This week while attending the my first Wilderness Risk Management Conference (WRMC) in Portland Oregon, I was lucky to be one of a handful of Alaskans to see our friend and mentor Deb Ajango receive the ever Charles (Reb) Gregg Wilderness Risk Management Award.
Deb has made outstanding contributions to the field of risk management, mentoring organizations like ours and authoring two books on the subject, which are now required reading for our staff. Each of our full-time staff members--myself, Tom and Nick--have taken the 80-hour Wilderness First Responder from Deb, which are widely considered to be some of the most diverse, practical, and challenging WFR classes you can find. Deb's wilderness medicine classes and in fact her entire risk philosophy are rooted in her experience as a guide on Mt. McKinley, as a one-time director of a large outdoor program which experienced a multiple casualty incident, and as a bear attack survivor where her husband was seriously mauled. Deb has dealt with more adversity, tragedy, and the painful healing process than anyone I know in the outdoors profession. It is thrilling and inspiring to see her not just remain in the outdoors profession, but to witness her rise to a level of national prominence in risk management and to receive this prestigious award.
Deb has a visit to Kodiak planned for December of 2012 to teach another Wilderness First Aid course. I highly recommend this course for anyone spending a lot of time outdoors or at sea.
http://www.safetyed.net/
A blog about Island Trails Network and all things trails from the desk of the Executive Director. www.islandtrails.org
Friday, October 26, 2012
Monday, June 18, 2012
Alaska Kayak School offers 10% discount to ITN Members
Catch
the new wave of modern sea kayaking skills development. Following a hiatus
since the sea kayaking skills festivals in July and September of 2009, the
Alaska Kayak School returns to Kodiak for a 4 day skills and safety festival.
If you’re a beginner or have never had formal training from certified
instructors and sea kayak coaches, you will benefit from the introductory
courses and trips: skills, rescues, navigation and journeying. If you’re an old
hand and have trained with certified instructors, have dome paddling
assessments and have practiced your skills over the years, you will benefit
from the Open Water Program: skills tuning, intro to open water, open water
rescues and towing and open water journey. All equipment can be provided, but
if you have a sea worthy sea kayak, dry suit, and all the safety tools, you can
use your own gear (and get a small discount). Hope you can join us the 5-8 July
for 4 days of fun and learning.
For a limited time, AKS is offering a 10% discount to ITN members in good standing.
For
details and pre-registration go to http://www.alaskakayakschool.com/2012/Kodiak%202012%20Skills%20and%20Safety%20Festivalaa.htm
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
June Executive Director's Report
Our marine debris Octopus "Ophelia" was completed
by Bonnie Dillard, Eva Holm and a few volunteers from Kodiak High School just
in time for Crab Festival this
year. Instead of entering her into the
parade we were allowed to showcase her right downtown near the fisherman's
memorial outside the harbor office.
There, she drew thousands of admirers and hundreds of photo-takers, and brought
attention to the kinds of things washing up on our beaches and their potential
impacts on the marine environment.
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"Ophelia" guards the fishermens' memorial outside Kodiak Harbor Office. Merrick Burden photo. |
We received word this month that NOAA reconsidered our grant
request for a clean-up of Tugidak Island, and increased the funding from $90k
to $120k. This will expand our clean-up
from seven back to our original proposal of ten weeks on the ground. Half of these will occur in 2013, the other
half in 2014, leaving us plenty of time to
recruit volunteers, to arrange logistics, and to avoid sensitive times
at Tugidak around migratory bird nesting and seal pupping seasons.
On May 22 we began our first trail crew of the season, a
six-week hitch for Kodiak High School students and grads called the
"Frontcountry Crew". True to
their name, this professional conservation crew consists of seven young
individuals and two crew leaders working on trails and public lands near Kodiak. Beneficiaries of their work include state,
local and federal agencies including State Parks, the City of Kodiak, Alaska
DOT and the Fish & Wildlife Service. The crew blog provides a
project-by-project account of their work, which is co-authored by crew leaders
Nick Kesling and Lesley Seale. You can see
short bios and photos of Nick, Lesley, and all ITN seasonal crew leaders here.
|
The first project for the Frontcountry Crew (FCC) was to
complete the boardwalk on the mist net trail for FWS, a project we had intended
to complete last year. This trail serves
a citizen science program where refuge volunteers capture, band, and monitor
migratory songbirds throughout the summer and the mist net operations began
June 6th. We were eager to complete
trail work in time to leave the habitat untouched during the study, and are
glad to have wrapped up one of the few outstanding projects left over from last
year.
