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Pomona College Magazine is published three times a year by Pomona College
550 N. College Ave, Claremont, CA 91711
Online Editor: Laura Tiffany
For editorial matters:
Editor: Mark Wood
Phone: (909) 621-8158
Fax: (909) 621-8203
PCM Editorial Guidelines
Contact Alumni Records for changes of address, class notes, or notice
of births or deaths.
Phone: (909) 621-8635
Fax: (909) 621-8535
Email: alumni@pomona.edu
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 Frost Smitten
Whale burgers, endless ice, a crazed tank ride through a Siberian
forest--how could Laurel McFadden '06 NOT fall in love with life in the
Arctic Circle? Story by Christine Wicker / Photos by Laurel
McFadden '06 Memories of a cold place at the edge of the world
have been difficult for Laurel McFadden ’06 to put away. She still
daydreams of endless nights, of icy months when the sun was never seen
in a little Norwegian utopia called Longyearbyen.
Never mind that fear of polar bears required her to carry a rifle
whenever she went for a walk or that exhaust from her snowmobile filled
her clothes with such a burnt gasoline smell that her entire bedroom
reeked. Forget that whale burgers are hardly food a typical 23-year-old
Californian craves. Don’t get hung up on cars that must be left with
motors running in Longyearbyen parking lots because the cold is so
intense that they would not start if they were turned off. “No one was
going to steal your car,” she said. “There was nowhere to go and only
one road out.”

The Canadian Coast Guard ice-breaker Amundsen,
photographed from the vessel's helicopter |
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McFadden lived in Longyearbyen, population 2,000, as part of a yearlong
photographic project that took her to four of the world’s most remote
Arctic locales. The prestigious Thomas J. Watson Fellowship provided
$25,000 for her study during the year following her graduation. She
previously had visited another remote part of arctic Norway on a summer
research trip, studying a bird known as the little auk with Assistant
Professor of Biology Nina Karnovsky. Despite 14-hour days and the
necessity of reaching into stinking bird holes, McFadden found the
frozen beauty of the Norwegian fjords was more than enough reward. She
wanted to go back, and so she did.
She wasn’t disappointed. Every day in Longyearbyen was an adventure in a
place where beauty was constant and constantly dangerous, where humans
had each other and little else, where there was an absence of frippery
and a surfeit of practicality. “People understand respect for nature,
not merely on an environmental level but on a survival level,” she said
of Longyearbyen, which is located on an island north of the Norwegian
mainland. “You have to pay attention to the weather to survive.”
Southern California with its easy, green, multi-flowered life seems
vapid in comparison. Like a smiley face poster next to Frederick Edwin
Church’s The Icebergs.
“I feel so at home out there,” she said.

McFadden beset by mosquitoes in Siberia |
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She fit in. A farm girl from Fillmore, Calif., who thinks of herself as
reserved, she was considered gregarious. A woman of unusual height, she
found a place where the scale of nature gave right proportion to
everything. At 6-foot-3, McFadden is accustomed to having American kids
on the street exclaim, “You’re really tall,” as though she might not
have noticed. In Longyearbyen, however, she was rarely set apart.
“Nobody really fits in. It’s a patched-together community” with lots of
graduate students and scientists studying nature, just her kind of
crowd. “Everyone is an adventurous, outdoorsy, independent spirit
surviving in the high north while simultaneously being part of a
space-and-time-bending gossip network. You know stories about people
you’ve never even seen,” she wrote in her blog. And another awesome
thing: “You wear the same clothes every day. No one cares.”
Her year-long Arctic trip had begun in Canada, where she helped do
research aboard a seven-story Canadian Coast Guard ice breaker called
the Amundsen. Then she was off to Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland, where she
taught English to schoolchildren, or tried to. In her journal she
recounts a typical lesson:

