This morning, we headed to Capitan's Coffee for breakfast. Andy got a notice that the local ham radio club meets there for coffee on Wednesday. Well, we waited and no-one showed. We did check their website and we were at the right place, date, and time so who knows what happened.
We did a few errands and then I went to the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center (Islands & Ocean). What an incredible place!
"Much of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge has been conserved for over a century, and we share stewardship with Alaska Native people. Development of sophisticated tools and the abundance of coastal and marine wildlife have made it possible for people to thrive here for thousands of years. The refuge stretches across the traditional homelands of the Unangax̂ people, in the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands, as well as smaller parcels on the homelands of Alutiiq/Sugpiak, Yup’ik/Cup’ik, Iñupiat, Dena'ina, Tlingit, Haida, and Eyak peoples.
One of Homer's two outstanding museums, the Alaska Islands & Ocean Visitor Center takes a sweeping look at life along the Alaska’s 5,000 miles of Pacific coastline, from the bottom of the Inside Passage, clear out to the tip of the Aleutians, then all the way up to the Arctic. That long line matches that of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge, five million federally-protected acres of islands, headlands, islets, rocks, spires, and other wildlife habitat (the visitor center is, in fact, the headquarters for the refuge).
In the museum, natural history goes hand-in-hand with 9,000 years of human history here, with a strong sense of theater throughout. An entire room is transformed into a seabird rookery, with sound and smell effects. A life-size trapper – "Mother was an Aleut, father was a Russian," he tells you – appears on a video screen in the door of a cabin, wanting to chat about the weather and fur prices. Special attention is given to the Aleutian Islands. The intimacy with nature of the island’s Native Aleuts is revealed in a rich collection of artifacts made with plant and animal materials (a surprisingly stylish seal intestines rain jacket with grass stitching). Native artifacts yield to displays on World War II in the Aleutians (the battle to dislodge the Japanese from Attu Island was the second bloodiest in the Pacific ), and the cold war military buildup and Atomic Age (three nuclear bombs were tested there)."
From there I went into the museum that starts with the Native Peoples and how they lived and still live on the Refuge. Next section was about the Russians and the Americans and the fur trade and fishing trade and what happened over the course of many years that led to conservation efforts.
There was a section on the war and what it did to the Native Peoples, the Islands and the creatures who lived there.
The last section was on conservation efforts to bring back the refuge and what is happening now and what the future holds.
I am going to post a few things but there was so much more.
This website has a virtual tour as well as movies on the visitor center and the refuge itself. If you have a chance or the time, take the tour and see the shows.
https://www.fws.gov/refuge/alaska-maritime/visit-us
Ceremonial Mask:
We did this museum in 2007. It fascinated me then and still does. I highly recommend going. If not, I highly recommend checking out that website near the beginning of this blog.
Since it was still cloudy-ish, we decided to check out the Salty Dawg. We first headed to the Pavilion where they were having a demonstration of Japanese drumming. Cute:
"The Salty Dawg started out as one of the first cabins built in 1897, soon after Homer became a town site. It served as the first post office, a railroad station, a grocery store, and a coal mining office for twenty years. In 1909 a second building was constructed, and it served as a school house, post office, grocery store. And at one time, it housed three adults and eleven children.
It was acquired in the late 1940’s by Chuck Abbott to be used as an office for Standard Oil Company. In April of 1957, he opened it as the Salty Dawg Saloon. The late 1950’s produced a change for the Salty Dawg Saloon by joining this building to it.
The Alaska Territory became the 49th state of the union in January 1959.
Earl Hillstrand, the late State Representative, purchased it in 1960. After the March 1964 “Good Friday” earthquake, he moved the structure to its present location. The distinctive lighthouse tower was added to cover a water storage tank, thus completing one of Homer’s more historical and recognizable landmarks.
2 comments:
The Tiglax is in port occasionally. Earl Hillstrand is the father of the Time Bandit captain, Andy, and brother Johnathan of the Deadliest Catch. They have another brother Neal, who is part of the Time Bandit also.
Thank you!
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