A Long Trek Home

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Submitted by damien on

We just finished another great book as part of our regular reading together routine: A Long Trek Home - 4000 Miles by Boot, Raft, and Ski by Erin McKittrick.

From Puget Sound to the Bering Sea ---
Four thousand miles along the edge of the Pacific ---
A world reduced to just two small packs and the next one hundred yards...

In 2007 Erin and Hig embarked on an incredible journey which started from their home in Seattle, Washington and ended in the Alaskan Alutian Islands - 4000 miles of rugged coast adventure using ultra-light backpacking techniques, packrafts, and skis. This book is the story of their year-long journey to "better understand the interplay between human communities, ecosystems, and natural resources" along the northern Pacific coast.

This book is not a how-to book, biography, or a travel guide. It is a collection of observations, stories, and reflections of their journey as it progressed through each of the seasons. Part adventure story, part environmental assessment, part nature guide, and part love story, there is something there for everyone. We were treated to beautiful descriptions of interactions with nature and wildlife. We saw how human activity impacts that wildlife. We visited remote peoples and villages. We learned how this young couple's relationship progressed from being young urban city dwellers to a family living in a yurt (inaccessible by roads) in a small Alaskan town.

One other thing we really like about this book was the "immersive" experience that we were able to have by viewing other media from the journey. In 2007, when Hig and Erin were originally on this journey, I followed their progress in a series of articles, photos, and videos on BackpackingLight. To read this book together and then go back and show the family those photos and videos really helped round-out the experience. One example is the story of a bear encounter they experienced in the spring. To read the account and experience what was going through Erin's head at the time, then to actually see the event recorded on video was really cool:

To immerse yourself a little more in their Alaskan world, there are lots of resources available on Hig and Erin's website Ground Truth Trekking.

Book Giveaway

Now that we have finished reading this book, we want to pass it on to one lucky commenter. All you have to do to qualify to win is leave a comment. The only thing we ask is that when you are finished reading it, please give it away to someone else.

The cut-off date for being eligible to win is Sunday April 11, 2010. Good luck!

Update 2010-04-15: Congratulations to Chris O'Connor (a.k.a. @GrumpyWookie) for winning the giveaway! Please come back here and comment once you have finished reading it to let us know what you think!

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Comments

book giveaway

I would really like the chance to read this book. I'm always looking for good outdoor or adventure realted reads.

Your blogs have inspired me to attempt the Day-Out-a-Week with my wife and high school son.

Blessings to you!

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[...] was one of our family books which Damien read to us in the evenings. Damien's written a longer review and is hosting a giveaway of our copy of the book at ADVENTUREinPROGRESS. I really enjoyed this book, no doubt in part [...]

Alisha, interesting you say

Alisha, interesting you say this. I was thinking of you while reading this.... "hum, Alisha and her family might like this". The book is about their long trek but much of it is about Alaska as a place. 

Yeah, just recently the

Yeah, just recently the Alaska fires have been stoked again. I read all of the books on Alaska in our little library over the summer and I just can't stop, lol! One of the best ones I read was by Peter Jenkins called "Looking for Alaska." It really featured the place and the people. And the other one was written in the 60s and was about a family that traveled from Washington (I think!) to Alaska along the Al-Can in a camper trailer. It was really great. They experienced first hand the big Good Friday earthquake of '64. The ground literally opened up and swallowed one of their neighbor's kids before their eyes. Sad.

I'm sure you feel this, but there's just something so invigorating, something that just makes you feel alive about knowing how you are living on the land, living in a place that one wrong step, it could cost your life, but if you play your cards right, it's Heaven on Earth.

Thanks, Damien! I will! We

Thanks, Damien! I will! We watched a really great documentary today on Alaska. It's called Braving Alaska. It was really amazing to watch how families live out in the bush. The struggles, the home births, the loss, and the complete fulfillment. Lol... don't get me going.

Unique + special

It sounds like an amazing story - in Australia, we barely get snow - well, you have to drive 4 hours to go skiing in winter. And the BEARS - they're incredible creatures.

I'd love to win a copy of the book - it would take me away from my daily train trip - to be immersed into an amazing world of the wild.

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[...] In Progress” website also has reviews of books – mainly non-fiction adventure tales.  One in particular caught my eye – about a couple who had trekked from Seattle to the tip of Alaska – a 4,000 mile [...]