What a beautiful story! And what an extraordinary pair of human beings. Karsten is a wildlife biologist and Leanne is a filmmaker. These newlyweds spent five months north of the Arctic Circle, on skis and on foot, following the Porcupine Caribou Herd. One thousand miles round trip!! They endured grizzly bear attacks, near-starvation (six days without a meal to speak of), borderline hypothermia, monster mosquitoes from hell, and just pure exhaustion. With only each other for company, frustration and frayed nerves were inevitable, but they stayed the course.
They were rewarded with the chance to witness caribou cows giving birth, a special connection with the herd, and encounters with wolves, musk oxen, foxes, grizzlies, bighorn sheep, and countless bird species. Not to mention trekking through stunning, nearly untouched wilderness. If you've ever spent time connecting with wilderness and dreaded returning to civilization, you'll understand the tears streaming off my face and down into my cleavage at the end! :0 I felt like I'd been on the journey with them, and I didn't want it to be over.
Unfortunately, the caribou calving grounds sit directly within the "1002 area" of ANWR. This area has long been targeted for oil development by the Bush crime family. A short-sighted solution fueled purely by greed, since U.S. Geological Survey estimates project only 6 to 12 months worth of oil supply after ten years of development prior to extraction.
This book is very well written and superbly edited. They don't bore you with every plodding step of every day, just the most important ones. There's a children's version, about 60-70 pages, mostly photos, so be sure you get the adult one.
There's also a 72-minute Being Caribou DVD of their trip, filmed by Leanne. It doesn't come with the book, but my library had it. It was awarded Best Environmental Film at the 2005 Telluride Mountain Film Festival. I watched the DVD before reading the book, which I recommend. I liked having the images in my mind and a feel for the people when I was reading. If you watch the DVD, don't turn it off when it gets to the credits. There's a funny voice-over right at the end. :)