Southeast
Also known as the Panhandle, Southwest Alaska is a 500 mile coastal strip made up of hundreds of islands. The inside passage is a transportation route through these islands.
Southcentral
The Southcentral region curves from the Gulf of Alaska, past Prince Williams Sound to Kodiak Island.
Anchorage
The Anchorage Bowl holds almost half the state’s population.
The Interior includes three major roads – the George Parks, Glenn and Richardson highways – that cut across the center of the state and pass a number of forests, state parks, and recreational areas, including Denali and Wrangell.
Fairbanks, Alaska’s second biggest city, is in the flat valley floor formed by the Tanana and Chena rivers. This is the best place to see the Northern Lights.
The Bush
The last region is The Bush, it is larger than the five regions put together and is separated from them by vast mountains and powerful rivers. The Bush covers a wide range that includes the Brooks Range, Artic Alaska, Western Alaska on the Bering Sea, the Alaska Peninsula, and the Aleutian Islands. I spent my fist two weeks in Alaska traveling through the Southwestern region and exploring Anchorage. I am now living in The Bush and loving it!
I am living in the Western part of The Bush region on the Bering Sea. I get to watch the sun set into the Bering Sea from my bedroom window every night (that is when it sets before midnight) and a few weeks ago I went swimming in it. The majority of the Bush is made up of small, remote native villages that can only be reached by plane or boat, and endless stretches of untracked wilderness.
Historians believe that the first Alaskans migrated from Asia between 15,000 and 30,000 years ago. The nomadic groups followed the animal herds. The first groups to come over were the Tlingit and Haida tribes, who settled in the Southeast region and the Athabascans, who settled in the Interior. The other two major groups were the Inupiat, who settled the northern coast (they are also called the Inuit), and the Yupik, who settled southwest Alaska. Life was harder for the Inupiat and Yupik tribes than the tribes further south. The cold winters and cool summers forced them to develop a highly effective seal-hunting culture to sustain life in the harsh regions of The Bush, which they maintain today.
Transportation
There are roads in the village and one ten mile gravel road that leads to another village, but these are the only roads on the island. The main mode of transportation is by Honda (4-wheeler) or in the winter snow machine. There are a few trucks on the island, but most people just use Hondas.
Food
Weather
Light
When I first arrived in Alaska the sun would set around 1 a.m. and would rise around 6 a.m. It took some getting used to, but I found that I could get so much done in one day. I didn’t get much sleep the first month, because I would be doing something and didn’t even realize that it was midnight. The light has not lasted as long as I would have hoped and every night we get less and less light. Right now we have normal days, the sunsets around 9:30 pm and rises around 8:30 a.m. That just means we are slowly heading to the long dark winter. I want to experience everything Alaska has to offer so I am looking forward to experiencing the dark cold winter.
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Villages in The Bush
The Bering Strait School District consists of 15 schools that stretch along the Bering Strait, not including Nome. I have been to four villages in the Bush so far and everyone has been different and unique. They are all small, remote villages with their own unique beauty.
Stebbins
Stebbins
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St. Michael
Mt. Michael is the only other town on the island and the only town we have regular access to. It is a little smaller than Stebbins but it has a larger store, so we often make trips to the store in St. Michael. It is only 10 miles from Stebbins so its landscape is similar.
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Mt. Michael is the only other town on the island and the only town we have regular access to. It is a little smaller than Stebbins but it has a larger store, so we often make trips to the store in St. Michael. It is only 10 miles from Stebbins so its landscape is similar.
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Unalakleet
The district office is in Unalakleet so I spent my first three days in The Bush sleeping in the school for new teacher training. We travel to Unalakleet a few times during the school year for training. Most flights to Anchorage go through Unalakleet because they have a larger airport, with a paved runway. It is a larger village with tundra and a hill with several windmills on it.
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White Mountain
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The Bush is a beautiful and mysterious place to live. I am so glad I moved up here! Although I am very isolated I work with some amazing people that I am so thankful to have in my life and I live in a stunning part of the world that not many people get to see. There are some challenges that I have faced here and I have had to make some lifestyle adjustments, but I am so thankful to be here.
Love it! So glad you're enjoying your life there! The pictures are absolutely gorgeous :)
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