Alaska's Great Wide Open
A land of silvery light and astonishing peaks, the country's largest state perpetuates the belief that anything is possible
- By Pico Iyer
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2009, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Roughly three out of every five visitors to Alaska view the state from their porthole as they sail along the coast. Many visiting cruise ships embark from Vancouver and head up through the Inside Passage to the great turquoise-and-aqua tidewater sculptures of Glacier Bay, the silence shattered by the gunfire sounds of chunks of ice ten stories high calving in the distance. For days on the ship I boarded, the regal Island Princess, all I could see was openness and horizon. Then we would land at one of the wind-swept settlements along the coast—Skagway, Juneau, Ketchikan.
In these rough, weather-beaten towns sustained by vessels that visit only a few months every year, you can sense the speculative spirit the state still inspires, translated now into a thousand tongues and a global hope. In Skagway, amid the old gold rush brothels and saloons, I came upon two doleful Turks selling lavish carpets at a store called Oriental Rugs. At the Port of Call shop around the corner, haunted mostly by crews from the cruise ships, a Romanian was chatting on a cellphone rented by the minute, while stewards and chambermaids browsed among piles of papadums and banana nuts. Next door, a man on a Webcam had awakened his wife back home in Mexico.
Alaska's state motto is "North to the Future," though of course the future never arrives. I walked around Juneau on a foggy, chill, late-summer morning (Southeastern Alaska's towns see an average of half an inch of rain a day), and the first statue that greeted me commemorated the 19th-century Philippine hero José Rizal, the poet and nationalist who was the most famous martyr of the Philippine Revolution, presiding over what is called Manila Square. Downtown I found a tanning salon, a Nepali handicrafts shop and a large emporium advertising "Ukrainian Eggs, Matreshka Dolls, Baltic Amber." Juneau, the only state capital that cannot be reached by road—"only by plane, boat or birth canal," a resident told me, in what sounded like a well-worn witticism—is nonetheless the home to fortune seekers from around the world drawn by its sense of wide-openness. Not far from downtown lies the Juneau Icefield, larger than Rhode Island and the source for the now receding Mendenhall Glacier, and in open waters half an hour away I saw humpback whales spouting and fanning their tails only a few feet from our boat, while sea lions cavorted even closer.
Alaska's central question is the American one: How much can a person live in the wild, and what is the cost of such a life, to the person and to the wild? By the time I reached Alaska, much of the world knew the story—dramatized by Jon Krakauer's book and Sean Penn's film, both called Into the Wild—of Christopher McCandless, the high-minded, unworldly dreamer who hitched his way to Alaska to live according to the back-to-the-land ideals of Thoreau and Tolstoy. Camping out in a bus near Denali, the idealist soon died. And every time a bear clambered across my horizon, I thought of Timothy Treadwell, another American Romantic archetype, who had spent summers in Alaska living with grizzlies, giving them names and convincing himself they were his friends, until an encounter with one went bad and he paid the ultimate price.
"A lot of people up here have no patience for these guys," a naturalist at Denali had told me when I asked her about the two men. "Because there are people here who have stayed in that bus, and they had no problems. But you've got to have respect for the land, to learn it. The one thing you learn here is preparedness."
That's why people in Alaska study how to read wolf scat and the habits of bears. "Right here she knows you're not going to come any closer, and she's fine," a guide at Redoubt Bay had explained about a nearby mother bear with her cubs. "But go somewhere she doesn't expect you, and Bailey will most likely kill you."
One morning in Denali, a hiking guide had pointed out a poisonous plant McCandless might have eaten by mistake. Then she showed me another plant, one, she said, that "would have kept him going to this day: Eskimo potatoes." (McCandless may have actually eaten the correct plant but mold on the seeds could have prevented his body from absorbing any nutrients.) To my eye they looked the same. I thought back to the maps I'd run my fingers along before coming here, many of the names opaque to me, others—Point Hope—sounding as if anxious visitors had tried, through invocation, to transform desolation into civilization. Some places seemed to combine prayers and warnings: Holy Cross, Elfin Cove, Cold Bay; Troublesome Creek, Moses Point, False Pass. Hours after I'd arrived in Anchorage, volcanic ash had drifted over from one of the Aleutian Islands, about a thousand miles away, closing down the airport—as if to say that all certainties were slamming shut and I was alone now in the realm of the possible.