Next up for the Frontcountry Crew was to provide a path in
Fort Abercrombie between the new Camp Host site (located near the newly
constructed pole barn) to the new tent sites to be constructed later this
summer. The completed project left a 4'
tread of full-bench construction, with a critical edge on steeper sideslopes
composed of native logs. The bench will receive a gravel lift during
Ft. Abercrombie Trails Day in late July and until that time park users are asked
to please stay off this vulnerable section of new trail as the ash layer sets
up.
Here and there, the crew has also been performing
maintenance and small trail improvements that you may enjoy--stump removal from
Rotary Park trail corridors, a trailhead overhaul and litter removal from Island Lake Creek Trail, even cleaning
out the pedestrian access over the Buskin River bridge (did you know it was paved
under all that gravel?). This crew knows
that it's the little things that count, and they've set out to beautify Kodiak
in this way.
On June 9th and 10th we welcomed four seasonal crew
leaders. Maya Edgerly, Andrew Martone,
Alex Maros and Ethan Zubkoff will lead the Backcountry Crew (BCC) comprised of
volunteer interns from Columbia Preparatory & Grammar School. Longtime ITN fans will remember CGPS from
previous years. This high school has
furnished an ITN trail crew each year since 2009, and provided countless hours
of volunteer service for us. They
conducted two of the three marine debris clean-ups we've done at Shuyak Island,
installed over a mile of geoblock at Spruce Island and Anton Larsen Bay, built
several bridges and played a large role in the construction of Rotary Park
trails. This year, Columbia Prep is
sending fourteen students--the largest crew ever. Add to that two chaperones and four crew
leaders and you've got a small army of do-gooders. This year CGPS's focus will be continuation
of the marine debris clean-up begun at Halibut Bay last year, and construction
of bridges on the Ouzinkie to Sunny Cove easement trail. Between June 14 and July 4 you can catch
updates on this crew several times a week on their blog.
But before Columbia Prep's arrival on June 14th, we're
training our crew leaders on sustainable trail construction and maintenance,
provided this year by Christine Byl.
Together with her husband and partner Gabe Travis, Christine owns and
runs Interior Trails out of Healy, Alaska, just outside of Denali National
Park. Christine has been working on
trail crews from Montana to Alaska for sixteen years and brings a wealth of
experience to our training classroom.
She is providing this training with the help of Alaska Trails, a
statewide non-profit that supports community organizations like our through
training, consulting and technical assistance.
We have based our training out of the FITC (Fish Tech) center on Near
Island, a great classroom facility with trails nearby. This week we've covered topics such as tool
safety, trail sustainability, new trail
construction, trail maintenance, design and layout, tread structures, retaining
walls, climbing turns and switchbacks, and rigging. We are grateful for our partnership with
Alaska Trails and Interior Trails, who impart their hard-earned wisdom to me,
our six crew leaders and seven members of the Frontcountry Crew.
After the trails-specific training ends on Wednesday June
13th, we will conduct in-house training on items specific to crew leaders and
spend a few days on logistics. Beginning
June 15th we will conduct training on Wilderness Survival and Bear Safety training
before mobilizing to Halibut Bay and Spruce Island to embark on our backcountry
projects for the year.
Wilderness survival training is a much-expanded topic for
ITN crews this year, thanks in part to guest instructor Jim Dillard. Jim covers topics such as how to dress for
the outdoors, what to put in your day pack, how to build a shelter or start a
fire in difficult conditions, and the many uses of a knife, saw or axe. These are critical skills for anyone growing
up in or moving to Alaska, and the woodwork he teaches has numerous crossovers
to trail building techniques. I'm
thrilled that Jim's been willing to share his expertise with our crews.
With that training under our belt, we'll be ready to
undertake the season's work. I look
forward to reporting on our progress throughout the summer.
Monday, May 7, 2012
May Executive Director's Report
As usual, spring has turned out to be our busiest time of year. There's a lot going on and I didn't report last month (too busy), so let's get started:
Our second annual Kodiak Outdoor Film Festival was a success, drawing over 265 people for an evening of great entertainment. Local filmmakers Shane Onders and Kathryn Symmes took home top honors, and all the videos had the standing-room only crowd cheering, laughing, and yelling for more. For ITN staff and board members, the best part of the night is meeting and greeting all of our loyal supporters (But we can say that partly because we get to see all the films in advance during the selection process). ITN thanks our members, volunteers, and many sponsors for making the Outdoor Film Fest a Kodiak institution.
Our second annual Kodiak Outdoor Film Festival was a success, drawing over 265 people for an evening of great entertainment. Local filmmakers Shane Onders and Kathryn Symmes took home top honors, and all the videos had the standing-room only crowd cheering, laughing, and yelling for more. For ITN staff and board members, the best part of the night is meeting and greeting all of our loyal supporters (But we can say that partly because we get to see all the films in advance during the selection process). ITN thanks our members, volunteers, and many sponsors for making the Outdoor Film Fest a Kodiak institution.
