Playing softball with coworkers Angelica is above I am below. Do you see how close I was to getting out! The yellow softball is flying right into his glove.
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Playing softball with coworkers Angelica is above I am below. Do you see how close I was to getting out! The yellow softball is flying right into his glove.
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Friday, June 19, 2009
Here is the 4 week update of Alaska:
The usual day:
I wake up 1 1/4 hours before I report in for work. On average this is at 6 am but I have gotten up as early as 4 am before. Then again sometimes it is at later in the day and I get to sleep in. I get up and make my bed (Cherish can testify for me) get dressed go down stairs and make myself delicious oatmeal with 1/2 c. oatmeal a small spoon of brown sugar and some fruit if I am lucky enough to have some. While the water is heating I make myself a peanut butter and honey sandwich (sometimes 2, depending on how long my day will be) and grab some other snack. As I eat my oatmeal, I contemplate life's mysteries and wonders. Afterwards I head back upstairs do my last minute primping, gather my things, and leave with some toast to eat on the way so work. I walk to the end of the hall and down the stairs and exit another locked door that leads outside between the tourist shops Chilkat and Island Diamonds.
Because this is the usual day the rain of course is coming down in a moderate drizzle. I pull up the hood on my bright red work raincoat and walk south to begin my 1/2 hour walk to "the yarrrd" (say it like a pirate). I hum a hymn or two and pause occasionally to watch a cruise ship pulling in or to enjoy making eye contact with the bald eagles. No one else is around except for the few beat up cars that pass me as they also make their way to work. If I look up I notice that I can barley see the top of Mt. Roberts and the tram through the low clouds. After walking a mile I am at the base of "the hill." I refuse to slow down so I consciously keep a brisk pace. I continue another 1/2 mile until I walk into the driver room and say hello to the others also in the yard. After enjoying some small chit-chat I swipe my time card find my keys and DVIR (daily vehicle inspection report) and head out to my van. (To write the routine of checking the van would be rather boring but it is sufficient to say that we check the engine, interior, and exterior.) Everything is in working order as it should be... but oh dear, it looks that the previous driver didn't fuel the vehicle last night. Now I must walk to the mechanic garage and grab the fuel card. I am carful fueling the van because the pump doesn't stop when it is full and it can overflow.
Half an hour to departure time I arrive at the dock to pick up the cruise ship tourists. While waiting I talk to the dock reps. I have made good friends with some of them who I see often, but there is always still someone who I have not met yet. We converse in mostly small talk but it is still way fun.
When the passengers get in my car I transfer them to their excursion and then I continue work all day. (I will write up my tour material sometime in a later post.) During my first 1/2-1 hour of stage time I am usually napping in my van. Afterwards I either walk around breathtakingly beautiful Alaska, eat, read, call friends or talk to other drivers staging around me. My favorite place to stage is at the glacier or Brotherhood Bridge because there is usually someone I know out there staging with me who I can chat with. There are also some very nice walks around there. You can walk to the beaver dam and watch the cute fat rodent swimming around. He keeps his head above water and you can see the wake leaves behind his large brown tail. Or you can walk to Steep Creek where you can watch the black bears trying to catch the large red sockeye salmon that are jumping and swimming upstream to spawn. There is also of course the magnificent Mendenhal Glacier itself stretching across 1 1/2 miles between two mountains at the terminus and over 3000 ft tall. Occasionally you can catch it calving into Glacier Lake with the icebergs floating around in murky silt filled water. The Mountain goats hop around on the mountains above. The clean air is filled with the sweet scent of the Sitka Spruce, Western Hemlock, and Amber woods. Here I feel so small around this vast landscape yet I know that my life is still important and that I have great purpose and potential.
After dropping off my last passengers I radio in "This is (van #) I just dropped off my last passengers and am now done for the day and heading back to the yarrrd unless there is anything else I can do to help." a few second later I get the response "Nope. Come on back. Thanks for your help today." I quickly respond, "Copy that. Thank you." It is a bittersweet moment pulling into the yarrrd because I can go home and relax or do something fun but I would prefer to be working more hours. (Luckily, when I am a nurse there will be plenty of opportunities to work more if I desire.) I fuel and wash the van then do a post-trip , where I make sure everything is still in working order. After I walk back into the driver room and fill out my daily and monthly paperwork and then punch out for the day.
