Thursday, April 25, 2013

Stormy Evening

Tonight is one of my favorite types of evenings. There is an icy wind blowing hard enough to whine around the windows of the house and it is raining. The Passage waves are whipped into whitecaps and I get to be cozy and warm inside and just watch. I think soup and bread are the greatest inventions for just such an evening.

One of my favorite memories with my daughter and husband was back in Columbia, Missouri. Sam and I  were in graduate school and my daughter was in high school. A big snowstorm was predicted so we stocked up on soup and bread ingredients and rented every Alfred Hitchcock movie we could find. The the three of us snuggled in and spent the entire weekend hanging out together, eating soup and watching great movies. Our 3 story condo backed up to beautiful woods and hills. The snow did in fact arrive and came down in huge fluffy puffs that swirled into heavy drifts. Every branch of the naked winter trees became dressed in thick frosting and brilliant red cardinals hopped about on our deck to peck at the sunflower seeds we had scattered. Perfection.

I have been inspired by Sherri's wonderful soup she serves daily at The Point. Wednesday features a music jam with local players and you can enjoy a little concert while you have lunch. See the picture of the yummy roasted red pepper soup of the day! One of my favorites is African Peanut Soup. I looked for a recipe online and ended up combining two recipes and sort of throwing in a couple items that needed to be used up. Fabulous and delicious!

I have also recently discovered the most delicious store bought bread I have ever had. It is called Dave's  Killer Bread.  Go to Dave'sKillerBread.com to learn about Dave and his inspiring story. I can vouch for the fact that Dave's bread is well named. It is especially delicious toasted with coconut manna spread on it which I found at the health food store downtown. If you are interested and cannot find Dave's bread in your store you can order directly from him on his website....WORTH IT!

Here is my version of the African Peanut Soup. If you are vegetarian, there are recipes you can use online or you can adapt as it makes sense to you. I think it is a rather flexible and forgiving recipe so you can add or delete items to your taste.

6 cups reduced sodium chicken stock
Medium red onion chopped
2 T fresh ginger minced
4 cloves garlic minced
simmer together then add
28 oz can of crushed tomatoes (diced probably just as good)
2 large sweet potatoes peeled diced into bite sized pieces
large bunch of collard greens and/or kale - strip the leaves and chop
mix in and simmer until potatoes done
I baked chicken breasts and then chopped into bite size pieces but you could shred or use ground turkey
I used 3 breasts
Curry and cumin to your taste
3 T Sriracha hot chili sauce
When potatoes are done skim about a cup of the broth out and whisk together with 3/4 c crunchy peanut butter - pour back into soup and mix well. Heat and Voila!

My neighbor lent me some great books about Pacific ocean life and tides. After 12 years in the desert, the ocean is fascinating to me. This morning the tide was out so far that the deep water rocks were uncovered. It makes for a much longer morning doggie walk as it extends the length of the beach significantly. Lucy likes to poke around in the little tide pools that house sea urchins and in the crevices where orange and purple starfish live. At noon I came home and the water was nearly up to the house. I think if I had to do things over I would have moved to the ocean at a much younger age and studied whales and dolphins.

One of the important things you must do when you move is find a great hairdresser. Thank goodness I have with Claire at Serendipity Salon. There are such interesting people in Ketchikan and she is one of them. She has lived in Guam and Japan and spent time in Hawaii and several other states. Claire is a very talented hairdresser as well as a fully trained instructor. She works absolute miracles on my hair! Claire was a contender at the recent A-Pork-a-Lypse and won 2nd Place.

Do keep checking Ketchikanstories.com - there are new stories on The Timber Years and Bush Pilots added. The stories are so well done and give you a real taste of life in Ketchikan. I added some pictures below of skunk cabbage, an aerial view of Alaska Marine Highway Ferry the Taku in dry dock, the Ketchikan High School commons (note the native canoe sculpture hanging from the ceiling) and a terrific mural about the subject of "Kings" by local artist Ray Troll. The high school's mascot is the King Salmon!

Be Well and Do Good!














Monday, April 22, 2013

This is a practice post to see if I have figured out to repair the text for easier reading. Do send your feedback!

Today was another stellar weather day in Ketchikan. Sunny and warm with clear skies. The first cruise ship is expected to port April 29 and downtown is busy preparing. There is a palpable excitement of anticipation in the air. Many stores are closed up all winter, but now there is new paint, washed windows, the unloading of boxes and building of displays.

