I have never felt so welcomed into a town. Right away nearly everyone who walked by our street either shouted and waved a "Hi! Welcome to Wrangell!" or stopped to chat for a while. I have never once lived in a place with such a welcoming, safe, serving, and group-oriented community. It is so refreshing!
How many people wish they had a sense of belonging, a group, a circle, or a gang? Even before COVID I heard many a depressed client respond when asked that she doesn't really have many friends, or doesn't get out much. It's a human condition to desire community. But what is community? This is what we have already seen in the short 10 days since our arrival:
Down Town |
Community is... seeing a poster for a community clean up day and actually showing up. It is making little brown bags of secret toys for boys or girls signed "From the Toy Fairy" and placing them around town for children to find. It's volunteering to work the concession stand, help coach a little league team, or starting an event called "Touch the Trucks" where kids get to go inside police cars, fire trucks, ambulances, and dump trucks. It's hearing that there's a new family in town without their belongings and inviting them to use your washer and bringing them fresh baked sourdough bread, toys for the kids, a queen mattress, French press and freshly ground coffee. It's volunteering for the fire department or starting a non-profit organization to help grieving loved ones pay for a funeral. It's posting on the community facebook page that you found a mitten on the trail, holding it for the owner to claim. Community is EACH PERSON taking that step that they wish others would. I'm sure there are "the Loners" as a driveway sign reads at a home out the road. But the large majority of residents here embrace the community mindset. We have been told by many life long Wrangellites, "It's a great place to raise kids!" If only more towns would follow suit.
Driving in Wrangell is a breeze. With such a small town it is a quick an' easy 2 minutes to down town to run errands at one of the surname stores. I'm still trying to get them all straight, after walking into many asking for an item only to be pointed across the street. If you want to drive "out the road" (up the one longer stretch of road), it's about 20 minutes or less to campsites, cabins, trails, and a lake. And there is literally NO waiting on traffic!! (cue angels singing). The Wrangell town passed a law that it is legal to drive ATVs on town roads so I just take the side-by-side down to do my grocery shopping and errands. It's so convenient! But sometimes you don't even need to drive. Cyrus walks to school and walks home, hallelujah! I feel like I have so much more time in a day! He and Darius can also walk to the school playground together and my neighbor even sends her 7 yr old son to walk to the post office to get mail. It's very safe and the community helps keep an eye out for kids.
Simovia Hwy, AKA "Out the Road" |
This is the entirety of the produce section of City Market grocery store |
Grocery shopping |
Sorting and picking up our Costco order. |
Other items are expensive here as well. Gas is currently $3.49/gal. Our house cost way more than other states for the 3 bed/2 bath home with basically no yard pictured here (on Wrangell terms this is a lot of yard!). Paint is $42/gallon for interior wall paint. And a large supreme pizza is $40!
Everyone in town is connected to town water supply we heard that it is high in the the chlorine like compound called 5IAA. So some people (myself included until our moving packet arrives with a water filter) get water from a fresh spring “Up the Road” at the “nine mile pipe.” It was recently tested and negative for E. coli and tastes great! And kinda fun to go fetch my water from a healthy source
Everyone seems to have a dog here. They walk them in the park, throw a ball for fetch, and clean up after them pretty well. I can't wait to get our Irish-doodle puppy in June! She will be so well socialized.
And the ocean is ALL around. After all, we are on an island. But the town is also on the point of the island, the beak of the flying duck. If I walk to the top of the hill we live on you can see ocean on three sides. The views are incredible. I have never enjoyed ocean so much, and I haven't even gotten out on the water yet. I guess we're just not "hot sandy beach" people, but Mountain Ocean, now that's exciting. My kids adore playing in the tide pools. We could probably stay out there all day, but watch out for the rapid twice a day tide change that can be up to a 20 foot difference in depth. I emphasize depth, because what you see in the distance the water moves closer to your belongings that you thought were safely stashed, is much different. We honestly saw the water move closer to us
So from a 15 day new resident who moved from Wasilla, Alaska and lived mostly on the east coast of the lower 48, this is what life is like in Wrangell, Alaska.