To get home I sometimes can hitch a ride from someone else who is leaving but if not I walk back past the shops and the Red Dod Saloon to get home. Now it is a much different story then walking to work. In fact, the streets are now crowded with tourists. I usually stop in Del Sol and talk to Kendra and the other Del Sol employees and chat a bit before I continue walking back home. i make another quick detour right before I get to the apartment and stop in Chilkat to talk to my roommate Suzette who works there. We can chat for a few minutes or over 1/2 an hour, it just depends on how busy we are and our moods.
I step into the apartment and walk to the couch and rest a minute reset my mind and then go upstairs and change into clothes that are way more stylish and comfortable then my uniform. Afterwards I may do a variety of things depending on the time and day: go on a tour somewhere for freeeeeeeeeeeeeeee :D, clean, eat, sleep, go on a walk around town, call family/friends at home, get a group to go an a hike or grocery shopping, hang with friends, or go to a church activity.
There are so many things to do with the YSA branch up here. Sunday is church and choir practice is after then in the evening the downtown group comes to our apartment (since it is the best location) and we all eat dinner together. Monday night is FHE and after we always play volleyball or basket ball until the building closes at 10 pm. Wednesday night is institute and volleyball again after until 10 pm. Thursday night is softball at sandy beach park (this is with work but it might as well be a church activity because there are so many of us there). Friday night we are assigned to clean the church building but we have an activity after such as movie night, volleyball, or just eat food and chat. There are also random activities such as BBQ on the beach, dances, etc.
When it comes to getting on free tours this is what I have done so far:
Pilots Choice helicopter tour--2 times but different pilots. They take you over a bunch of glaciers and land on two of their choice and walk you around. Breathtaking and large!
Dolphin Tours Whale Watching--We only saw one which is actually unusual considering we have the best feeding ground for humpback whales in the world here. I will have to do this again.
Glacier Gardens--Juneau's version of the Desert Botanical Gardens but with a creative twist like the blown glass. They have flower towers and plants grown in shapes, among the normal plants too of course.
Mendenhal Glacier--many many times
Salmon Bake--old-fashioned cooking with old-fashioned atmosphere and entertainment. The king salmon is delicious. The guitarist/singer performed songs like "Big Rock Candy Mountain," "Grandma's Feather Bed" and other old cowboy songs... I asked if he knew "Old Four Holer" later and he did not.
City Tour--2 times, unfortunately you cannot see Russia from the Governor's Mansion
Taku Lodge--you fly in a tiny float plane over the largest glaciers in the Juneau Icefield then land at a historic well kept lodge where they feed you an excellent fresh salmon diner cooked over an alder wood fire. Then you go on a hike to the waterfall and watch the bear come and try to take some of the cooked salmon he smells [we are safe inside the lodge btw] less then 20 ft away. He does not get any b/c we ate it all :) but he licks up the tasty salmon oil drippings.
Mt. Roberts Tramway--3 times. Ride to the top of the mtn. where there is a great view of the Gasteneau Channel and Juneau, fun hikes, an injured bald eagle in captivity, a movie about the wildlife, a movie about the native Tinglet tribe, and of course a restaurant and gift shops but I don't go there.
Salmon Hatchery--learn about how they run everything and salmon facts. Then they have salmon jerky and cream cheese you can eat as you walk around the aquariums they have inside.
Zipline--I am now a pro at flying at speeds of 45 mph over 180 ft high (:D
Things I still have yet to do:
The other zipline (so fun!)
Summer Dogs (the actual Iditarod dogs pull you in a car thingamabob but on dirt)
TEMPSCO Dogs (tourist version of the Iditarod on the Juneau Icefield)
Steamboat Tour (replica of old ferry and history lesson of the mines)
Mine Tour (a gold digger I am!)
Northstar X-trek (flying to then hiking on top of the glacier for 3 hours)
Evening Quest (more whale watching)
Interesting occurrences:
Two stalkers are after me (no mater where in the world I go these type of people still find me)
My roommate Erin was baptized
Camille from my university ward is also up here for the summer and in my same ward
Kendra is in my ward :)
The Randalls, who are in my university ward, came on a cruise and visited me. I gave them a tour of the glacier and took them to the top of the tram.
A bear damaged the boys apartment's grill because they forgot they left a fish outside.
