The author's wife sets and checks game cameras as a way of continuing outdoor adventure with a baby at home. (Photo provided by Jeff Lund)

I Went to the Woods: Appreciating the mini-adventure

With my left hand managing the 297 soft cover pages, I read.

Tim Cahill was in Mali and having a discussion with a local about laundering money. It was a wild story and made me think about adventure travel. Not to West Africa to be tempted by a local with a money laundering scheme, but heading somewhere that adventure waits — and when the fish are running.

I looked from the words to the windows. The gray afternoon was turning the deep blue of evening. I peeked down at the eyelids facing me. My two-month old daughter was sprawled out on my chest, rising and falling with my breath making adorable sleeping baby noises.

My wife returned home from checking the game cameras on the hill behind the house. I set down the book and discussed the results quietly. There was a buck and black wolf on Tuesday morning and a gray wolf and buck on Thursday a few hours apart.

“I think it’s the same buck.”

“Looks like it.”

It was a nice forkie with a split in the back on one side, technically a 2×3, but a deep, pronounced fork warrants that distinction, not one that is only marginally more split than a crab claw. That was it for the week, but my wife was happy with the chance for a mini-adventure up the steep hill made slick by rain.

The baby continued to sleep while Abby went upstairs to shower. I returned to my book.

Intellectually I knew that I would be forgoing much of my freedom to focus on being a dad, but experiencing it has made me think a lot about how my parents managed my brother and me when we were young. Before we moved to Alaska, they had a small lot on a lake in Nebraska and a heavy fiberglass boat they’d take out on the reservoir to fish for walleye. I was tucked into a vacuum box insulated with blankets so I could sleep. We moved to Alaska when I was five years old, so the memories I have are slimy ones with salmon and smokey ones with campfires at Forest Service cabins.

Now that I’m a dad, these memories make me even more grateful for my parents who continued their lives and careers after my brother and I were born. They included us in their adventures whenever possible so we never became the reason they didn’t have fun anymore.

I have written about gratitude a lot, but I have a completely new appreciation for the resilience of my grandparents and parents this year. Mom’s dad died when she was 13. He was an eighth-grade educated farmhand who took part in the Allied liberation of Italy in World War II. Grandma grew up poor and lived in a train car during the Great Depression. Her mom died when she was three years old and her dad sent her to live with cousins. She worked at a university bookstore then out-lived her retirement. By the time she died, she had outlived two husbands and was broke again, but she had enabled my mom to live a better life and Mom was able to pay for her final years in a nursing home.

Like many other parents, relatives and guardians, Mom and Dad gave me a better youth than they had. We hear a lot about generational wealth, but generational security is incredibly important and instilling the values of hard work and education so we could take advantage of what our parents provided for us will allow Abby and me to provide Haleigh a secure, adventure-filled childhood.

• Jeff Lund is a freelance writer based in Ketchikan. His book, “A Miserable Paradise: Life in Southeast Alaska,” is available in local bookstores and at Alpha XR. “I Went to the Woods” appears twice per month in the Sports & Outdoors section of the Juneau Empire.

More in Sports

Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé Nordic Ski Team and community cross-country skiers start the Shaky Shakeout Invitational six-kilometer freestyle mass start race Saturday at Eaglecrest Ski Area. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
Crimson Bears cross-country skiers in sync

JDHS Nordic Ski Team tunes up for state with practice race

Thunder Mountain Middle School eighth grader Carter Day of the Blue Barracuda Bombers attempts to pin classmate John Croasman of War Hawks White during the inaugural Thunder Mountain Mayhem Team Duels wrestling tournament Saturday at TMMS. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
Inaugural Thunder Mountain Mayhem Tournament makes most of weather misfortune

More than 50 Falcons wrestlers compete amongst themselves after trip to Sitka tourney nixed.

An adult double-crested cormorant flies low. (Photo by Bob Armstrong)
On the Trails: Some January observations

One day, late in January, a friend and I watched two Steller… Continue reading

In this file photo Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé seniors Cailynn, left, and Kerra Baxter, right, battle for a rebound against Dimond High School. The Baxters led JDHS in scoring this weekend at Mt. Edgecumbe with Cailynn hitting 23 on Friday and Kerra 28 on Saturday. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire file photo)
JDHS girls sweep Mt. Edgecumbe on the road

Crimson Bears show road strength at Braves’ gym.

Mt. Edgecumbe senior RJ Didrickson (21) shoots against Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé juniors Brandon Casperson (5), Joren Gasga (12) and seniors Ben Sikes and Pedrin Saceda-Hurt (10) during the Braves’ 68-47 win over the Crimson Bears on Saturday in the George Houston Gymnasium. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
Braves poke Bears again, win 68-47

Mt. Edgecumbe survives second night in JDHS den.

Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé senior Matthew Plang (22) skates away from Wasilla senior Karson McGrew (18) and freshman Dylan Mead (49) during the Crimson Bears’ 3-1 win over the Warriors at Treadwell Ice Arena on Saturday. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
JDHS hockey home season finishes with a split

Crimson Bears topple Wasilla, but fall to Tri-Valley.

Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé senior Matthew Plang (22), senior goalie Caleb Friend (1), Tri-Valley's Owen Jusczak (74), JDHS junior Elias Schane (10), JDHS sophomore Bryden Roberts (40) and JDHS senior Emilio Holbrook (37) converge on a puck near the Crimson Bears net during Friday's 8-3 JDHS win over the Warriors at Treadwell Ice Arena. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
Crimson Bears ending regular season with wins

Weekend double matches builds excitement for state tournament

Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé junior Brandon Casperson (5) attempts a shot against Mt. Edgecumbe senior Donovan Stephen-Standifer, sophomore Kaden Herrmann (13), sophomore Royce Alstrom and senior Richard Didrickson Jr. (21) during the Crimson Bears 80-66 loss to the Braves on Friday in the George Houston Gymnasium. The two teams play again Saturday at 6 p.m. (Klas Stolpe / Juneau Empire)
Visiting Braves earn win over Crimson Bears

Mt. Edgecumbe takes game one over JDHS, game two Saturday.

Ned Rozell sits at the edge of the volcanic crater on Mount Katmai during a trip to the Valley of 10,000 Smokes in 2001. (Photo by John Eichelberger)
Alaska Science Forum: Thirty years of writing about Alaska science

When I was drinking coffee with a cab-driving-author friend of the same… Continue reading

Most Read