An Inuit classroom in Greenland |
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Student No. 1: What does “pillow” mean?
Me: When you go to sleep in your bed, it’s what you put your head on.
Does everyone understand?”
[Series of “yesses”]
Student No. 2: What does “pillow” mean?
She lived with a family whose daughter, exactly Laurel’s age, had been
killed a year earlier in an automobile accident. The mother was still
deeply depressed, a state of mind that McFadden began to share. Almost
no one spoke English, which meant she had no one to talk to, but even
without speaking it was impossible to ignore that the whole town seemed
in the dumps.
As the indigenous people of Greenland see their culture break down—stuck
between old ways that won’t support their lives anymore and new ways
they don’t want to or can’t adopt—alcoholism is common. Neglect within
families and drunkenness is so routine that old women lurch along
streets until they collapse against buildings. Even the beauty of the
arctic world could be disconcerting.
“It is easy to see how people can believe in spirits out here,” she
wrote. “The way the snow moves over the roofs in the wind sounds like lonely whispers and screams. Watching figures down the road
swirl in and out of view leaves you wondering what is
in your head and what is outside.”
The turning point of her trip occurred when she and a teenager hiked
miles across a frozen bay to a settlement that turned out to be a
deserted summer camp. The trek took hours longer than she expected,
partly because the shorter and less warmly clothed teenager lagged
behind. As darkness began to fall, the cold intensified and spotting
bears became more difficult. McFadden was forced to stop again and again
while the teenager caught up with her. Alone she could have reached home
easily. Hampered by the girl and more terrified with each delay, she
began to consider all the ways they were likely to die. Bolting for
civilization seemed sensible. Instead she gave the girl some of her
clothes and urged her on. Once they reached town, McFadden made sure the
teen was safe before going home herself. When she took off her boots,
her feet were slightly frostbitten, one ankle has been badly wrenched
and a line of dark bruises showed where the boot had banged against her
leg. She was hurt and could still feel a residue of terror, but the
journey had shown her herself. And what she saw reassured her.
“The Arctic forces you to know yourself....You define yourself by your
actions and how you handle yourself,” she said. “It
takes a lot to faze me now.”

One of McFadden's biggest challenges came when she broke her foot and had to have two surgeries |
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After leaving Greenland, she broke her foot during a holiday in Scotland
and arrived in Longyearbyen in a cast. Dragging a
cast through a mile of snow to get to work at the University Centre in
Svalbard, where she helped three scientists with research, didn’t help
her foot heal. Before she could continue to the next step of her
journey, she had to fly to Tromso for surgery to bolt the bones
together. The first surgery was done wrong, McFadden says, leading to a
second one and a phone call home that involved much sobbing. That was a
low point.
The last stop in McFadden’s northern adventure was Cherskii, Siberia,
which once hosted one of the Soviet Union’s most infamous gulags. There
a local scientist hopes to restore the Siberian taiga to the savannah
grasslands they were during the Pleistocene era and eventually
re-introduce large mammals. Among his reclamation tools is a Soviet-era
tank with the gun turret replaced by a crane. One day he took McFadden
for a ride. She rode clinging to the top of the tank, fingers ensnared
in the engine ventilation mesh.

The converted Russian tank that took McFadden on the ride of her life |
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“Sergei drove like a man with a vendetta against trees. Oblivious to old
pathways in front of us, he chose instead to verve off and pulverize
everything in our path. The entire purpose of the tank is to mimic the
damage that a mammoth would cause, so, in Sergei’s words, ‘the mammoth
is not careful, we are not careful,’” she wrote. “... It’s like riding
an incredibly destructive rollercoaster without a seatbelt. Excitement,
however, slowly turned into mild terror and an ever-growing undercurrent
of horror. As we snapped through trees, sometimes the older ones would
explode into a hail of branches—I got a pretty good blow to the skull
and whipped in the face a few times from springing branches.”
McFadden survived the strange ride, and so did her fascination with the
arctic. When her year-long journey came to a close, she found it hard to
leave, in more than one sense. With no direct flights between Siberia
and California, she was forced
to travel west, spanning almost the entire globe to get home. She
zigzagged across Russia: taking a two-hour helicopter ride
from Cherskii to Srednekolymsk and then a small plane to Yakutsk before
transferring to a larger one for the flight to Moscow. Not that she was
in a big rush. McFadden was nervous about returning home, not sure of
her next move. “I knew it was going to be a huge transition.”
Months later, sitting on a campus bench while California sunshine played
hide and seek with arboreal shadows, McFadden often wore the look of a
woman in love, slightly distracted, a bit displaced. She’d been back in
Claremont working on campus as a geology technician for months, long
enough to have mothballed her arctic boots and coat. She blends in with
the students, but experience has changed her. She’s writing a book about
her yearlong journey. Next summer, she hopes to go back to Longyearbyen,
and eventually she hopes to do research of her own in the Arctic.
The intensity of her life last year isn’t easy for other people to
understand. When she tells them where she’s been, they often react as
though she was a tourist in some quaint place. But it wasn’t like that.
Explaining isn’t anything that can be accomplished in a casual
conversation. Usually she doesn’t even try.
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