Emma Stevens: A New Zealand author of an Alaskan love story
Romantic memoirs from New Zealand writer Emma Stevens
  • HOME
  • PHOTO GALLERY
    • "My" Alaska (Bush Alaska)
    • Scenes from Daily Life >
      • Climate >
        • Winter Slideshow
      • Keeping Warm
      • Keeping well
      • Housing
      • Transport
      • Food & Provisions
    • The Wedding >
      • The Wedding Pics >
        • The Wedding Gallery
    • Teaching & Education >
      • Teaching & Education cont'd
      • Murals / Classroom
      • Murals /School
  • BUY A BOOK
    • Buy a paperback
    • Buy an eBook
  • BOOK ME FOR A TALK
  • BLOG
  • CONTACT ME

Alaska

Alaska covers the largest area of any of the United States, but is the least densely populated.It shares a border with the Canadian territory of Yukon and the Canadian province of British Columbia, the Arctic Ocean to the north, and the Pacific Ocean to the west and south. Russia is west across the Bering Strait. 

Known for its huge oil and natural gas reserves, Alaska is famous for its export of seafoods such as salmon, cod, Pollock and crab. It's also a popular tourist destination.

My Alaska - Bush Alaska

Slide show of My Alaska
Picture
My Alaska is much less well known to the outside world. My Alaska is rural Alaska, most commonly called 'bush' Alaska. Hidden behind towering mountain ranges and across vast expanses of tundra, snow and ice.It is a place which tourists seldom see. 
Picture
A quick photo taken before freeze.
Picture
Me on my snowmachine.
Picture
View from the passenger's seat of the snowmachine.
PictureA map of Alaska showing Pilot Station and Kotzebue, where Gary was living when I first met him.
It is expensive to access, so few do. The only way in is to 'fly or float.' However everything is weather dependent. Boat access is only during the very short window of summer. The time when ice has finally melted and before freeze-up again.

My Alaska is very popular during mid summer and fishing season, when hunters and fishermen fly in from the lower 48 and pay huge sums to spend a week or so there. Amazed at the wealth of fish and game they are eager to return. 'I have been in bush Alaska!'

Bush Alaska is traditional home for the Inupiat, the Yup'ik and Cup'ik Eskimo, the Aleut, and the Athabascans. There are few tourist luxuries available here.
     
Walking on Ice is about living in Bush Alaska, the place I call "my" Alaska.