Chicago Sun-Times

ON ALASKA’S WESTERN TIP, OLD WAYS MINGLE WITH MODERN LIFE

Rugged Wales offers whales, fishing and most convenienc­es — when the weather cooperates

- Trevor Hughes @trevorhugh­es

WALES, ALASKA The single-engine Cessna buzzes back down the gravel runway, clouds of snow swirling in its wake as it pops into the air, climbs aloft and circles around.

Silence again descends upon one of the most remote villages in the United States.

Life is hard here. People and animals struggle to stay warm, to find shelter, to eat. The relentless wind scours the snow, whipping flakes into unprotecte­d eyes. Extremely bad weather often means there’s no connection with the outside world for days at a time.

But the Internet usually works. And there’s fresh salad if you’re willing to pay the freight charge.

Welcome to the westernmos­t town on the mainland United States, where native Inupiat traditions are increasing­ly clashing with the modern world, where schoolchil­dren watch LOL videos on YouTube but also learn to make kuspuks, traditiona­l coverings for parkas. Most residents have cellphones.

“Looking back, it’s just like you’re in a movie but living it,” says Clyde Oxereok.

A ninth-generation native of Wales, Oxereok, 57, has left Alaska twice: first on a high school trip to California, and again to attend basic training in Georgia. During the Cold War, Oxereok and other family members served in the Alaska Army National Guard in Wales, providing surveillan­ce across the strait that polar bears today routinely cross. A Russian island is just 18 miles away; mainland Siberia is 50 miles off the coast.

Stepping from the plane into Wales feels a lot like stepping back in time. Most people lack running water inside their homes, which means they use “honey buckets” for toilets, carrying them outside to be emptied into a disposal lagoon. Hunters like Oxereok eat bowhead whale, walrus oil and reindeer. His trigger finger gets itchy whenever he sees a seal swimming in the icy ocean.

HELICOPTER LIFELINE

On the other hand, as many as six planes a day land at that gravel airstrip, carrying in basically anything Amazon sells and you’re willing to pay for. That air lifeline is tenuous, though, and frays fast when the weather is bad.

“Last year we ran out of toilet paper in the entire village. We didn’t see a helicopter for six weeks,” says Michael Potter, a teacher on the nearby island of Little Diomede, which is actually even closer to Russia than Wales.

Students from Little Diomede last week were helicopter­ed into Wales for a basketball tournament. They stayed in Wales for a few days, sleeping in high school classrooms while they attended classes and awaited their ride back.

“People don’t understand — this is not like going to the zoo or going to a camping trip into the Sierras,” Potter says.

“Out here, it’s truly life and death. It’s not for the faint of heart. If you don’t look out for each other, people freeze to death.”

YOUTUBE AND WHALE HUNTS

The young men of the village smile as they eagerly await the first whale hunt of the season. The Bering Strait is a chokepoint between the Pacific and the Arctic, which means large numbers of whales, seals, fish and birds flood through with the changing seasons.

The Inupiat culture is based around shared values, and in Wales, extended families remain close. Oxereok’s older brother often jokes that a kid misbehavin­g on one side of the tiny village will have angry and well-informed parents waiting at home.

Oxereok says technology is forcing the culture to change. “You have to earn money to buy a cellphone, to pay the electric bill. People are more on a time constraint than when I was a kid,” he says. “In the last 10 years you could really see technology leap into our village.”

 ?? TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY ?? A patroller searches for signs of polar bears in the town dump outside Wales, Alaska. Climate change experts say faster-melting sea ice is causing polar bears to move onto land and seek out new food sources, like garbage.
TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY A patroller searches for signs of polar bears in the town dump outside Wales, Alaska. Climate change experts say faster-melting sea ice is causing polar bears to move onto land and seek out new food sources, like garbage.
 ??  ?? World Wildlife Fund worker Elisabeth Kruger records whale noises in the Bering Sea as Wales native Clyde Oxereok keeps her on land.
World Wildlife Fund worker Elisabeth Kruger records whale noises in the Bering Sea as Wales native Clyde Oxereok keeps her on land.

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