North to the Future

"The last claim under this Act was made by Ken Deardorff for 80 acres (32 ha) of land on the Stony River in southwestern Alaska. He fulfilled all requirements of the homestead act in 1979 but did not receive his deed until May 1988. He is the last person to receive title to land claimed under the Homestead Acts."

The FLPMA of 1976 put the kibosh on homesteading by repealing all the homestead acts.

You can still "homestead" but you have to buy the land from a current landowner.

Occasionally, the State of Alaska has programs where you can stake land and get it at fair market value. Sometimes, they might reduce the price if you live on it for 35 months (homesite program), but that's not in effect anymore.

But, Putin will give ya a couple hectares in Siberia if you'll live on it.

That was probably right about the time I was looking into it. Which makes it about 40 or so years ago instead of 30. (egads, where have all the decades gone?)
 
This morning's weather alert

"...HIGH WIND WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 6 AM UNTIL 4 PM AKST THIS AFTERNOON ALONG TURNAGAIN ARM AND HIGHER ELEVATIONS... * WHAT...East-Southeast winds 40 to 60 mph with gusts up to 80 mph expected. * WHERE...Turnagain Arm and higher elevations of Anchorage, including the upper Hillside. * WHEN...From 6 AM to 4 PM AKST today. * IMPACTS...High winds may move loose debris, damage property, and cause power outages. Travel will be difficult, especially for high profile vehicles. "




What it doesn't say is that it's likely to rain and glaze the roads. It's a damn fine day to stay in the cave.
 
"Every time I walk into my shift, I can see into the ICU.
I love standing outside and glimpsing the beauty of this profession before I walk in to the middle of it. There are beautiful moments, like a sunny day a while ago when nurses had moved a patient’s hospital bed outside to enjoy the sun and there are harder moments like what we see now.
These days, it’s darker outside, the lights are on all the time and there is often frenetic movement. I see teams in full PPE huddling to discuss a case, a silhouette of a nurse making adjustments at someone’s bedside or someone “term cleaning” a room after a COVID patient has left, either from being discharged or from passing away.
Each hospital room has always felt like a book to me, holding short stories of the patients and providers who inhabit these rooms, sometimes for minutes, sometimes for months.
These days, the stories are sadder than usual. They are full of “I thought I would be fine” or “I can’t breathe” or “I didn’t think it would be this bad” mixed with the occasional “ I didn’t want to come in" or "I waited as long as I could because I know how busy you all are.”
The phone rings endlessly with lab calling to say “Patient Y is COVID positive” or EMS saying “arriving with a patient struggling to breathe.”
The heroes of these stories are many: The nurses who look at me in near desperation and say, “I don’t know what else to do,” but then find a way. The house cleaners who work in silent teams, exhausted but moving as fast as they can to clean and open another room. The unit secretary who calls multiple hospitals to see if anyone has space to take a patient our hospital cannot accommodate. The respiratory therapist who, in the middle of the night, calls another respiratory therapist thousands of miles away to figure out the details of a new machine because we have run out of all the other regular machines. The pharmacist who stays late to help walk a nurse through a new treatment option. The house supervisor figuring out how to launder more gowns as we are going through them faster and faster every day. The doctor, who after calling a family to let them know their loved one may not survive COVID, says to her colleagues, “This is awful, I grew up with that family and he is younger than me” but who has to keep working, taking no time to pause or grieve, because she has six more newly admitted patients waiting for her.
At the center of every story is a patient with their own history. The father who thought he would quickly clear COVID like his family but who now can’t breathe and is now being admitted to the ICU. The healthy individual who cleared COVID but then comes back with chest pain from a heart attack likely caused by the disease. The little girl crying because she has a high fever from COVID and her belly hurts. And then there is the dog bite, the stroke, the car accident, the cancer patient who all have to wait longer as we try to find a staffed bed, a nurse, another resource in an already taxed system.
Those who help write these stories are each of you. When you choose to stay home, rearrange your business, your life, and your family as best as you can, you are choosing to protect your community, your family and each other, and you are changing these narratives. By keeping your distance, wearing a mask, washing your hands, increasing indoor ventilation and keeping your social circles small, you are helping decide how these stories will unfold. You are choosing to not let this virus determine our fate and ensuring there is room to care for those who need care. We want to there for you and yours when need us, but it is getting hard and we need your help. Together, we chose how this story ends, so thank you for doing what you can - it matters."

- Anne Zink
 
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Today is the last day of the year with 6 or more hours of official daylight, here.
 
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