Hikers in pursuit of the Alaska Dream looking over Doroshin Bay and the Skilak Glacier outwash plain in Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. (Photo courtesy Kenai National Wildlife Refuge)

Hikers in pursuit of the Alaska Dream looking over Doroshin Bay and the Skilak Glacier outwash plain in Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. (Photo courtesy Kenai National Wildlife Refuge)

Refuge Notebook: Following the Alaska dream

When I was 6 years old, my family traveled the Alcan Highway from California to the Arctic Circle in Alaska. We visited relatives who lived on a subsistence farm in the Peace River country of northern British Columbia and stayed with friends in a log cabin north of Fairbanks.

The adventures from that trip kindled a life-long love of northern latitudes that led to my time as a high school exchange student in Norway and eventually to seasonal jobs in Alaska from Lake Clark to Denali. Ultimately, the lure of following the Alaska dream led my husband Walter and me back to the Kenai Peninsula over 30 years ago.

While I have always loved getting out and experiencing Alaska adventure first hand from the canoe system of Kenai National Wildlife Refuge to the brown bear country of Katmai, I also find great inspiration in the reading the stories of other people who were motivated to follow their “Alaska dream.” Some great “reads” that I’d like to recommend on this theme include:

“Winds of Skilak” by Bonnie Rose Ward — Follow Bonnie and Sam Ward’s adventurous move from the suburbs of Ohio in 1980 to live “off the grid” on a private inholding on Caribou Island located in Skilak Lake (on Kenai National Wildlife Refuge). As Sam and Bonnie adapted to a remote life without modern day conveniences, they discovered the benefits of new friends, more time for each other, and the beautiful scenery of the Kenai Mountains and Skilak Lake. This book won a 2014 Next Generation Indie Book Awards/Memoir and also was an award-winning finalist in the 2014 USA Best Book Awards Autobiography/Memoir category.

“Two against the North” by Ida White Sharples — Ida White Sharples and her husband left Juneau in the late 1930s to build a remote homestead on the Kenai Peninsula. To reach their new home site, they traveled by boat from Kenai Lake down the upper Kenai River, braving the rapids of the Kenai Canyon, and then crossed over to the south side of Skilak Lake where they built their homestead. Ida had love of wildflowers and worked to set up an Alaska wildflower seed business. She also was the author of the first book on Alaskan wildflowers – “Alaska Wildflowers” (Stanford University Press, c. 1938). Look for this Kenai Peninsula homesteading story in local libraries as the book is now out of print.

“First Wilderness” by Sam Keith — Sam Keith is best known for writing the 1973 best seller “One Man’s Wilderness” about the remote life of Dick Proenneke in the Twin Lakes country of Lake Clark National Park. Sam Keith and Dick Proenneke were lifelong friends that both passed away in 2003. Ten years later, an unpublished manuscript written in 1974 by Sam Keith was discovered by son-in-law, author/illustrator Brian Lies. This work is now a new book, “First Wilderness.” The book tells the story of Sam Keith’s own Alaska adventure experiences — some with his friend, Dick Proenneke, and others even on our Refuge on Tustumena Lake. This book will give Dick Proenneke fans something new while adding to adventure stories about the Kenai Peninsula.

“Arctic Son – Fulfilling the Dream” (DVD and new 2014 edition book) — Authors and filmmakers Jean Aspen and Tom Irons (now living in Homer) share their story of moving to Alaska’s remote Brooks Range in the spring of 1992 with their 6-year-old son, Luke, and friend Laurie Schacht. Living alone for more than a year, they had the energy and insight to keep journals and to film building a cabin and their day to day life in this remote wilderness. They were inspired to create both a book and a DVD. The DVD shows on PBS stations throughout the country (including Alaska’s PBS Station, 360 North).

Jean has also written “Arctic Daughter: A Wilderness Journey,” which recounts her youth in the wilds of the Brooks Range. Long out of print, a new edition is scheduled for release in April 2015.

To find these books, check out our local libraries and community book stores. Wishing you inspiration as you follow your Alaska dreams!

 

Candace Ward is a park ranger, who has worked in the Refuge’s Visitor Services Program for over 30 years. Find more information about the Refuge at http://www.fws.gov/refuge/kenai/ or http://www.facebook.com/kenainationalwildliferefuge.

More in Life

File
Powerful truth of resurrection reverberates even today

Don’t let the resurrection of Jesus become old news

Nell and Homer Crosby were early homesteaders in Happy Valley. Although they had left the area by the early 1950s, they sold two acres on their southern line to Rex Hanks. (Photo courtesy of Katie Matthews)
A Kind and Sensitive Man: The Rex Hanks Story — Part 1

The main action of this story takes place in Happy Valley, located between Anchor Point and Ninilchik on the southern Kenai Peninsula

Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion
Chloe Jacko, Ada Bon and Emerson Kapp rehearse “Clue” at Soldotna High School in Soldotna, Alaska, on Thursday, April 18, 2024.
Whodunit? ‘Clue’ to keep audiences guessing

Soldotna High School drama department puts on show with multiple endings and divergent casts

Leora McCaughey, Maggie Grenier and Oshie Broussard rehearse “Mamma Mia” at Nikiski Middle/High School in Nikiski, Alaska, on Tuesday, April 16, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Singing, dancing and a lot of ABBA

Nikiski Theater puts on jukebox musical ‘Mamma Mia!’

This berry cream cheese babka can be made with any berries you have in your freezer. (Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion)
A tasty project to fill the quiet hours

This berry cream cheese babka can be made with any berries you have in your freezer

File
Minister’s Message: How to grow old and not waste your life

At its core, the Bible speaks a great deal about the time allotted for one’s life

Kirsten Dunst, Wagner Moura and Stephen McKinley Henderson appear in “Civil War.” (Promotional photo courtesy A24)
Review: An unexpected battle for empathy in ‘Civil War’

Garland’s new film comments on political and personal divisions through a unique lens of conflict on American soil

What are almost certainly members of the Grönroos family pose in front of their Anchor Point home in this undated photograph courtesy of William Wade Carroll. The cabin was built in about 1903-04 just north of the mouth of the Anchor River.
Fresh Start: The Grönroos Family Story— Part 2

The five-member Grönroos family immigrated from Finland to Alaska in 1903 and 1904

Aurora Bukac is Alice in a rehearsal of Seward High School Theatre Collective’s production of “Alice in Wonderland” at Seward High School in Seward, Alaska, on Thursday, April 11, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Seward in ‘Wonderland’

Seward High School Theatre Collective celebrates resurgence of theater on Eastern Kenai Peninsula

Most Read