A Quiet Moment

Alaska Wildflowers

I’d like to share a quiet moment I recently had on the McCarthy Road. I was chasing rainbows, looking for them, knowing the light was right. Trees blocked my first glimpse, but if I could make it to the pond before it faded…

I caught the tail end for just a few seconds before the shower came back and blocked the sun.

Rainbow on the McCarthy Road
Caught the last glimpse

Usually, this spot is all about the birds. It’s a favored Trumpeter Swan nesting place most years. But this year it’s the flowers.

Trumpeter Swans
Swan & Cygnet

I was hunting for orchids. They love that moist mossy patch of roadside.  I hoped I’d get lucky and spot one or two. What I found was a whole hill just covered with them. (I wished I’d brought  a better close-up lense.)

The Roundleaf Orchids were my favorites. I guess you might say the Roundleaf Orchid is a quiet flower. Like some people I know. Tiny belly flowers, easy to overlook, but if you really focus on them, a priceless treasure.

Alaska Wildflowers
Roundleaf Orchids

There were other flowers, too, over a dozen different varieties. Not big fields like a Mojave Desert superbloom, but scattered here and there through the grasses and the willows.

But I guess it wasn’t a quiet moment after all. A symphony of birdsong filled the air. It was more of a peaceful moment.

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
Lupines

What was quiet was the road. I stopped for at least 20 minutes and not another car came by going either direction. On solstice weekend!

It reminded me of the old days, before the rest of the world discovered McCarthy, when it was never-never land.

Sparrow's Egg Orchids
The hillside was covered with orchids!

It’s pretty quiet in McCarthy so far this season. There are a few visitors, mostly fellow Alaskans, but no crowds. I like that. It’s the tiny silver lining in the increasingly black cloud of our present-day reality.

But this quiet moment definitely feels like the calm before the storm. Travel restrictions have been lifted. The 4th of July will bring a huge influx of visitors.

A Quiet Moment
Sparrow’s Egg and Roundleaf Orchids

Alaskan villages are haunted by the specter of the last epidemic, the 1918 flu epidemic. Alaska was one of the places hardest hit by that scourge. It completely wiped out entire villages. And it wasn’t the first wave that got ’em, it was the second.

The first wave hasn’t even hit here yet. It could happen again. We’re very far from medical care.

McCarthy, Alaska
Quiet days in McCarthy

But this is also a town with an economy based entirely on tourism. What is the balance between economic survival and the lives of others in your community? That is the question that our village, along with the rest of the nation, is wrestling with now. Even in a community as remote and close-knit as ours, neighbor is pitted against neighbor in this struggle between economic prosperity and keeping people safe.

Personally, I feel that the lives of my friends and neighbors are priceless, much more priceless than that beautiful roundleaf orchid. They’re worth taking a few precautions for, making a few sacrifices.

Historic buildings
McCarthy

If you love McCarthy, maybe for this year’s Fourth of July you might consider giving us a pass and recreating closer to home. If you must come out, do your best to keep us safe. Avoid the crowds. Keep socially distant. Please, please wear a mask. It’s not about politics, it’s about being considerate to others and not passing on a deadly disease that you’re not aware you’re carrying. It’s about keeping all of us here for each other for just a little while longer. Take a quiet moment and think about our community, which like that orchid, is so beautiful but so very fragile.

Thank you, Patti of Pilotfish, for this Lens-Artists Photo Challenge. I’m a day late and a dollar short due to connectivity issues, but better late than never.

 

From A Distance

Big River State Beach

Tina of Travels and Trifles chose Distance as this week’s Lens-Artists Photo Challenge theme. It’s a theme I can relate to.

Talk about social distancing. I am well over 3,000 miles from my home as I wait out this emergency. There are a lot of us gypsy travelers, far from home, who have had to make difficult decisions as the crisis has unfolded. When confronted with the choice of possibly carrying the virus through many distant communities with extremely limited medical care in both Canada and Alaska to my very remote and vulnerable home, I chose to stay put. But it wasn’t an easy decision.

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
Home in the Wrangells, where we have lots of space.

I miss being able to go “out there.”  My mother, 91 years old, in an assisted living facility with a touch of dementia, can’t leave her room, and it is hard for her to understand why she isn’t allowed to go out, even for a breath of fresh air. Her sacrifice is far more difficult than mine.

Those people working the front lines – medical staff, custodial workers, grocery store employees, care givers, truck drivers, all of those in essential jobs, are making far more difficult sacrifices than those of us sheltering in place. They are risking their very lives every day. To all of you, my eternal gratitude for the sacrifices you are making.

McCarthy Fourth of July
Music is important. Sing, play, dance. It’s good for your soul.

We are all making sacrifices.  I’m not alone. We are all in this together.

All the same, I miss home, friends, and family. I find myself already grieving the loved ones I will lose to this virus, even though I don’t know who they are yet. None of us will pass through this trial unscathed.

Get outside, wherever you can. Stay healthy.

But we are fortunate. We live in a time when there are tools that help us feel close to those we love, even if it is from a distance. Can you imagine being in lockdown without the solace of easy communication available in our digital age?

It’s up to us all to help each other weather the storm. Be kind. Be gentle. Be supportive. Be patient with one another. We will all have our bad days before this is through.

Russian Gulch State Park
Listen to the birds sing.

Don’t let fear and despair, anger and frustration conquer your spirit. Take care of yourself. Get outside if you can, even if it’s just for a walk around the block. Stretch. Eat your fruits and veggies. Listen to the birds sing. Dance. Laugh. Play. Dream.  Above all, be grateful. For every little thing.

This too shall pass. It may feel like forever, but it isn’t. And we’re all in this together. There is comfort in that.

Carmel Beach
Appreciate joyful moments whenever you find them.