When we moved here we left the tennis stuff in the lower 48. But we were surprised to see rackets at the local sporting good store.
Turns out there are 2 courts in town. And the high school has gotten a tennis team in the last year or 2.
But it's not always easy playing this sports in Kodiak. If it's not the rain, it's the snow.
Maybe shovelling the courts strengthens your tennis serve.
In any case, if they are willing to shovel in order to play, this team is bound for the State Finals for sure!
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Saturday, February 19, 2011
A mid-winter's dive
On a January stroll, along the edge of Ft. Abercrombie....
...thought we found two sea otters.
But turns out we were wrong.
No otters, just something odd. Pretty, yes.
But, 25 degree air temperature and 34 degree water!
Till it warms a little more, think we'll go on hikes, or at least hope we stay inside our kayaks.
But, may we recommend, that before you just jump in that water......
visit with these guys......
to get a little local info on our scuba and our surfing.
Then, go enjoy!
...thought we found two sea otters.
But turns out we were wrong.
No otters, just something odd. Pretty, yes.
But, 25 degree air temperature and 34 degree water!
Till it warms a little more, think we'll go on hikes, or at least hope we stay inside our kayaks.
But, may we recommend, that before you just jump in that water......
visit with these guys......
to get a little local info on our scuba and our surfing.
Then, go enjoy!
Friday, February 18, 2011
After the storm
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Winter takes it's toll
We enjoy watching eagles in the winter. There are lots of these guys around: 600 breeding pairs on the island says the Internet. And that leaves out all those juveniles we see around town, looking for their winter meals.
But, winter is stressful on our animals. Last week the newspaper reported that a kayaker found 3 dead eagles on an island right here in Kodiak's St Herman harbor! Another was struck by a car, and a fifth one was electrocuted. All in one week!
In January another one was electrocuted in downtown Kodiak...and that was a famous eagle. The oldest bald eagle on record in Alaska: 25 years old. It survived the Exxon Valdez oil spill effect in Kodiak.
Seems like a lot die. Last year we lost about 33. We might be seeing more, but that is because people are learning to report them when they find them.
If they are dead, Fish & Game ships them frozen to Denver, where they store them and distribute them to natives for religious ceremonies. As common citizens, we are not supposed to even touch them. Leave them as they are and let F & G pick them up. Those are the rules.
And if you find a weak and injured one, don't try to help it. They are quite dangerous to approach, even if they look weak to you. When laying on their back they are particularly menacing: their claws are then in perfect position to tear you face and chest. Beware! We know people who have seen those hurt by such animals.
Any way, if F & G gets a sick one, they send it to rehab off in Anchorage. That is where the one on the small picture on the left went, less than a week after I took it's picture.
To read the article about the resent lost ones, copy and paste this address on your browser:
http://www.kodiakdailymirror.com/?pid=19&id=9551
Anyway, here's one juvenile sitting on a broken pier. See the wind lifting his head feathers? The white head is starting to show under the brown juvenile feathers. His body is as wide as a telephone post! I think their feathers are more "fluffy", making them look wider and bigger than the adults.
But it still looked cold. 20 degrees and over 20 mph winds. Not moving, just conserving energy.
Don't worry. He's young. He'll make it.
But, winter is stressful on our animals. Last week the newspaper reported that a kayaker found 3 dead eagles on an island right here in Kodiak's St Herman harbor! Another was struck by a car, and a fifth one was electrocuted. All in one week!
In January another one was electrocuted in downtown Kodiak...and that was a famous eagle. The oldest bald eagle on record in Alaska: 25 years old. It survived the Exxon Valdez oil spill effect in Kodiak.
Seems like a lot die. Last year we lost about 33. We might be seeing more, but that is because people are learning to report them when they find them.
If they are dead, Fish & Game ships them frozen to Denver, where they store them and distribute them to natives for religious ceremonies. As common citizens, we are not supposed to even touch them. Leave them as they are and let F & G pick them up. Those are the rules.
