Thanks for the tip Jake!You might find airfare from Anchorage to Hawaii to be a better deal . . . I know my sister said there are quite a few folks she knows in Alaska who make the trip southward at least once in the winter to escape to somewhere warm and with more sun.
Yeah, it sure will be. Last week I had to write a personality exam: MMPI-2. I have written it before. Quite the test: 567 true/false questions. "I want to be a florist", "I like to fix door handles" , "I hear voices that nobody else hears", "I am happy with my sex life", etc etc.Good luck Andrew, I hope it all comes off well. Quite an adventure!
Thanks Jags! The entire family is excited. My wife is the most out of all of us. New job: team leader for a team of 6 employees. Nights, days and weekends. I like the rotation though: 5-4, 5-4, 6-4 (5 shifts, 4 days off). I always have 4 days off which is nice.Oh my. That looks....cold. Really, really cold.
Good luck with your new adventure (same job as the old job, or a new job?). It should be a cool experience for the whole family.
You know you are up north when a group of friends is considered a pack.her pack of friends after me
Right and I agree. But I do support something made in Canada with a lifetime warranty. Not to mention, when the coat was originally designed for scientists in Antarctica, they gotta be toasty (and they are nice looking lol..) (broken link removed)A $900 goose jacket . . . was it made from the Golden Goose? Yow-sers . . . seems a mite bit expensive.
Its funny, when I first saw this mentioned, I did get a picture in my mind of the picture Velvetfoot posted, and you guys out there in your red uniforms riding on dogsleds to patrol the frontier from incursions by those pesky yanks But I realize that times have changed and this is not the 19th century anymore... Side question - do you guys still do much actual "mounted" patrolling or is that part largely ceremonial now?
Anyway, congratulations - it sounds like you and your family are in for the adventure of a lifetime. Its fun to use google maps, I was looking at the street view on Inuvik and its like I can actually walk through your future neighborhood - very cool, and the place is like another planet.
Heck even the road trip out there is going to a trip of a lifetime - looking at the map it seems like when you pass through Yukon territory even towns with fuel stops are going to be very far between, probably takes real careful planning. (and am I right that the last few hundred miles is all gravel road though the mountains??? too cool!)
Considering a blog?? I certainly hope it goes beyond "consideration". You write nicely and you have a thoughtful and gentle perspective on things; both make you a natural for a blog. I, for one, certainly hope you decide to go for it. You are, and will continue to be, a credit to red serge (a tailor, I appreciate your dress uniforms and serge!). And hat's off to your spousal unit for being so gung-ho on something that will give you and your kids such great insight into life beyond the tree line!!
coyote...and there's an open hunt for them in many provinces as they don't have any natural predators...just saying...or I could wait and buy a caribou hide or seal skin coat once I get up there.$900 Parka - wolf fur collar?
edit, no looks like coyote fur.
Hubby still has the parka from when he crewed out of Tuktoyaktuk in the 80s to work on drill ships in the Beaufort. Make sure you have all the winter gear you need before you leave as the cost of anything is really expensive in the north. Definitely function over fashion for the winter there. Good boots and mitts would be high on my list as I always have cold hands/feet. Usually wear 2 pairs of socks ... with outer one being wool! You might want to invest in some of these too!"justify" getting a $900 Canada Goose winter parka
My sister still has my Grandma's mink stole ... probably from the 30s-40s. I inherited my hubby's Aunt's full length (from 60s-70s). Very heavy and very warm ... especially good in Winnipeg in the 40 below and windy weather but not something I would choose for every day wear. It has always ticked me off when we have "helicopter" stars coming in to protest hunting/trapping practices ... especially when it is a source of income for the local people. Many of those local folks have hundreds of years of heritage in the hunt and use the skins/furs for winter wear as their ancestors did. Not much wind is going to cut through a skin/fur parka compared to some of the jackets I've had! I especially remember Sir Paul (McCartney) doing a photo op when the seal hunt was on years ago ... standing there in his Mustang suit. I wonder what sort of greenhouse gases were created to make that synthetic floater suit? Not particularly eco-friendly...regularly saw coats that were 50-80 yrs. old come out of cold storage for yet another "season"
Always best to get it from the source! Don't forget the muklucks!! Not sure if you caught the CBC item this winter ... an Inuit design copied from a photo of the shaman who created and was wearing it ... used without permission or acknowledgement by KTZ Fashion and D2Squared. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/inuit-shaman-parka-design-history-1.3345968 I look at that item and think of an opportunity lost by KTZ. If they had been granted permission, can you imagine the hype they could have generated by having a descendant there when it hit the runway?buy a caribou hide or seal skin coat
Hubby still has the parka from when he crewed out of Tuktoyaktuk in the 80s to work on drill ships in the Beaufort. Make sure you have all the winter gear you need before you leave as the cost of anything is really expensive in the north. Definitely function over fashion for the winter there. Good boots and mitts would be high on my list as I always have cold hands/feet. Usually wear 2 pairs of socks ... with outer one being wool! You might want to invest in some of these too!
http://www.walmart.ca/en/ip/hothands-hand-warmer-10-pair-value-pack/6000072430510
http://www.walmart.ca/en/ip/hothands-toe-warmer-6-pair-value-pack/6000118331015
I know milk in the northern reserves in Ontario is outrageous ... fresh fruit and vegetables the same. Food costs will be interesting for you... Since RCMP is paying the freight, don't just take what you need include what you "might" need. We have been a host community for northern evacuations ... folks always go back with far more than what they came with. Do you have snow machines to take with you?
Make sure you and the family take Vitamin D supplements since there is virtually no sunlight in the winter (bone health and also has effects on mood as it is used in combination with prescription drugs for depression). Hubby said it really throws off the circadian rhythms with virtually 24 hr sunlight in the summer and none in the winter. Northern lights are great though!
When Hubby was in the Beaufort, they used to hire local folks for polar bear patrol. Not sure if they are as problematic in Inuvik as they are in Churchill, MB but figure the same caution is prudent. Kids at one of our more rural schools have been trained when they hear the air horn, you get inside... wolf in the yard. I would imagine they have roughly the same system there...
Enjoy the new experience Andrew ... and keep us posted.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.