Sunday, March 20, 2011

Getting supplies in Bush Alaska

Groceries online - who knew?  

All supplies (with the exception of wild game meat and skins, local berries, and firewood) have to come by boat or plane.  Golovin has a very small store that sells mostly groceries and occasionally you can find towels, microwaves, gloves, coffee makers and other assorted things.  You never know what they will have in stock and if the weather has been bad, they may not have much of anything, so it is not a good idea to count on the local store for necessities.  Also, the only milk they sell is canned, powdered, and the long life milk and I am not a big fan of that.  The larger the village, the larger the store and sometimes there is even an AC store, like in Unalakleet.  In Nome, there is an AC store, a Hanson's, and Nome Traders.  Hanson's is part of the Safeway group and AC stands for Alaska Commercial.  Nome Traders is locally owned and operated.  All three stores sell groceries, clothes, household items, and other assorted odds and ends.  AC has the most clothes as it is basically rural Alaska's main grocery and department store.  Nome traders is mostly groceries and has more touristy stuff than the other two, while Hanson's is mostly groceries with assorted odds and ends.

Most of my groceries come through the mail... however, I also took several trips to Nome throughout the fall and would use that time to stock up on fresh foods from the local stores there.  I also occasionally purchase random food items at our local store - especially eggs which are fragile or junk food which I keep thinking I will stop eating.  I think it is also good to support the local store and community.  There are actually several online grocery stores, but I used Fred Meyer's this past fall.  Just go online and put in your order.  They ship your food freight (meaning it does not go through the postal service) and separate everything into either "freeze", "chill", or nothing for dry goods and other stuff.  It takes anywhere from 2-5 days to receive -so some produce just isn't worth ordering from them.  The prices from Fred Meyer's are close to a large city in the lower 48, though some items are more expensive and then there is shipping - which is about 1/3 of the total purchase.

The stores in Nome are more expensive than anywhere I've been in the lower 48 or even Anchorage -but they too have to ship everything in using boats or planes, so of course they will pass on the cost to the customer.  Generally, the items with the greatest cost increase (compared to grocery stores in the lower 48) are the items that are either heavy, fragile, or perishable.  In Nome, a quart of milk is around $4.30 and an 18 pack of AA large eggs is around $6.  It is strange that the only eggs available are grade AA - you almost never see those in supermarkets on the east coast.  When buying from Nome, of course, I have to really pay attention to how I pack the groceries!  The weather and where your boxes are put on the plane can really affect the condition they are in when I get them back to Golovin.  One of the stores in Nome -Nome Traders- takes phone orders!  I call them up and give them my order and my credit card number and they buy my groceries, box them up, and take them to the airline of my choice (Era or Bering Air).  I then call the airline and give them my credit card number and they charge about $.60 a pound and ship it straight to Golovin.  For produce, milk, and yogurt -this is a great deal!!

All household items, toiletries, and pet supplies are best bought online -though some common things can be found at the stores in Nome -if you are going there anyway.  My two main sources for most non-food items are Amazon and Drugstore.com.  I have been blessed in finding most of the things I need from Amazon and eligible for "free supersaver shipping"!!!!  Otherwise, shipping costs can get crazy!!

Pizza delivery in the bush?  Really?!?!  I heard about it and just had to try it!  There is a pizza place in Nome that makes pretty good pizza - though it isn't cheap - that has free delivery to the villages!!  You call them up, order your pizza, pay for it, and tell them what flight you want it on.  Meet the plane and you have a pizza!!  Of course, if you want it hot, you have to put it in the oven but I never expected to be able to order a pizza living up here.  The subway and one of the Chinese restaurants will also prepare a to-go order and get it to the airlines for you (for the price of the food and a $6 cab ride) - but if you really don't want to cook, you don't have to.


Pizza with a packing slip!!!!  Once we pulled it out of the oven, it was delicious!!

Saturday, November 6, 2010

My ECE class!!

