Categories: blog

Life in Alaska | Bedford Hills NY Real Estate

Life in Alaska

Thirty below four days before Christmas, and I am trudging through drifted snow along an old snowmachine trail that makes a thin, mostly obscured line across three miles of the frozen lake. A heavy snowfall last week weighed the two-foot-thick ice. Despite the bitter cold, water swelled through cracks and holes in the sinking ice, flooding the layers of insulating snow to lie hidden the drifts.

My father follows me slowly with his snowmachine as I walk the trail to see if the water buried underneath is deep to weaken the trail’s surface.

If the machine falls through the packed snow into the water flooding over the ice, it will freeze instantly in the slush, accumulating ice until it can’t move. By walking ahead, I can watch for this danger, and if the water gets too deep we will go home rather than risk soaking our feet and wrenching our backs trying to extricate the machine in the cold weather.

We don’t want to give up, because my brother will be on the weekly mail plane when it lands oil the tiny airstrip across the lake. He is coming for Christmas, and we are trying to make a safe trail so he can cross the lake to the home in which we grew up.

If the machine can’t get through, I will try with our dog team. The light wooden dog sled glides easily above most of the slush, and the huskies will go through the water, although they don’t like it. My twin sister and partner, Miki, and I usually travel by dog sled instead of snowmachine, but today the dogs are resting. They have pulled our sled more than 650 miles since the fall freeze-up—about 240 miles in the past three weeks—and they have earned their Christmas vacation.

For most of the winter, my sister and I use the dogs to travel along remote trap lines, catching furs, which provide our main income. Usually we set out 60 to 100 miles of trap line, with cabins or tents every 15 or 20 miles, and the dogs make a round trip every week or 10 days. Although slower than snowmachines, the dogs are less likely to break down, are quieter, more versatile, better company, and they do not bog down in overflow.

Now, as my boots sink through the crusted trail into water with a sickening sensation, I wish my dog team was here on the lake instead of the snowmachine. “There’s some bad stuff here, I call out. My father guns the machine, guiding it sately across the soggy slush before stopping so we can trade places.

Robert Paul

Robert is a realtor in Bedford NY. He has been successfully working with buyers and sellers for years. His local area of expertise includes Bedford, Pound Ridge, Armonk, Lewisboro, Chappaqua and Katonah. When you have a local real estate question please call 914-325-5758.

Recent Posts

Out of Sevice with brain injury since November.

Just back out of hospital in early March for home recovery. Therapist coming today.

2 years ago

Existing home sales down 28% | Katonah Real Estate

Sales fell 5.9% from September and 28.4% from one year ago.

2 years ago

Single-Family Housing Contraction Continues | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Housing starts decreased 4.2% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.43 million units in…

2 years ago

Closed Median Sale Price in Hudson Valley/NYC Markets Declined by 2.50% in October | Bedford Real Estate

OneKey MLS reported a regional closed median sale price of $585,000, representing a 2.50% decrease…

2 years ago

Building Materials Prices Decline for Second Consecutive Month | Pound Ridge Real Estate

The prices of building materials decreased 0.2% in October

2 years ago

Mortgage rates drop with inflation drop | Bedford Corners Real Estate

Mortgage rates went from 7.37% yesterday to 6.67% as of this writing.

2 years ago

This website uses cookies.