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  Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
  Wilderness or Wasteland

  NORTHANGER
  A Sail to the End of the Earth






  OneEarth Adventures
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How can the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge be called America's Serengeti and also a wasteland? Some view the 19.8 million-acre Alaskan refuge as wilderness habitat for a spectacular diversity of wildlife. To disturb this unique area would be a crime. Others see a desolate landscape inaccessible to most people. To not extract oil beneath the refuge's coastal plain would be a waste. So which is it -- wilderness or wasteland?

To answer this question, writer and photographer Amy Gulick adventured to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge last June. She went hiking in the Brooks Mountains, rafting the Kongakut River and camping in the coastal plain. She also made a stop in Prudhoe Bay to witness arctic oil development next door to the refuge.

Amy Gulick is an accomplished writer and photographer based in the Pacific Northwest. Her work has appeared in Sierra, E Magazine, Canoe & Kayak, Dive Training, Snow Country and others. Her award-winning photographs have been used by the Alaska Wilderness League, Sierra Club, Center for Marine Conservation, Alaska Rainforest Campaign and the Natural Resources Defense Council.
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ARCTIC NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE: WILDERNESS OR WASTELAND?

Visit Amy's website.

Temperatures below zero; wind like icy daggers; frozen whiteness extending out from a bleak, rocky shoreline—no sign of human presence anywhere. This is the cold reality that greets the six-member crew of Northanger upon their arrival in Antarctica—the end of the Earth.

Northanger, a 54 foot steel Damien II design ketch, was built expressly with the desire to access remote regions of the globe. Small, compact, self sufficient expeditions to high latitudes. On voyages to Norway, Alaska, Antarctica and through The Northwest Passage, Northanger successfully went to the limits and back.

From Ushuaia, Argentina, we sail down the Beagle Channel, past Cape Horn and cross the Drake Passage on our way to the Antarctic Peninsula. Our landfall in Antarctica is 5 miles off the eastern tip of Smith Island.

Greg Landreth and Keri Pashuk are a husband and wife team who met in the Antarctic in 1986 while crewing on different boats. They were married in 1990 in Canada and began purchasing Northanger with the idea of using her for sailing and climbing expeditions. Keri is Canadian, from Bracebridge, Ontario and Greg is a New Zealander from Ashburton, New Zealand. Keri and Greg take a special interest in high latitude sailing combined with expeditionary pursuits – climbing in particular. It is Keri and Greg’s daunting task to initiate their team members to Antarctic ocean crossing – and to keep Northanger’s systems operational throughout the deep freeze to follow.
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NORTHANGER

Our first book is now available
We are pleased to announce the publication of the first book under the One Earth banner: Secrets of the Viking Navigators by Leif K. Karlsen is available directly from the publisher, One Earth Press.

   
Click on the book above to order.

With the current focus on Iraq it is interesting to pause and look at what happened there so long ago...
Echos from IRAQ