Sunday, July 29, 2012

Subsistence Living

 Yesterday we took part in our first subsistence activity - berry picking.  For those who have no idea what subsistence living is (I didn't till we moved here), subsistence is literally living off the land.  The people who live out here don't hunt, fish and berry pick for fun, they do it to live.  A spring with low salmon counts means a really tough winter.  Right
now is berry picking season, the only subsistence activity we can take part in.  Once we have been here for a year, we can hunt and fish, but for now it's just berries.  The tundra is full of ripe blueberries and salmonberries.  Later this summer cranberries will be ripe.  There is no designated blueberry patch, you simply walk out onto the tundra and look down.  We
took advantage of a rain free morning yesterday and all 4 of us headed out, crossed the street, entered the tundra and started picking.  Walking on the tundra is hard work!  It's like walking on pillows.  You think you are on solid ground but then you sink 6 inches deep.  After 2 1/2 hours of walking we were all pretty tired (except Gianna who rode in her sling). 
Tundra Blueberries
          At first glance the tundra isn't very appealing.  There are no trees, it's mostly flat, and the standing water doesn't amount to much more than an oversized puddle.  But on closer inspection the tundra is really beautiful.  There are so many different mosses and flowers, and of course, berries.


Salmonberry

Fruit of our labor
So we are pretty slow berry pickers.  We have a lot to learn.  But we had a good time, we got some good exercise, and we managed to pick enough berries for a blueberry pie.
 

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Home Sweet Home

OK.  So I know its been a little while since my last post, but its been a busy last week and a half.  Last Monday I started seeing my own patients.  For the last month I have been shadowing other providers trying to learn the YK system.  There are so many papers for each patient its sometimes hard to keep track of them all.  My entire PA career (all four years of it) has been with electronic medical record (EMR); now I start here and we have paper charts.  The irony is that in January we move to EMR.  I will just get used to these bulky, heavy paper charts and will then have to learn a new EMR.  Oh well.  My first week went well I think.  There were a couple of late nights and a few really frustrating days, but it can only get better.  The worst part has been only have one car and one cell phone.  This week I have been using my iPhone at work because it has a lot of my medical references on it, and Mark has been keeping the car so he can take the kids to the park if the weather is nice.  I've been trying to predict what time I will get done and be ready to be picked up, but twice I have been pretty off.  So off that Mark has gotten tired of waiting, left and gone home.  I think we are going to have to break down and get a home phone.
Also exciting this week, we finally got our permanent place and our stuff!!  We are in company housing which is great because our water, sewer, and heating oil are all included in our rent.  We have a pretty roomy duplex, about 1000 square feet, but we are a little ways from the hospital.  (A little being very relative.  People here complain about how far away our subdivision is from town, but really we are only about 5 miles away.)  Our rent is pretty much the best deal around, but rent is still $1700 a month!  Most places in the area have rents more than $1700 a month, plus the tenant is responsible for all utilities.  Nothing beats having our stuff.  It has been more than 2 months since we have slept in our own bed.  We couldn't be happier now that we can finally settle in.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Operation: Suture

Coming storm and we have to go straight through it
I got the awesome opportunity the other day to fly with one of the other PAs to one of our villages.  A call came into the ER that a 6 month old got a pretty deep cut on the face that was going to require stitches.  Normally the village health aide would be able to take care of this; however, this particular village didn't have a health aide.  Rather than having baby and mom medevaced to the ER, myself and one other PA got a charter flight to the baby.  We got to the airport around 3:00 with the expectation that we were going to be leaving right away.  However, in true Bethel fashion, there was a "miscommunication" and the plane wasn't going to be getting in for about an hour.  An hour came and went, and we were informed that due to a strong head wind the plane was running about 40 minutes behind!  So we waited, and waited.  Finally the plane arrived, was fueled and ready to go.  The lady at the desk asked me to stand on the scale.  I kindly let her know I didn't have any bags (we were just going there and straight back).  She smiled and said "no, I need YOU to stand on the scale".  So up onto the luggage scale I went!  I should have known then when we walked out onto the tarmac and the pilot would indicated this tiny little plane to be our ride.  With a max capacity of 4 it is by far the smallest plane I have been on.  
Yep, that's the runway ahead
That strong head wind that delayed our charter in the beginning also doubled our flight time to the village.  We landed on a dirt runway around 7:00pm in the pouring rain.
Russian Mission
one of the villages I will visit often
              We were picked up in one of the village's 3 trucks and brought to the clinic.  Although the laceration repair took us longer than we had anticipated (but really what hadn't up to this point) the cut closed up beautifully and the baby did really well.  We hopped back on the plane and made it home by 10:00. 
Alaskan Tundra - with all that water it's no
 wonder there's so many mosquitoes! 

Bethel - Home sweet home
It was such a cool experience!  For the most part the weather for the flight was very clear.  We could see for miles!  It was so strange to me to see so much land and NO human footprint!!  We flew over miles of open tundra, we even saw several moose!  The plane ride was bumpy, but not as bumpy as I thought it would be. I can't wait for my next village trip!

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Taco Bell

 Many of you probably heard about the Taco Bell Hoax that fell on Bethel a few weeks ago.  Right about the time we were getting here, we heard whisperings that a Taco Bell was soon to follow us.  It didn't take long for these rumors to be dispelled.  Apparently, just before we got here, flyers were being circulated advertising a new Taco Bell complete with a phone number for those interested in employment.  It created quite a buzz, but unfortunately it turned out to be a prank.  Somehow, this joke gone bad made national news.  I've heard that it was some kind of research project; I've heard it was just some guy playing a joke on a friend.  Either way, the stir got the attention of the real Taco Bell.  I guess the powers that be at corporate Taco Bell decided this little town in the middle of Alaska deserved a day of tacos.  And if they were going to fly tacos to Bethel, why not make it big?  And if they were going to make it big, why not make it into a commercial?!    
We heard about free tacos and film crews yesterday.  The action was supposed to start around 1:00pm in front of the Cultural Center and we were promised we wouldn't be disappointed.  
I think 3/4 of the town showed up for the chance to be in a commercial and get a taco they may have never tried.  The whole affair had Hollywood stamped all over it.  So its true that there are no roads in or out of Bethel, but we do have roads within the town.  But why drive the Taco Bell truck from the airport to the Cultural Center when you can air lift it by helicopter?  After the dramatic truck landing, we were prompted to all charge across the muddy road for our free tacos like starving children.  All in all, it was a lot of fun.  I'm probably going to end up on national television shoving a Doritos Taco Bell taco into my mouth.  At the very least I made Anchorage news.  But for those of you who know me well, seeing me shove delicious food into my mouth should be no surprise.