A Centennial High School social studies teacher is out learning this month, the cold way.
Chris Ripken, of Blaine, is in Nunavut, in northeastern Canada, at roughly the same longitude as central Greenland. This week, he's in the second of a 2 1/2-week arctic dogsled trek, from Pangnirtung, across the Cumberland Peninsula, to Broughton Island, on the Baffin Sea.
The trip is part of GoNorth, an online adventure-learning program that operates in collaboration with the University of Minnesota and the College of Education and Human Development and NOMADS Adventure & Education.
Ripken is joining the three-person team in the fourth of a series of dogsled journeys across five Arctic regions: Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in 2006, Chukotka in 2007, Fennoscandia in 2008, Nunavut this year, and next year, Greenland. Each year, a teacher-explorer joins the expedition for a couple of weeks.
The team posts weekly photo and video trail reports and a daily audio update on its website, www.polarhusky.com, which are followed by almost 4,000 teachers around the world.
Reached last week by phone in Pangnirtung, the 37-year-old teacher said he was wowed by the beauty of the mountains and fjords that make up the arctic landscape, and the kindness of the people in the town where the team members were staying as they prepared their gear and dog teams for the 140-mile journey.
"The community members have been so helpful for us in getting things together and making things work," he said.
He told of a man who loaned the team tools, drove them around to look for wood, and showed them the seal and caribou he had hunted with his son.