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    Crossing The Gates of Alaska: One Man, Two Dogs 600 Miles Off the Map

    Crossing The Gates of Alaska: One Man, Two Dogs 600 Miles Off the Map

    4.5 2

    by Dave Metz


    eBook

    $9.99
    $9.99
     $13.00 | Save 23%

    Customer Reviews

      ISBN-13: 9780806533803
    • Publisher: Kensington
    • Publication date: 02/01/2010
    • Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 288
    • File size: 837 KB

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments viii

    Prologue 1

    Close to Paradise 5

    A Land of Epic Proportions 13

    The Northwest Coast 23

    Too Cold to Wait 36

    Crossing the Sea Ice 44

    Skiing the Kobuk River 53

    Aboriginal Lore 71

    The Allure of Wilderness 86

    Blazing My Own Trail 102

    A Sign Left by Someone Lost 124

    Breakup 131

    Nakmaktuak Pass 144

    Falling in the Icy River 158

    Noatak, the Fordone Frontier 173

    Lucky Six Gorge 189

    No Easy Ground 213

    In the Heart of No Man's Land 225

    Walkarbund Creek 240

    Bone Hungry 252

    The Passing of the Ages 269

    Suggested Reading 273

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    The snow forms the beginning of a near vertical chute that falls at least a thousand feet. My feet, shaking, manage to hug the thin edge of solid rock. I feel my heart creep to my throat and warm sweat drip down my back, defying the subzero Arctic air. Somehow I reach a plateau and think the worst is behind me. I couldn't be more wrong.

    This is the story of Dave Metz's death-defying, breathtaking, and passionate journey through the Arctic outback. Driven by his lifetime reverence for the outdoors, Dave, with the help of his two beloved Airedale terrier dogs, embarks on a three-month epic of survival and astonishing determination that rivals the most daring world-class explorations.

    I find myself on a gigantic trench hemmed in on both sides by peaks that look like ice-daggers from another world. The idea that I'm at the mercy of the wild sinks in. . .and I desperately want out of this endless, icebound maze.

    Skiing up frozen rivers, enduring bitter nights at twenty below zero, and staggering across vast reaches of barren tundra and scrub woodlands, Metz's unprecedented 600-mile trek took him to the remotest regions of the untamed North. In frightening and stunning detail, he shows us an unwavering spirit and a compelling sense of adventure that can only be satisfied when truly free. . .

    Dave Metz has been to Alaska over a dozen times in the last twenty years. He's kayaked across Alaska twice, once with his beloved dog Jonny riding in the bow, and lived there for two years in remote locations. He's also kayaked and trekked in Peru, Brazil, Canada, and Borneo, and has hiked across most of Oregon and Washington. Despite his forays away from home, he managed to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree in English literature from Portland State University, where he also did course work in zoology. He currently works for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife as a seasonal fish biologist. In addition to studying mammals and the preservation of indigenous cultures in rain forest regions, he continues zealously to embark on wilderness survival and exploration adventures, cycling, and hiking trips. He lives Philomath, Oregon.

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    Kirkus Reviews
    A seasoned wilderness survivalist takes on Alaska's backcountry in his most daring trek to date. From a young age growing up in Oregon, fish biologist Metz was fascinated by the call of the wild, where he would "feel light-headed and in perfect tune with my body and the world around me, like I belong in the wilderness." Uniquely attracted to Alaska, the author claims more than a dozen trips there since he was 18, when he became "instantly hooked on the place." At 30, he began meticulously mapping out a daring hike that would take three months to complete and cover 300 miles across the Brooks Range, an exceptionally remote, mountainous passage "that shifts dangers with the extreme change in seasons." The area has only been traversed by a handful of hardcore explorers, so Metz planned to stay close to villages to replenish food supplies and then educated himself on the severe weather conditions as well as troubleshooting chance encounters with moose, wolves, bears and the "excruciating loneliness and hours of physical exertion." Along with his two Airedale terriers, Jimmy and Will, the author left Oregon by plane in late March 2007 and headed for his Northwest coastal starting point of Kotzebue, Alaska, where previously mailed boxes of food and clothing awaited him in ten-degree weather. Metz delivers a spectacularly descriptive travelogue by way of chronological journal entries. With 200 pounds of cargo in tow, Metz travelled via dog-pulled skis, a method called "skijoring," and he braved howling winds and numbing subzero temperatures, longed for girlfriend Julie and revisited bittersweet memories of his former canine traveling companion, Jonny. Depleting reserves of food and fatigue, aswell as a tumble into an icy river, threatened his resolve, but the author's ordeal remains a dazzling, grueling experience. An intense treat for armchair adventurers and renegade backpackers. Hopefully the publisher will include a map in the finished book. Local author promotion in Portland, Ore.

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