Vol.12,
No.68, 2009 YUKON RITUALS by Marcia Lee Laycock
The thin slip of red mercury barely
rose above its bulbous pool at the
bottom of the thermometer. The
Yukon was proving its myths to be
true. The place is more than cold.
When I ventured out, the mystery of it
made me stand still, watching,
listening. I knew I risked frozen lungs
if I removed my scarf, but I could
breathe out heavily through its wool
and hear my breath crackle. I listened
to the chortling ravens, their raucous
voices punctuating the thin stillness
with incongruities, tropical noises
mocking the cold. I watched their
movements, their black bodies
slipping through ice fog, their raggededged
wings pulsing like whispers
from a nether-world. They seemed the
only creatures able to survive with
comfort and even pleasure, in the
midst of these harshest of elements.
The Huskies seemed only to tolerate
the cold. Sleeping it out, curled in
their mass of fur, noses tucked under
tails, the dogs’ only distraction was a
curled-lipped gnawing at chunks of
frozen fish and ice caked between
their paws. No other creatures stirred.
Each day I chopped wood. Choosing
the biggest stumps gave me the
illusion of strength. At -60, every
molecule of water in wood is
crystallized. The blow of my axe
splintered the fibres instantly. Tossing
the brittle pieces into a pile, I almost
expected them to shatter, like bits of
fragile glass. They fell, not with the
thud of wood, but with the clack,
clack, clack of castanets.
My husband worked as a carpenter
that winter, or tried to. Mummified in
layers of clothing, he would haul the
battery from behind the stove and step
out into -60, his red mustache and
eyebrows soon defined by frost from
his own breath. I would watch through
the window as he pulled a tarp over
the truck’s hood, lit the Saskatchewan
block heater (a tobacco can holding a
roll of toilet paper soaked in kerosene)
and positioned it under the oil pan. He
would wait, squatting once or twice to
check the flame, then burst back into
the cabin, a cloud of cold issuing from
his stomping feet. After two or three
cups of coffee he would try the
ignition. Sometimes it started on that
first try, sometimes it took a few
attempts. Most of the time the truck
would only go back and forth in the
driveway, the steering wheel too stiff
to turn the frozen drive train. My
husband would come back in,
chuckling, agreeing that in the battle
of man against nature, sixty below had
once again proven invincible.
Our rituals of winter continued until
the sun returned in early March. I was
reading, my feet propped up on the
window sill, when I became aware
that it had happened. The sun lay, at
that moment, only a promise on the
rim of the opposite hill, like the
sudden glow behind a cloud that has
darkened the landscape for too long.
All that day I watched it, and the day
after, and the next. As it slowly grew
down the hill and across the valley, I
longed for that moment when the pale
light would stream through the
windows of our cabin. The day came
when I thought it would, but the world
itself seemed to stand still when the
golden light stopped and began to
retreat again, at the end of our
driveway. My whole being moaned.
But finally the sun did touch the
house, pouring through the windows
with its faint warmth, breaking the
grip of winter.
Now the rituals would change.
Breakup would come, the thick river
ice would begin to move with the
growling rumble of a freight train,
releasing the Yukon and Klondike
rivers. And that soon followed by
twenty-four-hour daylight, by the rush
to plant broccoli, cabbage and carrots
and to ready the greenhouse for
tomatoes. The salmon would run
again and fish wheels would begin
their relentless turning, tossing thirty
and forty pound fish into traps,
interrupting their struggle up Yukon
tributaries to their spawning grounds.
Snow geese and swans would find
their way back to their breeding
grounds and the caribou would move
across the barren land to the north.
Tourists too would make their annual
pilgrimage to the gold fields,
exclaiming at the show of slivers of
‘colour’ in rented gold pans.
We would all tune our bodies and
minds to the fast pace of the short
summer. But always the awareness
was there, the urgency just below the
surface of every thought, every
decision. Get ready. Winter is coming.