And if you find a weak and injured one, don't try to help it. They are quite dangerous to approach, even if they look weak to you. When laying on their back they are particularly menacing: their claws are then in perfect position to tear you face and chest. Beware! We know people who have seen those hurt by such animals.
Any way, if F & G gets a sick one, they send it to rehab off in Anchorage. That is where the one on the small picture on the left went, less than a week after I took it's picture.
To read the article about the resent lost ones, copy and paste this address on your browser:
http://www.kodiakdailymirror.com/?pid=19&id=9551
Anyway, here's one juvenile sitting on a broken pier. See the wind lifting his head feathers? The white head is starting to show under the brown juvenile feathers. His body is as wide as a telephone post! I think their feathers are more "fluffy", making them look wider and bigger than the adults.
But it still looked cold. 20 degrees and over 20 mph winds. Not moving, just conserving energy.
Don't worry. He's young. He'll make it.
Friday, February 4, 2011
Ft. Abercrombie walk in the snow
The day after the "walk" down Island trail, we took a walk around the lake in Ft Abercrombie. There is still snow on the ground and you have finally burned up some calories after being cooped up with those long winter nights.
So, today take a real leisurely walk around one side of the lake at Ft Abercrombie, go to the ocean, and return on the other side of the lake.
Hope you enjoy what there is to see: ice skaters and ice fishermen on the lake; cormorants; an eagle at the sea shore. You might even see a sea otter. How about fishing boats working in the cold?
On the way back, pay attention to the moss on the trees. Their persistent green color gives you a "warming" sensation, even on the snowiest days.
You never know what you'll see. So get out and enjoy whatever there is.
So, today take a real leisurely walk around one side of the lake at Ft Abercrombie, go to the ocean, and return on the other side of the lake.
Hope you enjoy what there is to see: ice skaters and ice fishermen on the lake; cormorants; an eagle at the sea shore. You might even see a sea otter. How about fishing boats working in the cold?
On the way back, pay attention to the moss on the trees. Their persistent green color gives you a "warming" sensation, even on the snowiest days.
You never know what you'll see. So get out and enjoy whatever there is.
Once the snow stops, get out and enjoy..
The Lower 48 has been cooped up for a week with bad weather. It has now stopped.
So do what we do in Alaska. Get your 14 year old lab and that pesky little rat dog on their leashes. Get your IPod loaded with a nice beat of Spanish classical music.
Now get out and enjoy what's around you!
We'll climb to the top of the hill and and follow the creek from Island Lake down to the ocean.
After being cooped up, you'll thoroughly enjoy the exercise.
So do what we do in Alaska. Get your 14 year old lab and that pesky little rat dog on their leashes. Get your IPod loaded with a nice beat of Spanish classical music.
Now get out and enjoy what's around you!
We'll climb to the top of the hill and and follow the creek from Island Lake down to the ocean.
After being cooped up, you'll thoroughly enjoy the exercise.
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Kodiak Coast Guard saves the day... for a distressed vessel in the Atlantic
A fishing boat, taking on water beyong what the bilge pumps could pump, called out for help. No it wasn't local; their accents seemed awful strange. It was a Southern accent.
And it was from over 4,000 miles away. Off the Florida Coast in the Atlantic Ocean.
No one else heard it. Kodiak listened and got its coordinates. So USCG Kodiak called Florida to try and reach the vessel. A Navy ship was 12 miles away and to the rescue they went. The Navy Times reported the rescue, but appreantly never mentioned it was initiated form over 4,000 miles away.
Way to go, Kodiak! Always keeping those earphones on!
Apperantly radio transmissions can bounce off the ionosphere, skip the local air and he heard far, far away.
To hear the transmission about it, go to KMXT, the local Public Radio Station in Kodiak. You can hear the conversation in the background and their report on the story. Copy and paste the following on your browser:
http://www.kmxt.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2462&Itemid=2
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