I am a big fan of movies. I Love You to Death, is one of my favorites and is on as I type this. Kevin Kline, Tracey Ullman, Joan Plowright, River Phoenix, William Hurt, Keanu Reeves are all great in it. Miriam Margolyes, who you may recognize as Professor Sprout from the Harry Potter series, is hilarious as Joey's Italian mama. If anyone knows how to obtain a version of Johnny Stecchino that will play on U.S. DVD players let me know....another favorite.

I moved to Alaska December 23rd (day after the shortest day of the year) and figured that every day would get lighter and better. It has! The light has returned in large chunks each day and now dawn arrives by 0430 and it is dusk until nearly 2100. It makes for lovely evenings of watching the water and beach walking. There were otters, ducks and seals out tonight playing.

I need to brush up on my grammar rules because I have forgotten proper use of it's and its.

That is it for the practice post....let's see if I figured out how to correctly change the body font !

What a Wild Couple of Weeks!

Welcome to my first publishing! I have been emailing friends across the country about the what I find delightful and interesting about my move to Alaska life. To my surprise, several have requested that I start a blog. I am a greenhorn to blogging and my new adopted state, but game to give it a try.

Every place I have lived offers it's own version of the arrival of spring. In Missouri, robins returned, red bud, plum trees, forsythia bushes, spring flowers, thunder storms and warmer weather were the markers. In the desert, the cactuses bloomed and the air was alive with mesquite and creosote after a rain. Here in Ketchikan there is a whole new menu to learn. We have robins here and their song must be what is so familiar to me. We have enjoyed crocuses, daffodils and other spring flowers. Skunk cabbage has bloomed which the locals tell me is a wake-up treat for the black bears coming out of hibernation. The herring have spawned and their eggs are a local delicacy. The downtown area is engaged in full-tilt spruce up mode. Business owners are power-washing the winter and grunge away in preparation for touristo season. AND perhaps my favorite thing, we have a daily nature show to view out the window of river otters, seals and now humpback and killer whales.

I met a Tsimshian woman at the hospital who belongs to the Killer Whale Clan from Metlakatla Island across the way from us. She taught me that Killer Whale is the older and more proper name of the Orcas. Other local tribes include the Haida and the Tlingit. I highly recommend our award-winning website: www.ketchikanstories.com to learn more about life and things to do in Ketchikan.

My walks with Lucy the Beagle-mix continue to be a fun way to spend time on the beach. I have tried a number of times to practice meditation and cannot seem to pay attention and clear my mind, as one is supposed to. Zen for me is on the beach. This week brought two magical experiences. One morning was frosty and there was a heavy fog that blanketed everything in the Passage with silver. A thick wet fog hung over the water and the rocks on the beach were all outlined in white edging. I was startled by a huge concussion of sound and looked up just in time to see a humpback dive back into the water and flip it's tail. There was more than one and I watched them play and puff big steamy spouts as they leisurely swam along. They were talking to one another and it sounded like a Chewbacca roar....maybe that is where the Star Wars makers got the sound! Then a couple days later I learned something about why Ravens and Eagles figure into Native stories here. Mature bald eagles look ferocious. Their beaks and talons clearly are capable weapons. I was surprised to learn that they are frequently chased by the much smaller ravens especially when the eagles try to raid the raven's nests. Now I understand better why Baltimore chose the raven as their mascot...they are quite brave! Ravens make a sound that sounds like a crow caw with more of a CLOCK, CLOCK, CLOCK sound and the one I watched chase the eagle was tenacious. Twice the eagle somersaulted midair and flared it's talons while upside down toward it's angry pursuer. What a aerobatic show!

April is Poetry month and our public radio station KRBD, features a clever celebration of it called: A Poem a Day Won't Kill You! Local people read a poem of their choosing so we have enjoyed quite a selection.

One of the tag lines for Ketchikan's advertising is Ketchikan....Art Lives Here. Boy does it ever. The Arts Council here offers wonderful, varied and regular concerts, art shows, and dance performances.
April Verch and her band members Cody Walters and Hayes Griffin, put on a wonderful show about a week ago. I don't think I have ever seen anything quite like it. April is diminutive in size but a mega-packaged talent. She is a Canadian fiddler and step dancer who performed at the 2010 Opening Ceremonies of the Winter Olympics. She and her band play a combination of Canadian and American folk and bluegrass as well as original compositions. The music alone would have been enough, but then in the middle of smokin' hot fiddle-fest, you find out she has tap shoes on and while playing she breaks out into equally hot and fast dancing. She explained that the steps are a combination of Ottawa Valley folk, Irish River Dancing, clogging. It is hard to imagine neural networks that work that fast and all at the same time! Check out www.AprilVerch.com for music and show times.

