All pictures taken by Nancy Stewart

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Alaska, United States
“Photography is a small voice, at best, but sometimes one photograph, or a group of them, can lure our sense of awareness.”

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Spring in Alaska

Spring in Alaska

Spring in Alaska is known as "breakup," because that's a pretty accurate description of what happens. One day there's lots of snow on the ground -- gray because it's been there so long -- and it's bitterly cold. The next day, there's still lots of snow but it's melting fast and there are puddles everywhere. It's time for parents to get out their children's "breakup boots" before sending them off to school.
spring eveningIce is melting in the big rivers -- the Yukon, the Kuskokwim, the Tanana -- and the town of Nenana has been making money off the fact since 1917. For many years, it has held the Nenana Ice Classic, which awards a cash prize to the person (or, sometimes, group) who most closely guesses the time when the ice will go out on the Tanana River. That moment comes when a tripod on the river ice moves enough so that a line attached to it stops a clock on shore. That usually happens in late April or early May.
Spring, like fall, is one of Alaska's shorter seasons. Its length depends on what part of the state you're in; in Anchorage, it often begins in late April when the first carefully nurtured crocuses appear and ends in early June when the lilacs bloom.
The photos above show Anchorage in the spring from two perspectives. Both are views of downtown Anchorage. The top photo shows it as seen from Earthquake Park near International Airport in early spring when ice has melted in Cook Inlet but snow remains on the land.The mountains behind the city are the Chugach Mountains. A suburb, the Hillside, extends up the slopes of some of the nearer mountains

1 comment:

  1. WOW Spring Break up is happening in my house. All the melted snow water is coming in our house. We still have a foot of snow on the ground and the water is leaking in our house :(.

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