Saw a porcupine using the crosswalk
I have eaten glacier ice and drank glacier water
I have hiked to the ice caves
I am the music chairperson and choir director and backup pianist in my branch
I bought a ukulele off ebay to practice since it is sooo hard to get to a piano
One of my awesome coworkers is a professional pianist: Elise West (she is on itunes)
Another coworker of mine is Lawrence Diggs. He has written a book on the uses of vinegar, had his own cooking show in Japan, helped set up a humanitarian organization in some African country which recently sought him out and had him return to give him a medal, paints... and a ton of other krazy kool stuff.
Well I am going to go watch the ship leave the dock with Cherish now bye! We built this city on rock and roll! :)
Monday, June 1, 2009
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Some pictures of my adventures:
This is in a helicopter flying over the Tongass National Forrest (largest one in the US) I saw about seven mountain goats around here.
This is the pilot Scott and the helicopter on 1 of the 39 glaciers in the Juneau Icefield.
ME in front of the helicopter on the glacier. This Ice is over one mile deep. It takes 100 ft of snow to make 1 ft of glacier ice
ME straddling a crevasse that is over 150 ft deep. The rocks are pulverized pieces of mountains over 12 miles away.
ME in the helicopter. Ain't she sweet!

This is the closest I have gotten to seeing a bear. Don't worry I will see more in June and July during salmon season :)
This is a close-up view of glacier ice. The ice is blue underneath because there is no air inside and it is so dense that it has a perfect crystal structure that absorbs all color wavelengths except for the shortest--blue. :)
This is the group that I went wale watching with: Allen, ME, Maria (rommate), Cherish (roommate), Braidey
Me on a boat in Auke Bay with Mendenhall Glacier in the background.
Bald eagle on top, sea lions on bottom, Chilkat Mtn Range in the back.
This is the closest I have gotten to seeing a bear. Don't worry I will see more in June and July during salmon season :)
Friday, May 29, 2009
First week
Well I have had quite a but of change from two weeks ago but I am loving Alaska. Sorry I haven't been able to post any videos I have taken quite a few but I can't post any yet because I need to buy a special cord to hook it up to my computer. Until then though I will relate all I can in my blog here. Today I have the day off so I have plenty of time to update it :)
"Let's start at the beginning, a very good place to start"
I arrived at the International Juneau Airport a little after 1 pm on Sunday May 17. This airport has only five gates and has one flight to Canada. I was greeted by my roommates who came to pick me up after church. They gave me a half hour drive through tour and then we headed to the apartment.
The apartment is in the downtown historic district above some tourist shops. The apartment is really nice. Downstairs we have the living/eating area, kitchen and bathroom. Upstairs is another bathroom and three bedrooms- two that face the street and the Gasteneau Channel where the cruise ships come in and one that faces the mountain. Cherish and I share the one that faces the mountain, so we have the worst view and don't get much sunlight in it but we have learned that it has its advantages. Because we get less light we can fall asleep easier because it is not completely dark until around eleven pm. We are also never disturbed by loud outside street disturbances late at night or early in the morning that our roommates tell us about.
The very next day I started my training as a driver guide. I learned how to "pre-trip" my mini bus (these are much larger then the 15 passenger vans I thought I would be driving, they are more the size of the handicap busses) and then Rick the manager had me drive to most of the places I would be driving with tourists. The hardest part was learning how to back into parking spaces at the Franklin Dock, but I learned and have done it many times since. After work we went to FHE and learned about how to be grateful and played volleyball.
Tuesday they had me work! Usually they send new workers on a ride-along with someone who had been there the previous year before they have you do it yourself... but not me apparently. I was really nervous but my co-workers were helpful and told me facts and stories I could tell my passengers. I was assigned TEMPSCO PC all day. This means that I would transfer cruisers back and forth from the dock to helicopter tours on the icefield and glaciers. Apparently I was a good and entertaining driver because I got decent tips. After work we had the missionaries over to teach my roommate Erin more about the church. She has been investigating and is really interested. I am sworn to secrecy and cannot say anymore at this time but I will tell you more when I can *wink* ;)
Wed I was assigned the same thing but did not receive any tips. I was still good it is just that some cruise lines passengers are better at tipping than others. When I was done though I was told to drive to canoe lake and switch my vehicle with Maria's broken one. I could not remember where it was so I had to ask for directions and even then just barley found it.
...Well I am going to go on a free-for-me-tour to the Glacier and the Salmon Bake so I will finnish updating later.
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