I can’t believe it’s been a week since my last post. Time does go fast. As I left you I was flying to Stebbins to aid in broadcasting the native dance festival. Stebbins has a very nice school, and a great gym for broadcasting from. They have a massena kind of like a balcony that goes around 3/4 of the gym. We set up our equipment up there. It was a perfect vantage point. We were unfortunately running into some compression problems with live channel (the software we broadcast with) so we decided not to use it at all. We had two cameras set up. A Canon GL2, and an s-video camera that John Concilus let us borrow. Randy brought a 50 foot s-video cable, so we positioned the s-video camera on one end of the gym, and had the GL2 at half court. All up in the massena. We had both cameras plugged into a switch allowing us to switch between the video feeds. The kids ran the cameras and the switch, broadcasting the signal to the rest of the schools in the district. Since the signal was being sent through the video conferencing system, we were able to see one other site on our TV. On Thursday it happened to be Shaktoolik. While we were broadcasting the dancing. I noticed there was a lady in Shaktoolik dancing along with the music and video she was getting from us in Stebbins. As we were getting settled in on Wednesday, I noticed that I forgot my sleeping pad. We were sleeping in a classroom at the school, and the floor is really hard. I started getting a headache that evening, and wasn’t able to sleep until sometime after 3:30 A.M. So I was pretty tired the next day. Thursday night I pulled out my parka and snow pants, and slept on top of those. With my parka, it’s like sleeping on a down feather bed. Pretty comfy compared to the night before. So I slept a lot better. During the day the kids were practicing Native Youth Olympics. They have some pretty cool competitions. One of them they have a wiffle ball hanging from the basketball hoop. You have to jump up and kick it with your foot. The hard part is you have to land on the same foot you kicked it with. The amazing thing is there are kids that can kick really high. The world record is over 10 feet high, that’s above the rim. One of the kids in Stebbins was kicking about a foot below the rim. I wish I had some video to post on here. Another one is set up the same way, but they have to jump up and kick the ball with both feet at the same time. There is the wrist carry. To people hold a stick between them, and a third hooks their wrist over the bar. The two people pick the person up and carry them around the gym until they fall off. There are many others. I’ll see if I can find some video to show it off.I got my PHP and MySQL books in. They are pretty big. I am still in the very beginning right now, learning about the origins of PHP. Apparently it was created by a Canadian who wanted a counter on his website to see how many people viewed his resume. It is now the most widely used web-scripting program in the world. I am hoping that it won’t be to far above my head. The exciting news for the week is the crab pot. Erin, C.O. and myself went out last Sunday and cut a hole in the ocean ice to drop a crab pot down. We borrowed a chainsaw from Henry, one of the elders in Brevig. When we started cutting through the ice we didn’t hit water on our fist cut. We cut out a big square, and cut it into a grid. Then we used a chisel that C.O. made, and popped out the ice blocks. On the second level we broke through. Unfortunately the hole filled up with water, and we couldn’t use the chainsaw anymore. It would have been under water. So we had to use the chisel and there was still about 8 – 10 inches to go. It was tough work. We chipped away a hole big enough to slide the pot in sideways and called it quits. We were tired. We went back out Monday and about 3 -4 inches had formed over the night. We chiseled through that since it was at the surface. There was still the layer of ice under water that we had left the day before. So we chiseled that a little bigger and pulled up the pot to see. One day isn’t near enough time, but we had caught a couple of starfish. We are going to pull it again on Saturday. If we don’t have anything again, I think we’ll move it further down the coast. Rumor has it that people used to do some crabbing, but they would go a long ways down the coast towards Nome. I’m hoping that we can do it closer. One thing we have on our side now, is a little knowledge of how to get a hole cut in the ice. It should go a little fast next time.
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