Friday, November 26, 2021
(F)Rosy-Cheeks on a Peaceful Black Friday
Sunday, November 14, 2021
Winter Wonderland
It was crisp out today, even by Canada standards. I threw the snowshoes in the car and headed to the Eagle River Nature Center hoping to find some powdery trails to practice a bit more in. I was surprised to see my car panel read -20C outside (yes, I still cannot speak Fahrenheit). I was also surprised that I was still gung ho to go, since that's pretty cold by standards in the Anchorage bowl (it's usually a bit warmer being near the coast/inlet)
So glad I did! It was an absolutely gorgeous, desolate, quiet day. Just the sounds of my own feet crunching in the snow, and the odd woodpecker rhythmically pecking away. I encountered a handful of people but less than 10 in 2 hours, so it was like having the place to myself.
When I looked online for places to do beginning snowshoeing, Eagle River Nature Center is one of the spots listed. I was thinking the main trail to the viewing decks would be solid pack, but some of the other trails would not be. Turns out they are all groomed somewhat, so after a few minutes of looking silly, and one foray down a hill through a wooded area just to satisfy my inner child and go offroad, and starting along the Albert loop and reaffirming the trails were groomer, I took them off and carried them for the most part. They might come in handy here on an icy day, but in the soft packed powder, the Sorels alone were just fine.
Despite it being -20C, the river is still bubbling along. It was a stunning scene.
Along the board walks the river was battling between flowing and freezing at the surface, with many frozen spheres moving on the surface.
Along the Albert loops, there is an offshoot called the Geological tour. This was the road less travelled, and made for my snowshoes. So I did get to put them on and go mucking through deep snow for a while. I was following the path of a lone skier who eventually gave up as the ski tracks turned to deep footprints. Definately the right spot for the snowshoes.
Saturday, November 13, 2021
Dang I love days like these
I've worked easier jobs. I've lived more glamorous days. I miss both of those things on many days. But not this day. After 14 inches of fresh powdery snow on Wednesday night, today was the inaugural walk in my first set of snowshoes. And it was fabulous.
I wanted to do the first walk right by the house, since I wasn't really sure if there was a knack or skill involved with this. If nothing else, I could crawl home if it ended badly. It's possible I'm doing it wrong, but really it was just walking. And a lovely walk indeed.
Down by the river there were some moose tracks, and a lone eagle flew overhead, probably amused by my delight at lumbering through the deep snow. It was nice, and quiet, and people free -- my favorite weekend things!
Monday, November 1, 2021
Bezmars-o
Everyone at work has already been talking about Christmas shopping. Maybe it's because we're a reeeeally long way from true metropolitan shopping. But they are talking about getting the orders in quickly. The mail will be slow. There's a shortage of everything. And then, they say they are ordering from Amazon early.
Don't do it, I said. Remember the great toilet paper panic buying of 2020. Do we need to collapse the fragile supply chain ordering this year's equivalent of the furby. But more importantly, Jeff Bezos just went to space. The ultra rich are so damn rich they can have their own rockets. What happens if Jeff Bezos DOES get to Mars? And if he's the first one there, does he get to plant a flag and claim it as his own colony? Would we have to call it Bezmars? It would be werid. Bizarro...or shall I say, Bezmarso.
That said, I still love Christmas, and Christmas shopping....I am just going to try very hard to not fund an intergalactic takeover by the billionaires. To be clear, there is a very good chance that everything I purchase will further spread the wealth gap between me (the poor consumer) and the merchant...but I can feel reasonably good about it if there are no space ships in the employee parking lot when I go to peruse their wares.
The other bee in my shopping bonnet this year is related to climate change and finding smaller sources, possibly sustainable gifts. Yeah, I am going there. Climate change is real (and so is COVID but that's another post for another time). Back in the 80's and the school days, and all the scary stuff they talked about is happening. To be fair, we thought it was going to be from our hairspray (and even more so Bon Jovi's hairspray) and freon, so it wasn't completely accurate (nor did my choice in music truly lead to the decline of the western civilization as was also theorized at the time).
So, I have come across some reasonable products that I like that may make their way into gift bags this year, and all of them check some of the boxes as well -- none are perfect and carbon footprint free. Heck, even when I washed ducks, I burned fossil fuels to get to the duck scrubbing location.
1st up -- Blueland products. I got this for me for my birthday this year (that and I adopted my re-used shelter cat Mr. Muffins). This is the glass bottles for hand soap where you add water and a soap tablet -- bottles are re-useable, recyclable if you ever break or get rid of, and, the tablets are small so you save save some carbon footprint by shipping small tablet refills, rather than giant bottles of soap (which are mostly water anyway).
The best part is the two entire houseguests I have had in the last 3 months in COVID surge-land up here have both commented that they LOVE my foaming hand soap and bottles, and both wanted to know where they could get them. They look nice, and they are a guest pleaser, so these are making somebody's gift this year.
As an aside, there are several other companies doing similar product lines, including Doterra. I fully expect some of the Doterra hand lotions to end up in some gifts this year as well.
Another cool product I have fallen in love with is Prose haircare. It costs a bit more than your standard drug store haircare...probably about the same salon care, but it's really good. You fill out an online questionaire and get a formula tailored to your hair needs. When it's time for re-order, you also rate the product on how it met the needs you asked for...and will tweak the formula to improve with each order. My hair has gotten curlier as I have gotten older...also drier and fuzzier. What I notice is my hair is sooooo soft now. And less fuzzy. I love the fragrance I picked, and have to say, so far I am smitten. Yes, the bottle has your name on it. And they let you opt out of the plastic pumps on refills, because, every bit reducuced counts they say on their website, and me (and the global turtle population) agree. I wish the bottles were glass as well, but they are plastic.
So this year, as I look to smaller companies, more eco-friendly options, I am also reminded of one of the hit gifts from last Christmas. Jerky in a box, from a small company in Drake, Saskatchewan (population 250) -- you know I have a soft spot for small town Saskatchewan. This gift was definitely a winner!
And a local Eagle River favorite spot -- Alaska chicks. Gifted someone a wool beanie the other day and it was so cute I went back and grabbed another for me.
Advertising? Not really, because I don't get paid for these recommendations. Just thought I would give a shout out to some of the little(er) guys who make great gifts, without creating space junk and rocket fumes off the profits.