After four months of summer vacation we returned to our home in Alaska. This time as a family of five, and a family with (a little more) experience of living in the bush.
We found that some motion sickness can be avoided if we have headphones on. |
The cool, wet weather greeted us as our plane landed on the pebble and dirt runway. Clay was there to load us and our thousand dollar grocery order in the school van. We didn't get far down the road when I asked Clay to stop the truck. I quickly hopped out with Dagny. It was windy, so I wrapped her blanket around her, set her on the ground beside the road, and rocked her body back and forth in the damp dirt. She squinted and Ben snapped a picture; then we scooped her back up and rode two miles to the village of New Stuyahok.
It is a tradition of our village, and other tiny villages around us, that once the mama returns from the hospital with her baby, the baby is to be rolled in the soil of her hometown. Although New Stuyahok isn't my hometown, it felt appropriate at that moment. (Sorry, Webster, NY). It reminds me of "from dust we were formed to dust we return" concept. Genesis 3, right?!
We have now been here for over a week. Some days are really interesting- last Monday I canned 10 pounds of carrots and froze 171 bananas. And some days are less than exciting (yesterday all I did was help Wolfe tape monster pictures on my walls and was Anna to Ruby's Elsa game.) However, each day is met with more of an optimistic view than last year. We know a little more about bush flights, we know a little more about ordering bulk groceries, a little more about the village culture...I could go on. But I won't. Because I can write a little more about it later.
This job is for the monkeys... |
Blueberry picking |
Clay had a family addition too. Harvey, the new puppy, is on his far right |
And God's good grace is sufficient , DDD. You're a brave woman.
ReplyDeleteAnd God's good grace is sufficient , DDD. You're a brave woman.
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