Thursday, March 24, 2011

Running of the Reindeer


March is a special time of year in Anchorage.  Snow has invaded our lives for the last 4 months and we've endured the darkest days of winter but spring is only a few months away. What a better way to chase away cabin fever than with the highly anticipated celebration called Fur Rody. This festival and sports tournament was created 76 years ago to celebrate when the trappers and miners came to town for trading (http://www.furrondy.net). Now days the most publicized event of The Fur Rendezvous is the Iditarod dog sled races.



Kevin and I participated in one of the less prestigious events called Running of the Reindeer. It's Alaska's slightly less dangerous version of Running of the Bulls. Participants are encouraged to dress up and get silly. A couple of my co-workers (along with our reluctant husbands) took the opportunity to get silly and advertise. We stayed up until the wee hours the night before, coming up with the most absurd tag lines to advertise a dental office. Every time someone would read our signs and laugh we'd follow up with a business card and invitation to check us out.




They used a group of male reindeer from a local reindeer farm at one end of the street. A few blocks down is a lonely female reindeer. A massive crowd of registered runners complete with a number pinned to their shirts are released. Then the studly male deer were set free to zig zag their way through the obstacle of people to find the waiting female deer. Only to be lead back to the beginning of the race in time for the next mass of people to run.





We had a great time hanging out in the fighting crowds and freezing our toes as we waited to run. Elizabeth, my scheduling coordinator, was even touched by a reindeer twice during our run.


Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Anchorage Folk Festival

The winter can be pretty long in Alaska. To combat the cabin fever and remind everyone that there are more than just bear and moose outside residents organize festivals from January through March.


The 22nd Annual Anchorage Folk Festival was from January 20-30, 2011. We went for the final Saturday night show on the 29th. The night started out with a new age meditation piece that put our friends' kids to sleep before the music even started. It was a worrying start but the rest of the show kept us entertained past our bedtime.

The festival encourages family based bands and two were on display for us. The Wright Stripes playing cover songs from the White Stripes with the entire family in on the act. Then later the Hooper Family Band playing together to "stay together."
The Wright Stripes
The Hooper Family Band

The group Relative-ly Famous from Homer were claiming or reaching for family ties with Jewel's aunt and a relation to someone on Lord of the Rings as members of the band.
Relative-ly Famous

Our favorite bands were The Asteroids with their "swingy jazz grass", the Twangabilies and their "timeless toe-tapping tunes from some grizzled old pros", and The Grass-Fed String Band's "organic blend of feel-good roots music with 'new grass' feel." It helped that I actually knew a few of the songs but they all put a lot of energy into their performance and made it a lot of fun. The Grass-Fed String Band also had a hilarious song about not throwing out the water after boiling your vegetables because it has good nutrients, calling it veggie gin or something like that.
The Asteroids
The Twangabilies
The Grass-Fed String Band

Alaskans are very proud of their eccentricity. Not everyone can enjoy living where it stays frozen for months out of the year. They also like to brag about famous artists that have been inspired by their time in Alaska. Here are a couple songs that were mentioned during the show that I thought some of you would enjoy.

Johnny Cash: When It's Springtime In Alaska (It's Forty Below)




John Denver: Alaska And Me



We'll have an update on the biggest festival of the winter, the Fur Rendezvous or Fur Rondy, soon.