School started for me on September 1st. My classroom is in a building owned by the Native Corporation, known as the EDA or the IRA building. All villages have one and in some villages, this is where the ECE/Head Start class is (like here in Golovin). In some villages, the Head Start is held in the school or in a district building near the school.

I have 3 other teachers working with me, employed by Kawerak and not licensed, who are wonderful and have grown up in Golovin -so they are a very good resource for me!! I have 11 students, 7 four-year olds and 4 three-year olds. We have school Monday through Thursday from 8:30 - 3:30. Next week though, we will start having a 3 hour day on Friday, just for the children moving on to Kindergarten in August 2011. This will be a great chance to make sure they are truly ready for school!!

So far, the parent support has been wonderful! Most of the parents work in the same building where I am teaching and so they can pop their heads in and see what is going on and they have been supportive and appreciative of my presence in the classroom and with their children. This makes teaching so much more enjoyable.!!

Teaching this age group is always so fun and fast-paced! Children at this age learn so fast and it is always amazing to hear what they pick up from activities and stories!!

One of the biggest differences in teaching young children out in rural Alaska versus the east coast is the environment. There are no fenced playgrounds with a certain amount of ground cover, no closing school because of a little snow, no rules about keeping plants out of the play area. We take our kids out most every day and they run around a rocky cliff or we go for a walk through the bushes and down steep hills. In the fall, they would pick berries and eat them. In the winter, they slide down the hills on their snow pants. One of our best areas for games is on the road -and all the children know to move over for a truck or 4-wheeler (they call them all Honda's, though there are a few that are different brands) Soon, if we keep getting snow, I guess we will have to move out of the way for snow machines!!

My little ones go and play on the "big school" playground after school and on weekends and once in a while in the fall and spring, we will walk them down the hill (1/2 mile) and let them play during school -then bring them back in one of the teacher's 4-wheeler trailers!! We have skis for all the kids! I can't wait to watch them skiing! We still need more snow and we also need more skis!! Some of the teachers from other sites have even talked about how they took the kids ice-fishing in the winter... WOW! How fun would that be!!


My classroom on the right side of the stairs.


Staff training -Bush style!

I really need to post more... I will work on that! The staff training in Bering Strait School District is very different from the other 5 districts I've worked in. Since most staff is in remote access villages, they fly everyone to a central location, in this case -Unalakleet (pronounced "you-na-luck-leet" or how everyone around here says it "you-na-kleet"). All the teachers, who don't live in town, stay in the school -air mattresses are provided, bring your own sleeping bag! Each school is assigned a classroom -though there are also male-only and female-only rooms for those who prefer that. One of our teachers stays with friends in town, but all the rest of us stay in the same room. This is a fun way to get to know your coworkers -big slumber party!!!

 Nick and I on the way to New Teacher Orientation
 BSSD "School Bus"
 I call shotgun!!!  This is the best seat on these little planes.
 Nick and I waiting to go home after 3 1/2 days of New Teacher Orientation
 Nick taught math and science last year to grades 7 - 12.  This year, we have an additional teacher for math, so he is just science.
 Jill finding a place to sit (she teaches grades 2, 3, and 4)
 The pilot is inside loading the luggage area.
 Amanda (English and History grades 7-12) and Maude (grades K/1) waiting for meeting to start
 Poor Nick.... I kept asking others to take pictures of me and they kept making Nick jump in also, since it was also his first year.
 The school district has a hanger and a gas tank in Unalakleet for the plane.
 Seal Island in Norton Sound
 SHOTGUN!!
 Nick listening attentively
 Beats sitting in chairs for 8 hours
 More "hurry up and wait" - b/c you can't rush a plane!
 Margaret Koegler (principal) conducting a session with husband Alan (grades 5/6 and special ed) "listening" in the background.
 Private planes, ERA planes (yes - Jim Tweeto from Flying Wild Alaska) and wind mills up on the hills.
 Finally going home after 2 weeks of training.
 Inside of our "school bus"


That being said, I had new teacher training August 10th - 13th in Unalakleet, then flew back to Golovin for a weekend of unpacking and meeting a few more people, then back to Unalakleet for full staff training August 16th - 19th. I really like flying on the small planes!! I even got to fly in the copilot's seat on the way back from training on August 19th!!! You can see so much more from the front - I love it!!!