Main Street Gallery is presently featuring La Folie Circulaire: A Journey into Bipolar Disorder. I went to the opening night (which offers terrific hors d'oeuvres). It was an incredibly moving experience. The walls were covered with brown paper and the narration written in white with the gorgeous photography mounted so that one traveled the journey with the young man and woman featured in the piece. Both are local. One, a young man who is a talented musician/songwriter and the other a beautiful young woman. It was educational, heartbreaking, inspiring, and beautifully rendered method of storytelling. They hope to take it nationally and if you have the chance...do go see it!

I have never worked in psychiatric health care, but it seems to me that a number of movies have done a better job of connecting us to those experiences than public education has. Some favorites: Lars and the Real Girl - the story of how a sensitive doctor, family, co-workers and town support the healing of an agoraphobic painfully shy young man so that he might reconnect to people after a lonely and painful childhood; The Fisher King and Reign Over Me- a peek into how traumatic loss can unravel the lives and mental health of previously functional professional people; Silver Linings Playbook - This year's Oscar nominated depiction of life with Bipolar Disorder. I'm sure I am forgetting others, let me hear your favorites.

Ketchikan is quite creative in inventing its own fun. Last weekend I went to the 2nd Annual A-Pork-a- Lypse. It was a fundraiser to help a local student raise the required funds for Rotary Student experience to Thailand. The celebration of BACON involved a $5 cover at the door and $5 bucks to enter your celebration of bacon-inspired culinary creation. As a guest, you sampled the various dishes and then voted with dollars. There was a bacon cake, bacon brownies, marmalade with homemade pretzels, sopapillas, halibut wrapped in bacon with apricot sauce, bacon popcorn. A guy showed up wearing a bacon shirt and there was a great sign that said: BACON - The reason you are not a vegetarian!

I have spoken about The Point before and I'm hanging out with the ladies of the knitting bunch to learn how to make a scarf with te linen stitch. If you want to get a better view of what The Point is all about you can go to their Facebook page and see the inside as well as what is for lunch.

I am now a big fan of seaplane travel! We had had clear skies and mirror-like water for a week and I was really looking forward to my maiden voyage on the DeHavilland Beaver with Pacific Airways to fly over to Prince of Wales Island for clinic. But, as luck would have it, I woke up to wind, whitecaps and very cold weather. We were supposed to depart at 0730, but when I arrived the pilot said they were postponing until 0900 when they thought things would be fine. Secretly, I was hoping they wouldn't be. Yikes, I have flown with my husband in Arizona, Colorado and Missouri and I liken it to feeling like a bouncing spider on a string. I was a bit nervous about bush plane flying. I have heard repeatedly, however, that the pilots for Alaska Airlines and the local bush pilots are awesome, so I figured they wouldn't really take off if the weather was too dicey. Sure enough, although the weather didn't look too different to me, we loaded up mail, supplies and 3 passengers and off we went. Gravina Island is across the Passage from Ketchikan and is where our airport is located. Jeff, the nurse practitioner from Craig clinic, was scheduled for pickup on that side for some reason so we actually took off, circled around, and landed to pick him and some more mail up. We got pretty wet reloading for that pickup but we got reloaded and I must say the rest of the take off, landing, flying experience has made me a real fan. The radial engine makes a great sound if you like engines and it was so much SMOOTHER than the bouncy hot air of desert flying!!! Scenery was gorgeous and when we arrived in Hollis at Prince of Wales, we unloaded all the mail and supplies and hopped into the Pacific Airways van for the hour trip over the mountain pass to Craig, Alaska. I chatted with Yvonne, a chef for the M/V Misty Fjord, a small charter yacht that offers a more intimate Alaska touring experience. If interested, check out their website at: www.smallshipalaskacruises.com. They explained that winds in the pass can wreak havoc on flying so unless the weather is near perfect they don't try it and passengers utilize the shuttle. The return flight was lovely with several rainbows and clear weather most of the way.

May 3rd will be Tourist for a Day. Celebration of the Sea Art Walk and the opportunity to try all the beloved summer activities will be offered to locals at discounted prices. There will also be a Blessing of the Fleet by the Fish House (which serves terrific chowder!)

Today our weather is back to clear and lovely. Let us do what we can to support the victims of the tragedies in Boston and Texas last week. I will close with a quote from one of my favorite historical people:

"We must preserve the right in the United States to think and to differ" Eleanor Roosevelt