Refuge Notebook
Peninsula Clarion Article
Dated
8 June 2001
Ch..Ch...Ch...Changes
by Brenda Wise
When I was
tasked to write an article for the Refuge Notebook Series, I had something specific
in mind. Like things normally happen, something comes up to change the best
laid plans of mice and men. Fortunately, you learn go with the flow and
the many changes it brings. This article was originally going to be about some
of the refuge staff that has been around for many years, but it too has changed.
After talking with a few of the old geezers, anyone that has
been here over 17 years, I discovered they are a wealth of information and have
witnessed many changes over the past 17 to 31 years. The one obvious change was
the refuges name. The Kenai Moose Range, established in 1941, became the
Kenai National Wildlife Refuge in 1980, but many residents of the Peninsula still
refer to it as the Moose Range.
In the old days, the Refuge
Headquarters was located on 5 acres of land in downtown Kenai. Today, it is located
on 160 acres on Ski Hill Road in Soldotna. The permanent staff has gone from 10
to 39. During the summer season, the staff grows to almost 80 and includes temporary
employees, volunteers, Youth Conservation Corps enrollees, and student interns.
The number of visitors has certainly changed too, from a few thousand, to over
half a million each year. Our fleet of vehicles has grown from 10 to 150, including
heavy equipment, dump trucks, flatbeds, fork lifts, snow machines, and boats.
The maintenance area grew from a 2 door mechanic stall to one with 4 doors, a
wood shop, and storage buildings to house all the equipment. There are also now
approximately 7 miles of trails at the current headquarters area for cross country
skiing and nature walks.
Life was simpler then as well. Technologically
speaking, the office had an old Xerox machine that literally burned
copies. There were no fax machines, no computers, and no reliable 2-way radio
communications.
Campground and road maintenance was all handled out of the
shop and crews went out daily to collect trash from the garbage cans located at
the pull outs and campsites. The outhouses were placed over excavated pits and
when the pit was full a new pit was dug and the outhouse was moved. Now we have
contracts with local businesses to pick up the dumpsters and pump the outhouses
in the campgrounds. During winter, it would take two very long days in the road
grader with an overnight stay, to maintain Swanson River and Swan Lake Roads compared
to current 7 hours in a dump truck with a plow.
Over the past 25 years,
glaciers have retreated up to ½ mile and the retreat of Skilak Glacier has given
birth to a large lake at the front of the glacier. The contracting and melting
of the Harding Ice Field has exposed barren rock and mountain tops that used to
be snow-covered during summer but are now free of snow. Seasonal water levels
are lower, small ponds have dried up, lake shorelines have shrunk and new islands
have been formed as water levels lowered. The effects of logging activities, wildfires,
and bark beetles have also impacted trees and other vegetation.
This summer
will begin a time of change as some of our "old timers" leave the Refuge
to enjoy the rewards that retirement will bring. We will miss them and their dedication
to the Refuge that they have given throughout their many years of public service.
New names and faces will join the staff over the next year and bring about a new
era of change.
Brenda Wise has been employed at the Kenai National Wildlife
Refuge as a Refuge Clerk for the past 12 years. Previous Refuge Notebook columns
can be viewed on the web at http://kenai.fws.gov.
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