The following week, while K-12 kids were starting school, all of the ECE (Early Childhood Education) teachers went to Nome to have training with the Kawerak staff. Kawerak is the organization in this area that sponsors Head Start. My students are actually in a Head Start program that has a licensed teacher in the room, employed by BSSD (Bering Straight School District) - that's me!!
 Igloo #1 - LOL
 Brenda - one of my co-teachers
 Annette -Brenda's older sister, my other co-teacher
 
Cleaning after training
 Still cleaning
 The man with the hat is our SUPER TALENTED pilot - he will fly in ANYTHING!  Students and staff both have reports of sideways landings, getting their heads bumped on the roof, etc.

 9 different teachers from 9 different villages. Five teachers had to fly ERA.
 I was at the store before getting on the plane asking if anyone needed anything.  They all said EGGS!  Our little store was out, SO I brought home 10 dozen eggs and sold them to the other teachers, saving 12 for me!!


SO, while in Nome, the school district put us up in the Aurora Hotel -one of 2 hotels in town and it is super nice!! Our training was all week and very informative. I learned a lot and enjoyed getting to know all the staff from the different sites!! This will be the only time I see the other ECE teachers until October... SO different from the east coast!

So, during my first month in Alaska, I was in my house a total of 10 nights, took 9 plane trips (7 of them being bush planes -9 seats or less), and stayed in 4 different towns!! Now THAT'S a way to start a new job!!!!!!

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Golovin

WOW!! Golovin is a pretty little village. It is on a point, so to the north, south, and west you see water and in all directions you see mountains also!! I was picked up by one of the maintenance men, Sonny, and taken to my apartment where I met my principal! I walk into my apartment and WOW -all my tubs and boxes are there -I don't have to move them!! How nice. I spent Sunday evening and Monday and Tuesday morning meeting a few other teachers and unpacking and just walking around the town. My classroom is actually in the EDA building which is owned by the Native Corporation. It is a 10 minute uphill walk from town. It is a really nice walk now, but should be interesting in the winter!!! I love being able to see the entire village as I am walking down -it is really special. I think I'm going to love it here in Golovin!!!!!

 Golovin airport from the plane.
 Full moon rising and reflecting on the bay.
 Sunset over the Lagoon

 spare bedroom -now has a boiler in it
 My bedroom.  Many teachers use aluminum foil instead of blackout curtains.
 Standing in the kitchen facing the living room and door.
 Standing in the living room facing the kitchen and bathroom.
 About 15 steps outside of house!


 My side of the building ends just before the right edge of the picture.
 My house
 Truck to deliver water to the people who live up the hill.  People who live downtown are on the city water grid, except for the school - who has their own water tank (though they pay the city to fill it in the summer).
 After making my bed, of course.
 Cutting zip ties off of the totes.
 Breaking into the boxes and totes - all 27 of them.
 When buying sugar.... seal in a bag BEFORE taking to the post office!!!
 EDA building - owned by Chinik Eskimo Community, or the Native corporation.  Houses Head Start, EPA, and other positions funded by Kawerak.  On the right is my classroom and on the left is a large community room and kitchen.  There is also a bedroom in the back that people can rent.
 11 pm sunset between Washeteria and power station.

 resolution is lousy, but this picture was taken from my door
 my shed -in other areas where I have lived, this would just be a porch.  it acts as storage and helps keep snow out of your house when the wind blows like crazy
 Standing just inside
 view from kitchen window
 Golovin power station

Sunrise over bay