We have a full slate of activities and events scheduled
for this summer. Something is going on
nearly every weekend this month. In the
interests of space, we have not listed them all here, but you can check out all
ITN happenings on our website calendar.
This month saw a host of grant applications come back--all approved! Here is a taste of what ITN will be doing in the new few years.
We received a legislative grant to construct 2600'
of hiking trail on municipal land located on Near Island in the city of Kodiak,
Alaska. This one will go right alongside the channel, teeing off an existing
trail in North End park and contouring the hillside to the city parking lot
near the St. Herman harbor launch ramp. We
believe (and often say) that a robust system of trails on Near Island serves
the recreational needs and provides healthy alternatives to automobile travel
for all members of the community. By providing hiking experiences easily accessible
from downtown this trail in particular will add to the visitor experience and
provide an economic return to the city of Kodiak. We can't take credit for the idea
though. This trail was first proposed in
a 1987 Near Island Comprehensive Development plan adopted by the City of Kodiak
and the Kodiak Island Borough. In 2011 City of Kodiak renewed their commitment
by passing a resolution (2011-34) specifically supporting Near Island Phase
III.
We've also received a small grant to
"clear the way" for the coming bike path. As you may know, $3.1M has been allotted for
the design and construction of Phase 1A which will span from Kodiak Pier 2 to
Deadman's Curve. Phase 1B of the bike path will span from Deadman's Curve to
the USCG base and will closely parallel Rezanof Drive but may depart from the
D.O.T. right-of-way (ROW) where (1) the trail can service nearby population
centers, business and recreational areas or (2) natural terrain features and
drainages render ten-foot trail corridor impractical. A paved bike path is a
large public works project, and something beyond our means to construct. But as the project is likely to take years to
complete, we have offered to punch through and make some soft-surface trail
improvements to make the half-finished trail usable in the intervening
years.
We received a legislative grant to resurface
an existing 800' trail linking residents and businesses of Marine Way to
Mission Road via Father Herman St. The trail resides entirely on City of Kodiak
land and enjoys frequent use by downtown residents, dog-walkers, hikers and
those seeking a nearby refuge from nearby industrial zones. This 6-foot widened tread will allow for
comfortable two way foot traffic and slow two-way bicycle traffic. Increased
use and lack of proper drainage has caused incising along the tread and led to
ponding and muddy conditions along the trail. The resurfacing project will
incorporate natural and artificial drainage features such as outslope, crowning
and grade dips to ensure adequate drainage.
To round out the list of "terra
trail" grants, we received funding to make improvements to a short trail that links residents of Sharatin Drive
and adjacent subdivisions to the Trinity Islands subdivision via the Perenosa
Drive right-of-way. Parts of Perenosa were platted decades ago but never fully developed
as a street (that's why you never hear of Perenosa Drive except through ITN). In
the ensuing years, some forgot about the right-of-way and thought of it as
their backyard, while others used it to shortcut to nearby neighborhoods. The construction of a backyard fence in the
Perenosa right-of-way in 2010 brought the purpose of ROWs into sharp focus. Were they intended for streets and public
utilities only, reverting back to the adjacent landowners if utilities and
streets weren't needed? Or did they
retain their public value as conduits for moving people on bikes, on foot and
in strollers through a maze of dead-end streets built for automobiles? After public review, the KIB Planning and
Zoning commission and KIB Parks & Recreation committee chose the latter,
and we are following up by improving the trail to meet the current use
patterns.
We continue to make conservation of our
coastlines and watersheds, and have had some recent fundraising successes here
as well.
ITN was awarded a grant this month from the Marine
Conservation Alliance Foundation for marine debris clean-ups at Halibut Bay,
Long Island, continuation of our incentive program for set net fisherman, and
project to remove derelict crab pots from Womens Bay. We also received a grant from NOAA to conduct
seven weeks of marine debris clean-up at Tugidak island in 2013. This will be our largest single clean-up yet,
and is focused on the heaviest concentration of debris we’ve found on the
Kodiak archipelago. Together, these grants
account for a significant increase in our efforts at coastal conservation over
the next two years, which seems like good timing—the impact of marine debris
from the 2011 Japan tsunami is just beginning to be felt here.
There has been extensive media coverage of marine debris
caused by the tsunami, mostly as a human-interest piece. The autographed soccer ball on Middleton
Island which was traced and returned to a Japanese youth and the Harley
Davidson motorcycle that washed up in British Columbia both made national
headlines. An anchorage network
affiliate picked upon a local effort to map the appearances of team-logo fly
swatters from Kodiak to Montague island near Prince William Sound. These flyswatters, novel are they are, are
most likely not related to the tsunami.
