Monday, June 1, 2009
Days of the Dead
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Clams Ahoy!
We spent the rest of the day in Homer, on the other side of the Kenai Peninsula from Seward. I had been there a few times for work, but Tyler had yet to venture to the 'hip' town of the peninsula and also the 'halibut fishing capital of the world'. So, once again, I got to be the expert. It was really quite a head-inflating trip for me. We stopped at the most widely known bar on the peninsula- The Salty Dawg. It's in the middle of the Homer Spit, which is a 4.5 mile long sand spit. We ordered some tasty local Homer Brewery beer, which Tyler is holding in the above picture. And no, it's not in a pint glass, but rather in a recycled Sobe container. Tyler kept imagining his beer tasted like Sobe flavors. Personally, I think he just had to light of a beer. You may be asking what's in his other hand--a pocket tool and a re fabricated ball point pen! While at the pub, our one and only pen broke while discussing our clamming operations for the next day. So Tyler, being Mr. Can-Do-With-A-Multi-Tool disassembled the pen, evaluated the situation and fixed the problem. We then had an operational writing utensil and could finish the our plans to seek out and conquer the quick-footed razors.
After a day of sight-seeing and sun-bathing, we camped right on the Homer spit. We were lucky to just miss all the memorial day traffic, so we had a nice secluded spot on the beach. By about 11pm, we were privileged to a glorious sunset, too, with reds and purples and a lot more color than we've been seeing in Seward. Most likely, it had to do with the notorious volcano Mt. ReDoubt that we could see steaming across from the spit. Volcanic ash makes for the most colorful of sunsets.
The next morning, we woke up, hit my favorite restaurant in Alaska, Twin Sister's Bakery, for breakfast, and headed out to a new beach for more clamming. Above, Tyler is digging like crazy for a fast little bugger! It took both of us digging, one with the shovel, the other with our hands, to get to the clam fast enough. As soon as the clam feels the digging vibrations in the sand, it starts booking it, digging deeper and deeper into the sand. It was all we could do to keep up with them. We definitely did better than anyone else we watched on the beach--and I could feel the results in my arm muscles the next day! By the end of the day, we had 99 clams in about 4 hours of work! We packed up, headed home, and cleaned and cleaned those clammies for hours on end. I made clam chowder with them yesterday. Thanks to Dad's recipe, the chowder was AMAZING!
This is a view we had from one of the beaches we were on--the only place in Alaska that launches boats with a tractor! There were stacks of corroded, worn tires next to the office building. Tractors aren't built for salt water. It was fun to watch a tractor push a boat into the ocean, though! And when the boat comes in, a poor grunt has to go out in hip waders to hook them together. It's really dangerous work most days, when the surf's breaking on the beach! Tyler met one of the guys who does that for a living. He had broken teeth.
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Ball and Chain
Tyler and I enjoyed our very first wedding anniversary May 3rd. I am officially deamed the 'ball and chain', and Tyler's officially the 'old coot'. We decided to celebrate the loss of our newlywed status with a camping excursion. I got off work the night of the 2nd, we packed up our gear, and hiked about 2.5 miles south of our apartment to the southern tip of Tunsina Beach and camped right on the dark glacial sand that makes up our beaches. It was quite literally the nicest weather we've seen since we moved here--blue skies, no wind, and warmth!
The area we went to is about 1 1/2 hrs from Seward, and far enough on the other side of the peninsula that you can see Mt. ReDoubt, our infamous exploding volcano that hasn't been able to shut up since it started exploding in March. We saw a big cloud of steam coming out of it when we drove over there, you can even see it in this picture!
We continued on to Kenai, and found the longest, widest sandy beach we've seen in Alaska. It's right where the mouth of the Kenai river meats the ocean. This is us on the beach, and if you make the picture big, you can see Mt ReDoubt behind us once again. We were even privileged to a free F-22 flight show, which is the army's new fighter jet. It goes so fast, and went straight up from sea level like a rocket!
Monday, May 4, 2009
More of the fishin!
On Friday, Tyler and I both had the day off. Since Thursday had provided such a bounty of fishy herring, we of course were spending the day pickling and canning the herring. Mid-way through the process, surrounded by fish and vinegar, a friend stopped by to ask if we wanted to hop on a buddy's charter boat and go trolling for salmon. We of course jumped on the opportunity of a virtually FREE boat ride around the bay, especially considering it was one of the warmest, calmest, nicest days we've seen in the year we've been in Seward! So, we quickly wrapped up the herring project and ran towards the harbor.
Friday, May 1, 2009
Tastey herrings anyone?
Spawning herring have arrived in Resurection Bay! Tyler and I have spent the last week looking for signs of herring spawn, hoping to find a big ol bunch of tastey fish. We've trekked all around the bay on rumors of where they were spotted the day before, only to be just a little to late each time to watch a spawning event. They've been around in big schools, spawning on whatever they can. Herring actually don't exist in egg form very long, they develop in only 10 days! The kelp around the bay is all quite quickly becoming covered in little clear herring eggs, which will soon all disapear. And those little eggs have been mocking us all week long--where are your parents little babies?!? Well, on Tyler's lunch break yesterday, he went across the street to see if he could catch anything in the bay (yes, he does this regularly. And yes, he really is Mr. Hunter/Fisherman of Seward...he spends more time with a pole in the water than I think even the fisherman do) In a few short seconds he caught 5 herring! So, after work, some of his coworkers and I headed back down to the docks to try our luck, and did we score!
After all the wildlife viewing and catching, we came home to clean and eat some fresh fish. The deal: I will cook the sides and can the fish if Tyler cleaned it all. Yes! I win! So, we grilled the herring on the barbeque and I made some rosemary potatoes and a greek bean/pea side dish. The sides were very yummy, but I do have a recomendation: Pickle your herring. It's oh so much yummier.
Wish me luck with the pickling!
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Morning in the Backyard
Look at all the green moss and little plant shoots! It reminds me of something fantastical. I kept finding what I would consider perfect 'Gnome Spa' spots today, where they could get a massage and a sauna soak in a perfectly comfy root/moss complex.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Mushies and Pretties Oh MY!
Happy day! A new blog! I hope you are jumping for joy in the knowledge that soon, you will know what we've been up to! The posting has been long coming. We have learned that posting blogs becomes quite troublesome when you have neither 1. time nor 2. a camera. But today was a happy day! We have a brand new 15X zoom digital Nikon camera! So I will bless you all with some freshly taken pictures! It finally came in the mail today, slightly delayed due to a road closure on the Seward highway. We have only one road in and one road out of Seward, so when they decide to work on the road, it gets shut down and we get quite cut off from the outside world. No mail delivery, no fresh produce. It's a very good thing Tyler and I are so industrious, for we can produce our own produce! Pictured below, our Espresso Oyster Mushroom babies:
Okay, more to come later, I just wanted to give you all a quick update!
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