Being Caribou

Thanks to the Bush administration, the debate about oil drilling in Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) is still strong in congress. Wanting to have a deeper understanding of the land and the animals that live on it, I picked up Being Caribou last month. Winner of the 2005 Banff Mountain Book Festival grand prize, it is the true account of wildlife biologist Karsten Heuer and filmmaker Leanne Allison, who set out on a five month trek, following the migration of more than 120,000 caribou.
It is first and foremost an amazing account of a couple that traveled by foot and by skis through unforgiving landscapes - fording swift, deadly cold rivers, as well as encountering ravenous grizzlies who tracked them as prey. They paid attention to their dreams, listened to the music of the earth, and ultimately learned what it is to be caribou.
More compelling, however, was the information that puts the oil supply in perspective and dispels many of the politician-generated myths about ANWR.
Did you know that the supply of oil under ANWR represents a mere 6-month supply of oil for the United States and that it would take ten years or more for it to hit the market? Huh?! Our President wants to destroy the calving grounds for 120,000 animals for a mere 0.3% of world oil production in 2016?
The environmental impact - not to the caribou and other animals, but to the land itself - is also quite interesting. We don’t hear about it, but Prudhoe Bay has an average of one oil spill a day. Geez!
The book is a quick read, and I’d highly recommend it. If you don’t have time for the whole meal deal, though, you can get a reader’s digest version of their trek and the issues surrounding drilling in ANWR from the Web at beingcaribou.com.
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