It is not possible we have been here a week, but we have. Everywhere else seems light years away both in time and distance. Dave, Nancy and Ted head out to the rock den, and I hike. I pause on a ridgeline to eat lunch and take in the view. The wind riffles the pages of my notebook, and the sun feels like a warm hand. Long feathers of cirrus clouds stream across the immense sky. Are we in for a change in the weather? I hope not. We have been so fortunate with the crystal clear days. There is no night. Dave and Nancy reflect on how chilly and dreary it can be when it rains. I can imagine wind-driven rain downpours and penetrating cold. We have not heard a forecast, nor have we picked up any world news. It’s hard to care. This is our world right now.
July 07, 2006
It is not possible we have been here a week, but we have. Everywhere else seems light years away both in time and distance. Dave, Nancy and Ted head out to the rock den, and I hike. I pause on a ridgeline to eat lunch and take in the view. The wind riffles the pages of my notebook, and the sun feels like a warm hand. Long feathers of cirrus clouds stream across the immense sky. Are we in for a change in the weather? I hope not. We have been so fortunate with the crystal clear days. There is no night. Dave and Nancy reflect on how chilly and dreary it can be when it rains. I can imagine wind-driven rain downpours and penetrating cold. We have not heard a forecast, nor have we picked up any world news. It’s hard to care. This is our world right now.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
I am in awe reading this blog on arctic wolves!
ReplyDeleteI have experienced wolves up close backpacking in Denali's Toklat
River valley and on the border of Manitoba and Nunavut, but my one wish in life is to see and experience the arctic wolf. Not an easy thing to accomplish. I've looked into backpacking Ellesmere Island but just getting there costs a fortune.
I was hoping you could give me some information
about getting to Ellesmere to photograph Canis lupus arctos.
Hello!
ReplyDeleteI am hoping this posting will work. I am sorry for the delay! Getting to Ellesmere on commercial trips to the national park, for instance, are expensive and designed for hiking and trekking as far as I know. Getting there on your own is very difficult unless you can charter private aircraft, and even then, you can't get about in that vast landscape. The wolf research conducted by L. David Mech and his associates entails research permits from the territorial government and a mountain of paperwork. The weather station referenced in the Blog is operated by the Canadian government, and there is nothing there but that station. Even flying into the landing strip there requires permits. The BBC and other media entities with huge amounts of corporate funding can afford the support that an expedition on one's own requires. Sorry to be discouraging, but this is one of those places that is next to impossible to just visit as a private adventure.