Rather, they along with the hundreds of customized water bottles, and
miniature foam basketballs are the contents of a container spill from a passing
freighter. ITN President Patrick
Saltonstall first blogged about them after a deer carcass survey on the west
side of Kodiak, only later discovering that the phenomenon has spread over
hundreds of miles of coastline.The curious absence of any of these sports
novelty items from locations east of PWS or in southeast Alaska suggests they
arrived by different means than the large plastic oyster floats and polystyrene
cylinders that have impacted the entire state.
Regarding these larger, latter types of debris, they
started showing up by ones and twos in Alaska in late 2011. Kodiak first reported finding these large,
apparently foreign objects in a late December KMXT article, but the majority of
reports on the SeaAlliance facebook page, which was launched by MCAF to monitor
tsunami debris findings, were coming from Yakutat.
Around April 20, Kodiak pilot Dave Hilty flew his
personal plane from Sitka to Kodiak after working as a herring spotter. He passed Cape Fairweather, Icy Strait,
Middleton and Montague Islands and finally Shuyak, Afognak and Kodiak island
for his return home. Hilty told me that
he’d flown this route for many years, and always seen one or two oyster floats
per year along the way. This year he
began counting soon after taking off from Southeast Alaska, noticing right away
an increase in debris levels. Then he
began counting by twenties. In all he
estimates he saw 4000 floats along his flight path.
On April 26 Nick flew with Hilty to look more closely at
the Kodiak archipelago and found dozens of oyster floats scattered around
Shuyak and north Afognak islands. The
numbers were lesser in quantity than HIlty observed around Montague island and
the north gulf coast but far more than we would normally see here. On May 3rdNick and I traveled by
kayak from Monaskha Bay to Anton Larsen Bay to inspect our work sites and
counted two tsunami debris pieces--one rigid black one at Termination Point and
one polystyrene white one near Kizhuyak Point.
Passing Ouzinkie we saw Herman Squartsoff, who first reported the
flyswatters to me back in March, and he told us he’d found 28 more.
The flyswatter epidemic and the tsunami-generated Oyster
floats may be from different sources, but they all signify an increasing amount
of marine debris washing up. ITN will continue to monitor and document these sightings to
target future clean-ups and to make the case, if needed, for additional funding
to protect our shores.
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Fly swatters hit Kodiak shores
Recently, an epidemic of sports-logo fly swatters have been hitting Kodiak beaches, presumably lost from a shipping container (foam basketballs too). Todd Anderson decided to start mapping them. Check out this link to see if your favorite team has washed up, and where.
Found a flyswatter? Email location, team name and your contact info (optional) to toddanderson907@gmail.com.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Trail enthusiasts: the future of the Russian Ridge trail system will be re-shaped tonight. Come to the KIB Parks & Recreation trails summit and make your voice heard!
Tonight at 7:00 PM Kodiak High School Commons, the Kodiak Island Borough Parks and Recreation Committee will be holding the first public “TRAILS SUMMIT” This meeting is an opportunity for residents to share ideas, discuss issues and talk about the conditions found on our trails in an effort to improve their enjoyment. During the meeting, special emphasis will center on the Russian Ridge Trail System.
Items to be discussed include: Introduction of the newly adopted Road System Trails Master Plan to the community. Opportunity to comment on trails along the road system. Share concerns; suggest improvements (bridges, trail hardening etc.). Information gathered at this Trails Summit will be the topic of future Parks and Recreation meetings. The second part of the meeting will be a focused on a discussion about Russian Ridge Trail System. The P&R Committee is looking for public input in the development of a Trail Management Objective (TMO) for this area located between Selief Lane and Monashka Bay Road. This trail system is a multi-use area popular with motorized and non-motorized users. This trail was identified through the Trails Plan process as an important community trail. Part of this area has also been considered for residential disposal at a future Borough land sale.
Please come share your ideas.
For more information, please contact the Community Development Department at 486-9363
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Help us complete this Marine Debris Masterpiece!
This Saturday, join dozens of other students and volunteers who have worked on creating "Ophelia", a giant Octopus created entirely of marine debris! This is part of an outreach effort by ITN and Kodiak High School art program to teach more people about the marine debris phenomenon and the impacts of the plastic and derelict fishing gear washing up on our shores. Volunteers will be cutting, sorting and washing marine debris and placing individual pieces on the Octopus. The completed sculpture will then be placed on display in the KHS foyer. Volunteer should use the front entrance to the high school (near the office). What: Marine Debris art workshop Where: Kodiak High School art room (use front entrance near office, follow signs) When: Saturday, April 14 12-5 PM, or any portion thereof! Who: KHS Art Program and Island Trails Network See you there! |
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