.

Then the prep work began on the concrete.  Identifying all the cracks that needed repair, we only had two main cracks from all the earthquakes, and a few minor cracks that really didn’t need filled. I fixed those up and began cleaning the slab. Lots of sanding & scrubbing! Unsealed concrete never seems to get fully clean.

Yesterday I began the final scrubbing with the degreaser/cleaner that came with the epoxy paint kit. And two rinses with water and two hours later, the floor was ready for dry time!

Let the fun begin! My helpers were eager to get started. They edged the entire space while I roller, sprinkled and sprayed the finish. Now it’s time to dry. This is the hard part, waiting to use the space that we’ve worked so hard on!!

Photo dump!

This was the first part of the journey, a little forest ecology field trip. We learned that there are naturally hybridized Sitka-White spruce trees here in this temperate rain forest. And they grow huge!

Afterwards it was back to the bunkhouse for some much needed rest. Walking miles in mud boots is not advisable. But we were ready for the next adventure come morning!

Lab time was quite eye opening. 🫤🔬🤢 Remember that time at fish camp when pulling nets and a bunch of sea water splashed on your face and some got on your lips and you licked them… Yeah, you ate plankton.

That’s it for our end-of-year field trip. Lots of learning and fun was

It’s been a decade +1 now. Looking back over some timeline photos with gratitude and admiration for the many wonderful people in our lives and glorious experiences. And for the young people (grown-ups?!?!) my oldest two have become (the first becoming the “Legal” for sure grown-up age today!)

I’m often scratching my head in wonderment of how, exactly, the time has gone so quickly. The business of life steps on the gas when you’re not looking.

This summer is getting underway and we are trying to take advantage of every single moment of decent weather! (Two summers of rain and dreary days has us in a deficit !) We’ve got a to-do list a mile long to get done and life moments to pause and celebrate. Which of course leads to the aforementioned warp 9 speed of life.

I hope you take a moment today to pause, breathe deeply, walk barefoot and be grateful.

Ahoy mates! We’ve shoved off and we’re underway to the Kasitsna Bay Research Facility to explore our marine and forest ecology! This is an overnight trip across Kachemak Bay. Seas are mostly calm, overcast skies, it’s supposed to rain but so far it’s just cool and overcast.

Aboard the Discovery with Captain Victoria!

I’ll be sure to post more about our adventures when we return home! You can see our adventures here!

Spent the afternoon at my friend Barbara’s White Gold Farm observing her milking operation and made mozzarella cheese. She has dairy goats as well but we focused on the Holstein side of things this time. She has two cows in milk, Sadie and Sally.

Barbara is our 4H Leader in addition to being our friend for our entire tenure here in Alaska. I met her through an ad I ran for childcare way back in the day. She’s been a constant ever since!

Before we got started on the mozzarella she let us sample a Monterey Jack cheese she made back in January. So good. The flavor is just so much better than commercial/store bought cheese. We are inspired to try making some different types of cheeses now!

While there, we got to see the cutest little calf ” Sir Loin” 😁. He’s about three weeks old and belongs to Sally. Nothing cuter than a baby cow. 😍 Except maybe a cute little boy experiencing a cute lil calf for the first time.

Cowlicks
Sadie, she’s a big girl!

The kids got to experience the shear size of these cows, much larger than previous experiences! And learn a few things about milk production. The cheese making was the best part, because it tastes so good!

Good food and good company, nothing compares!

Today, at 5:36 AKST pm (4:36 AKDST) we Mark the 60th anniversary of the 9.2 magnitude Good Friday earthquake.

131 people lost their lives here in Alaska. 16 people in California and Oregon.

$311 million dollars of damage, in 1964 money, that’s $3,087,314,110 of today’s money (adjusted for the 900% loss in value).

Valdez and Chenega were completely destroyed and a resulting Tsunami of 200 feet high was registered at Shoup Bay near the Valdez Inlet. The surge touched Canada, Hawaii, Japan, and Australia.

The quake registered seismically in nearly every state in the union with the exception of three. Seattle’s space needle wobbled.

4 year old little Dean remembers all the appliances, the wood stove and cabinet contents toppled onto the floor. He also remembers that the snow was gone, an early breakup that year. Funny the things that are left with indelible ink.

There’s still visible scars of that day on the way to Anchorage near Portage, the remnants of the trees killed when the land dropped below the water table. Time takes its toll and Alaska reclaims it’s dead. There are fewer trees standing now than when I first moved here. The little garage that was shuttered after the quake finally fell down a few years back. The landscape is healing, reminders fading. But we must remember.

Sources: History , Must Read Alaska, Oral History of Thelma Barnum & Fred Christoffersen, Dollar Times