FAIRBANKS — In keeping with the Lincoln Bicentennial theme, Gov. Sarah Palin was introduced with a revised, Alaska version of the Gettysburg Address at Saturday night’s Lincoln Day Dinner hosted by Fairbanks Republican Women.
And Palin exhibited her Alaska fashion sense, sporting a tan smoke ring — a circular scarf delicately knitted in Eskimo motifs from fine qiviut, the underwool of Arctic musk ox.Palin also mentioned media confusion about predator control in Alaska.
She said she responded to a FOX newscaster’s questions Saturday with, “For me, I eat, therefore I hunt.”
Then she added for the Fairbanks crowd, “That’s the way we roll in Alaska.”
http://newsminer.com/news/2009/feb/15/palin-speaks-lincoln-day-dinner/Palin does no favors for musk oxen
Michael Engelhard
Jan 24, 2009
http://alaskadispatch.com/tundra-talk/9-talk-of-the-tundra/634-palin-and-the-musk-oxenA 2006 survey of traditional musk ox habitat in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge surprisingly came up short: Pilots counted only a single animal within refuge boundaries. It is easy to imagine that loner as one of the two shag piles our boat crew approached on the Aichilik River, which unbeknownst to us then could have been the entire herd.
What triggered this downward slide of a species sculpted by glaciers? Poaching? A mysterious disease? Toxins in the water or soil?
Residents of Kaktovik, an Eskimo village nestled against the Arctic Ocean's blue sweep, increasingly comment on erratic weather. Colder springs delay breakup season, preserving snow sumps deep enough to stop even 900-pound bulls. Untimely thaw-freeze episodes encase grasses and sedges under an ice crust too thick to be cracked by hooves. Malnourished cows may give birth to weak calves, or leave in search of greener pastures farther west or in Canada. Recently, 13 musk oxen drowned in a flood on the Colville River west of the refuge; others got stranded on raw barrier islands where they pawed sand for sustenance and starved to death after the sea ice melted, mingling their bones with bleached driftwood.
The last musk ox topples notions of ecosystem stability and raises questions that cut close to the bone. Is human-caused local extinction less lamentable than its global counterpart? Do we dare reassess our responses to environmental threats, or are we bull-headed enough to repeat destructive behavior ad finitum?
Outlining a philosophy of sound land management, Aldo Leopold cautioned us to preserve every cog and wheel when tinkering. The realization that we don't even hold all the blueprints or fully grasp the interlocking of parts can be as humbling as a face-to-face encounter with ice-age beasts.
Trained as an anthropologist, Michael Engelhard lives in Alaska, where he works as a wilderness guide. His latest book is 'Wild Moments', a collection of writers' adventures with northern fauna.
