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| Bed. |
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| TV and microwave. |
Jonnie 711's scrapbook. Expect no lofty platitudes here. *Now arranged chronologically!*
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| Bed. |
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| TV and microwave. |
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| Keep Driving. |
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| New Years 2000, Las Vegas Strip. |
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| Donald's storage unit. |
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| Dancing on makeshift tables. |
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| Passing out & sleeping in the dirt. |
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| Worth a close up. |
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| Me in the chair, Todd standing above, Amanda on the right, & our photographer in my lap. |
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| Cantwell collage. |
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| Valdez Harbor, crack of dawn. |
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| Donald & Chris in the cabin. |
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| Chris, our Captain. |
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| Cowboy Fishing. |
I discovered this ad for Cowboy Fishing magazine while browsing through a different magazine in the Anchorage library and thought, "That's a real specialty item!"
From the ad text:
Enjoy a magazine with in-depth articles about cowboys and fish, written by cowboys who love to fish with other cowboys. Subscribe today. YEEHAW!How large could the audience for this publication possibly be? Do they fish with a lasso?
While the Internet was not readily available in rural Dillingham, Alaska, where I spent the mid-90s, we did have cable TV, so I kept hearing all about how great the Internet was. At first, it seemed like a fad. Initially, I thought they were just talking about email and that people were overenthusiastic about it. Then you'd hear about kids causing trouble from information they found on the Internet and all the rampant porn. That's when I started getting excited about going online—so much information so easily accessible! In the analog world, you had to really hunt around for things.
When I returned to Anchorage in 1997, the World Wide Web (then commonly known as the "Information Super-Highway") was a mainstream phenomenon, but I still had never used a browser in my life. I was able to self-educate myself in the free computer labs of the University of Alaska, Anchorage.
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| "Fuck you, ape face!" |
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| Jesus has joined the Work Force! |
“Life is a bucket of shit with a barbed wire handle.”
– Jim Thompson, Texas By The Tail
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| Todd's customization job. |
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| Mel, Laura, me, & Todd: Ready to set off to Alaska. |
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| Carpet. |
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| The "Green Egg Van" in Seward, AK. |
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| Let the Sun Shine: Donald & the blue Econoliner. |
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| The blue Econoliner from my apartment window, Anchorage, 1997. |
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| Tire stud informational display. |
People sometimes use chains in the continental states, but the studs are better for long-term daily use (winters are a lot longer up there).
They're an extra expense, the unused set of tires (studded in summer, regular in winter) requires storage space, and changing them is another annoying task on the To-Do list every 6 months or so.
In Anchorage, modern apartment complexes had electrical outlets available on posts located in the parking lot, one for each parking space.
In Dillingham, we would run an industrial extension cord from the house to the van.
Here is a photo of me changing a tire on the ice, using a lever made from firewood to assist my piece-of-crap jack:
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| Changing a tire in a frozen driveway. |
Dillingham, Alaska, when my brother Todd and I were there (1995–1997), was a very secluded part of the world—it still is, I guess, but internet availability probably changes a lot. When I was there, we had no internet, though we did have cable TV, so we weren’t entirely disconnected in terms of information, even back then. It was certainly physically disconnected, though. There were no roads to or from Dillingham; it was more of a hub town for a handful of scattered Yu'pik villages and a boat harbor with access to Bristol Bay. No fast food, though there were a couple of restaurants, bars, and grocery stores.
One year, our supervisor directed us to participate in the local parade. We drove the company van through the streets of Dillingham. While we didn’t have it together enough to create a proper float, we felt we should haul something, so we put an old Nordic Track exercise machine on the flatbed trailer and hauled that behind us. Our supervisor created a wooden figure which we all referred to as the “Walk Dude.” We added a few balloons and some signage to identify ourselves, and we were good to go.
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| The company van. |
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| The "Walk Dude." |
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| Signage, balloons, and brother Todd. |
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| Driving into town. |
Probably our most outrageous source of entertainment in Dillingham was the potato launcher.
Our boss built it from PVC pipe—just the right diameter to snugly fit a potato down the barrel. At the base, he attached a wider plastic chamber with a screw-off cap, where we’d spray in the “fuel”: Aqua Net hairspray. (It worked great until they changed the formula; after that, we had to switch brands. The key was finding something flammable.)
He rigged it with an old electric grill starter and a bolt inside the chamber, so all it took was pressing a red button to send a spark across the chamber and ignite the hairspray. We kept a broomstick handy to use as a ramrod whenever a potato didn’t quite fit.
When you hit the button, it let off a loud bang that echoed through the trees, and the potato launched with surprising velocity. My supervisor once speculated that a direct hit could break a man’s ribs.
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| Potato Launcher. |
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| Taking aim. |
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| Todd prepares to launch a potato. |
We used to set up targets in the backyard and fire the potato gun at them—usually an old trash can lid propped up with rocks.
That was one of the perks of living in the middle of nowhere. There’s no way we could’ve gotten away with that in a suburban neighborhood without drawing the attention of the neighbors—and probably law enforcement.
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| Our crew, most days. |
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| Skif Pilot Jonnie. |
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| The old barge. |
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| Todd welcoming us aboard. |
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| Glen tying anchoring our skif to the barge. |
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| Fishing off the barge. |
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| Remains of a WWII era bathroom. |
Canned meat has been a part of my life, and I’m happy to share this memory:
Chicken of the Sea – Back when I was living in the Alaskan Bush (pre-internet), entertainment was scarce. To pass the time, I started writing to companies in hopes of getting free coupons. One day, I wrote a letter to Chicken of the Sea, claiming that I had found a chicken feather in my can of tuna. I told them it was probably the result of a worker on the production line who thought it would be funny play on the product name.
Chicken of the Sea replied, saying that it was very unlikely for a worker to have done that, due to their stringent quality control processes. However, they did send me two coupons for free cans of tuna.
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| Seward Boat Harbor. |
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| Me with a salmon I caught. |
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| Either Snake Lake, or Lake Aleknagik. |
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| Baby Bear on the shore of Lake Aleknagik. |
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| Brother Todd eating a caribou rib. |