Pico Iyer has written nine books. His most recent is The Open Road: The Global Journey of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama.
Editor's Note: A sentence in this article was corrected to clarify the geographic location of Alaska's easternmost Aleutian islands.
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Comments (10)
This was an article that brought back a lot of memories for me. The writer in my opinion did a very good job describing a huge and diverse area in a small space. 50 years ago most of the non-native residents other than military personal were in Alaska because they wanted to be. They were individuals, and it sounds as if they still are.
In 1958 I drove to Alaska and found a job with the Army Corps of Engineers in Anchorage. Two years later I had to leave for a four-year hitch in the Navy, which did include one year on Kodiak. Alas, my plans to return after my military service were frustrated by other obligations but those few years were among the happiest and most interesting of my life. To even begin to appreciate the state and the differences between it and the south 48, one must spend at least a year there. In those latitudes sunrise and sunset times can change dramatically not only by time of year but in a relatively few miles north or south. And in Spring and Summer those times can be almost meaningless thanks to the long twilight periods.
A few more photos I would have liked to have seen. The seaplane base at Lake Hood – Lake Spenard near Anchorage back in the early 60’s was home to some 20% of US registered floatplanes. That figure is probably larger now. Then there is Merrill Field at Anchorage, what does it look like today.
Is there no up to date photograph of the exterior of the Salty Dawg Saloon? In 1959 along with a few friends from the Corps of Engineers I visited Homer and met Chuck Abbot. That was 5 years before the Good Friday earthquake and I have never heard how much damage was sustained by that old building. Given its location I had assumed that it was probably destroyed.
Posted by Walt Kramer on December 14,2009 | 02:25 AM
It was a typical afternoon; cool, overcast with an intermittent light rain,in the month of August 1966, when I stepped off the blue catamaran supply ship that had docked in front of the only General Store in the Tlinget Indian village of Kake in Southeastern Alaska. I quickly surveyed the physical setting of this new, different and exciting settlement in which I was to live and work as a Business Studies teacher for the next two years.
The first row of houses were built on the tidal flats. Then there was a dirt road followed by another row of houses. The second dirt road was followed by the last row of houses. There was a very noticeable lack of TV antennas. The single wooden water line from a mountainside spring supplied the buildings with water. During the winter the water line would freeze; thereby, making the use of a potty chair a daily necessity. The resourceful and innovative people who lived on the tidal flats had indoor outhouses. When they had the urge to relieve themselves they would sit on the one holer and allow it to drop into the tide water below. Hopefully when the tide went out it would take the human waste out with it. Needless to say if one were to gather octopus, clams or seaweed for the evening meal it was prudent to go to a beach that was at least a quarter mile away.
I asked a little girl where the school Superintendent lived. She spoke in a flat monotone style of English that the house was in the third row up. I later learned that the young people only spoke English, the middle aged folks were bi-lingual and the older aged individuals just spoke Tlingit. The Tlingit language has a guttural sound to it.
The school year ended in May of 1968. I spoke in the Tlingit language. "Goona-cheech:" Thank you. "Suey-yeah-qua-sit-teen:" See you later.
Posted by Charlie Kenyon on December 14,2009 | 04:21 PM
I HAVE MADE TWO ATTEMPTS TO TELL THE STORY OF MY TWO YEARS OF LIVING IN A PRIMITIVE TLINGIT INDIAN VILLAGE IN SOUTHEAST ALASKA COMMENCING IN AUGUST 1966. EACH TIME I GET THROWN INTO CYBER SPACE AND MY NARRATIVE IS FOREVER LOST. IS THERE A METHOD TO SAVE WHAT I HAVE WRITTEN SO WHEN I GET BACK TO THE WEB ADDRESS I CAN CONTINUE WITH MY STORY LINE?
