VOLUME #1: "AlaskaThe Home We Leave"
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1996
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Note: This is our first travel journal as we prepare to embark on a one year, around the world family sabbatical. If you'd like to learn more about us and our trip, see About Worldhop. What's in this issue:
George: For almost 17 years we've lived in a "magical" place, Alaska. Salli and I moved here from California so I could try out my fantasy of living in "The Last Frontier," (But if you ever drive the Alaska Canadian highwaythe Al-Can to old timersyou may still see the ten deep finger claw marks Salli made on her way here). It's been a wonderful place to live. We've raised our two daughters here, as well as several wolves, one cat, a horse, rabbit, chinchilla, snakes, a goose (named "Raven," go figure) and some other critters I've lost track of. Mostly we've raised ourselves, and we've had an awfully good time in the process. For a sample of pictures showing the Alaska we know, click here. Alaska's history is rich with remarkable men and women. Most people know about John Muir, Jack London, and Soapy Smith, but there are many other less-well-known pioneers. One of these was the Japanese adventurer, Jujiro Wada. Shanghaied on a whaling ship, he arrived in Alaska in 1891. He lived with Natives on the Arctic coast and learned from them survival, including dog mushing. In 1909 he was hired to scout by dog sled a new, 450 mile trail to some gold claims. His efforts helped publicize the Iditarod Trail, the same route used by dog mushers in Alaska's most famous modern day dog sled race. From Gold Fever in the North (Editors: Darcy Ellington and Angela Tripp), about blazing the Iditarod Trail to the gold mines: "Dog teams routinely carried several hundred thousand dollars in gold on the trail, but there was only one dog team robbery. William Shermeier, owner of the Halfway Roadhouse, and a prostitute known as the Black Bear got driver Bill Duffy drunk one night and stole $30,000 in cash from his sled. In the end, Shermeier went to jail, and Black Bear married Duffy. |
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