| Sunset over Savage River last week |
Where do I even begin?
I came to Alaska at a critical point in my life, a point at which I was open to all the possibilities of existence in the world. And beyond just learning to fend for myself in this rough and wild place, I also grew into myself as an individual, an adult, and a woman. I came to Alaska to be closer to the roots of the connections between humans and nature, and that is what I found.
| Denali |
I feel as if I could keep exploring Alaska forever.
But earlier this summer, a fortuitous turn of events gave me a new direction to follow for a while. Most of my close friends and family know by now, but here's the official announcement:
I'm starting graduate school. Hooray!
It's been hard to keep my excitement on the back burner all summer, but now that I only have a week left of work, it seems like the only thing that can temper the sadness I'm feeling about leaving Alaska for the next foreseeable future.
Over the past few years, whenever I finished a season in Alaska, I knew in my heart that I'd be coming back the very next season. This time is different though. This time I don't feel that. This time my heart is pulling somewhere else, and although I know that it will be somewhere else incredible, and I know I will be coming back to work at Denali some day, it probably won't be for a while.
But if it weren't for my work in Alaska, I probably wouldn't have decided to try for grad school, and so for that I am forever grateful.
To answer the question you've probably been burning to ask over the last couple paragraphs: I will be going to the University of Oregon for a Masters in Environmental Studies, Media, and Geography. Pretty much everything I love, in a state that's *almost* as cool as Alaska. :)
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| Mountains make me weird. |
After next week, I'll be transitioning this blog to my domain name, Trail Mixed, to follow whatever adventures unfold from graduate life in the PNW and beyond.
And after graduation?
Antarctica. :)

Best of luck to you, Andrea! Enjoy grad school! I visit Oregon every year, I hope to run into you again.
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