Posted by Charlie Kenyon on December 12,2009 | 10:22 PM
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Posted by canada private bus service on December 5,2009 | 06:10 AM
This story about Alaska is interesting but unfortunately incomplete and somewhat misleading, particularly from the perspective of wildlife. A case in point – totally omitted from the article - is Alaska’s cruel practice of allowing the hunting of wolves from airplanes for a bounty. These animals are spotted from the air, chased to the point of exhaustion, and then killed by gunshot, their bodies slung under the airplane’s wings as proof of their demise. It’s one reason why efforts are being redoubled to pass the Protect America’s Wildlife (PAW) Act in Washington, DC - to bring an end to Alaska’s abominable aerial hunting program and what apparently passes for ‘sportsmanship’ in our northernmost state.
Also, the photo of the young woman grinning beneath A ‘lynx hat” - all that remains of an exquisite animal who was killed for its pelt - makes me wonder if she knew how her headgear was produced. The lynx is threatened or endangered in many places, including the lower 48 states and here in Maine; this unlucky creature was probably caught in a trap, executed at point blank range, and then skinned. These repulsive details say a great deal about the society that sanctions them.
Both of these animals deserve better from the self-styled superior species we humans claim to be. In my view, Alaska has some vital improvements to make in this regard.
Posted by Don Loprieno on November 13,2009 | 01:52 PM
Iyer provides an ideal image of the territory by sharing some of the smallest details that contribute to the uniqueness of the Alaska experience. I found myself captivated by the extensive use of imagery. I would expect that Iyer writing about his experience brought about much-needed recognition to a beautiful land often overlooked.
Posted by Katherine Richardson on November 12,2009 | 10:12 PM
I love the way Iyer described his journey through Alaska with such detail. I felt like I was there experiencing the stillness of life and the calmness of nature. I am from Chicago and absolutely love the city, and I love going to other cities. I think I'd love to visit Alaska for his reason,"You don't come to Alaska for its cities...but for everything that puts them in their place."
Posted by Tyler Michel on November 11,2009 | 06:46 PM
This article is well written and persuaded me to go to Alaska to camp with a couple of my buddies. I love how the author describes Alaska, culture, people, and wildlife. Its a breath of fresh air.
Posted by Derek Parker on November 11,2009 | 11:48 AM
Despite Iyers beautiful use of imagery and a vivid account of his times in Alaska, one has to question is there is a sense of guilt for divulging a secret twice the size of Texas. Those who search out new fronteirs do it not for others, but for their own satisfaction. In the case of Alaska this satisfaction is most definately a sense of being in an unexplored territory that you are uniquely experiencing. By writing about Alaska and its wonders, the untainted tundra becomes less mysterious every word. Each word attracts more tourists who undoubtedly do not preserve the natural wonders of Alaska. Writing about such a wonderful place is a benefit and detriment at the same time. You are educating readers while at the same time encouraging them to explore the land you so dearly want to protect.
Posted by Alden Harris on November 11,2009 | 10:42 AM
Carey Winfrey states in the opening editorial remarks. "Our title is our greatest asset...Smithsonian confers authority, integrity, responsibility, and trust." As an avid supporter of the Smithsonian these words ring true and are the reasons for my support of the work done by the Institution. However, I am writing out of concern for the publications integrity. I must tell you how disappointed I was to see Smithsonian use a 20 to 30 year old stock photo for the cover showing Portage lake and Portage Glacier in the background. For those readers who are not from the area this photo would seem appropriate for a story about Alaska, the truth is, due to climate change Portage Glacier seen in the background (viewers right) has receded from view and is no longer calving such large pieces of ice. As a resident of Anchorage I can certainly appreciate Pico's enthusiasm for our state. I made that discovery years ago. That said, I cannot understand why the magazine chose to cherry pick from cheap out dated royalty free stock photos to show case a state as beautiful and dynamic as Alaska. I implore the publication to reevaluate when and what stock photos to utilize in their stories and return to maintaining imagery that speaks to the organizations creed of authority, integrity, responsibility, and trust.
Sincerely,
Tim Remick
Posted by Tim Remick on November 3,2009 | 06:55 PM