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Erin McKittrick - Mudflats & Fish Camps: 800 Miles Around Alaskas Cook Inlet

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Erin McKittrick Mudflats & Fish Camps: 800 Miles Around Alaskas Cook Inlet
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Mudflats & Fish Camps: 800 Miles Around Alaskas Cook Inlet: summary, description and annotation

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Experiences of a family that opened its front door to walk 800 miles in the wilderness Alaska holds a mythical place in the American imagination as our wildest, coldest, largest, and farthest frontier. It is also the home of writer Erin McKittrick, who lives in a yurt on the shore of Cook Inlet with her husband and two preschool-age children.Mudflats and Fish Camps chronicles McKittricks journey, along with her family, as they set out to hike and paddle the entire coastline of Cook Inlet, a distance of 800 miles. This is unconventional parenting in the extreme, bringing kids not just into the woods, but into quicksand, snow, and the realm of grizzlies! And while their story includes all the stubbornness, excitement, and sleet-in-the-eyes awfulness that comes from walking their way through the world, it also provides an intimate history of a wild and fascinating place and the people who call it home. While many adventure tales spring from the restless quest of someone seeking to find themselveswhether floundering in the possibilities of youth or in the throes of a midlife crisisMcKittricks story is about a person who has already found her purpose in life. Its an adventure that happens right in the authors backyard, providing her an unusual depth and connection. And its not a story of record-breaking speed, hopeless under-preparedness, or a radical transformation of the soul. Instead, it describes the journey of an ordinary family stepping into the wild outside their home. The wonder of the landscape, the exuberant joy of children outdoors, and the magic of exploration make Mudflats and Fish Camps an inspiring tale of choosing to walkliterallya more adventurous path.

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Forced onto the mud by the currents of Chickaloon Bay we rest our gear on the - photo 1
Forced onto the mud by the currents of Chickaloon Bay we rest our gear on the - photo 2

Forced onto the mud by the currents of Chickaloon Bay, we rest our gear on the only dry surface available.

While we set up to packraft on Kachemak Bay Lituya plays with a paddle - photo 3

While we set up to packraft on Kachemak Bay, Lituya plays with a paddle.

Slush slicks the tide flats on the south side of Kachemak Bay where we were - photo 4

Slush slicks the tide flats on the south side of Kachemak Bay, where we were caught in an April blizzard.

Coyote or fox tracks in the buttery mud of Turnagain Arm We take a - photo 5

Coyote or fox tracks in the buttery mud of Turnagain Arm.

We take a paddling break on a white beach made of barnacle shells in the - photo 6

We take a paddling break on a white beach made of barnacle shells, in the fjords of Kachemak Bay.

The full moon hangs over the Fire Island wind generators and the Chugach Range - photo 7

The full moon hangs over the Fire Island wind generators and the Chugach Range across Knik Arm.

The kids examine moose droppings on a snowy trail The sun sets on a calm - photo 8

The kids examine moose droppings on a snowy trail.

The sun sets on a calm day turning the water orange Nikis tent and our - photo 9

The sun sets on a calm day, turning the water orange.

Nikis tent and our tent perch on a windy knob near Iliamna Bay A setnet - photo 10

Nikis tent and our tent perch on a windy knob near Iliamna Bay.

A setnet fisherman fills a bowl with fresh salmon filletssome for dinner some - photo 11

A setnet fisherman fills a bowl with fresh salmon filletssome for dinner, some to preserve.

Near Point Possession a small creek rushes over the tide flats passing - photo 12

Near Point Possession, a small creek rushes over the tide flats, passing scattered glacial erratics.

Still snow-covered in late April Mount Iliamna towers over Cook Inlet and an - photo 13

Still snow-covered in late April, Mount Iliamna towers over Cook Inlet, and an oil rig probes beneath its waters.

Along Turnagain Arm Lituya revels in the possibilities of mud Mount - photo 14

Along Turnagain Arm, Lituya revels in the possibilities of mud.

Mount Augustine puffs a cloud of steam across the Douglas River tide flats and - photo 15

Mount Augustine puffs a cloud of steam, across the Douglas River tide flats and Kamishak Bay.

A brittle star snakes over seaweed during an extreme low tide at Scott Island - photo 16

A brittle star snakes over seaweed during an extreme low tide at Scott Island, on the west side of Cook Inlet.

Katmai sleeps on Higs lap while I paddle in front of the rafts lashed together - photo 17

Katmai sleeps on Higs lap, while I paddle in front of the rafts lashed together from below with a driftwood pole.

Usually an alpine species small colonies of marmots inhabit parts of Cook - photo 18

Usually an alpine species, small colonies of marmots inhabit parts of Cook Inlets rocky shores.

Spring bursts into bloom with Kamchatka rhododendrons on the tundra cliffs - photo 19

Spring bursts into bloom with Kamchatka rhododendrons, on the tundra cliffs above Kamishak Bay.

I paddle down a tidal channel of the Susitna River with an oil platform - photo 20

I paddle down a tidal channel of the Susitna River, with an oil platform visible in the fog beyond.

A Monterey dorid a shelless creature related to snails glides through a tide - photo 21

A Monterey dorid (a shelless creature related to snails) glides through a tide pool on the Nanwalek reef.

A sign on the Nanwalek grocery store A field of dandelions blooms beneath - photo 22

A sign on the Nanwalek grocery store.

A field of dandelions blooms beneath setnets hung for repair on Chisik Island - photo 23

A field of dandelions blooms beneath setnets hung for repair on Chisik Island.

One of our packrafts glides across the buttery mud of the Trading Bay flats - photo 24

One of our packrafts glides across the buttery mud of the Trading Bay flats.

MUD FLATS AND FISH CAMPS

800 MILES AROUND

ALASKAS COOK INLET

ERIN McKITTRICK

For Katmai Lituya and the unwritten future Mountaineers Books is the - photo 25

For Katmai, Lituya, and the unwritten future.

Mountaineers Books is the publishing division of The Mountaineers an - photo 26

Mountaineers Books is the publishing division of The Mountaineers, an organization founded in 1906 and dedicated to the exploration, preservation, and enjoyment of outdoor and wilderness areas.

1001 SW Klickitat Way, Suite 201 Seattle, WA 98134
800.553.4453 www.mountaineersbooks.org

Copyright 2017 by Erin McKittrick

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form, or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Printed in the United States of America

Distributed in the United Kingdom by Cordee, www.cordee.co.uk

20 19 18 171 2 3 4 5

Copyeditor: Amy Smith Bell

Design and layout: Heidi Smets Graphic Design

Cartographer: Bretwood Hig Higman

Cover photograph: Fingers of muddy sand flow down the beach in a tiny trickle.

Back cover photograph: A friend joins us for a piece of the journey, paddling the sometimes treacherous waters of Turnagain Arm.

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