Here are some picture I took during my lunch break of the drifts by our house.
Here's the new snow drift that formed from the south side of our house and across the road to the Catholic Church. The drift was three or four feet high in the middle of the road. |
Here was the honda and snow machine path that used to go between our house and the red house. It was erased by the wind. The wind sculpted the snow like it does the sand at the beach. |
Monday night began as usual. I went to Jill's house for Bible Study. Around 8pm Jill received a call from Carolyn (our principal). We heard Jill say, "I have a few volunteers already here." We were being called to the big school...a pipe had broken and flooded the gym. We bundled up, grabbed our mops, and walked to the big school. On the way there Nathan noticed the Northern Lights glowing above the school. They were low and far away and looked like a green cloud. It was very pretty even though they weren't very bright or "dancing" across the sky. We arrived at the school and were met by around ten other teachers already working in the gym.
First we mopped... |
...then we towel dried the floor. This led to towel races. |
Nathan went back the next day and looked under the gym. There were icicles everywhere! The gym is about eight feet off the ground. There were icicles that reached from the bottom of the gym floor to the ground that were several inches in diameter. No pictures yet though.
Our Next Arctic Reward
Nathan received a call from my dad last night asking if the Northern Lights were visible. Apparently they were supposed to be bright and visible in Alaska. Please keep in mind that the district I work in (15 villages) is the size of Minnesota and that is the state of Alaska was laid on top of the lower 48 states Juneau (east edge of Alaska) would be in Atlanta and the western edge of the Aleutian Islands would be in Los Angeles. Yeah, Alaska is that big!
We had been hopeful this week and the week before when there were Aurora Borealis forecasts but each time we were disappointed or just saw glimpses of a spectacular show that would be happening much farther north (like the lights we saw on Monday night walking with our mops to the big school). I went to bed last night feeling skeptical because there was nothing in the sky.
At 1:15 am Nathan woke me up. "You're going to want to get up and see this," he said, "It's amazing." I jumped out of bed, put on my wool socks, snow pants, sweatshirt, parka, beanie and face mask, glove liners and gloves and my boots and we headed outside into the calm 25 below zero night. Usually the moon is bright enough to light up the snow but for the next several days the moon rises just before the sun and sets right after the sun, so there is no moonlight. I'm watching the snow and trying to breath in a way that won't fog up my glasses and then freeze. We get to the road and I look up and right above me stretching from one end of the village to the other right above our heads are the greenish streaks of the Northern Lights! We walked across the tundra and climbed the hill to the north and just stood and watched the lights. They weren't as colorful or defined as the picture you see of them but they were unmistakeable. We whistled at the (native tradition) and they began to dance. While we were out we could hear another person down in the village whistling to them too. We watched the green streaks dance to the north and become more defined. The streaks would literally flow across the sky. We stayed outside until almost 2am before the cold made us head back in. It was a memorable experience. We don't have pictures yet...Nathan is going to brush up on his low light skills with his camera. Maybe we'll get some good shots before the sun takes back the night. In March on the equinox we will be back to 12 hours of daylight and more.