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John Stember
John Stember
RECENT
Montana Drag Wrestling
Fighting Oligarchy
nyt Yellowstone Protest
nyt Federal Layoffs
nyt Grizzly Bears
"I Don't Want to Talk About it"
Montana’s Childcare Gap
Learning Through Buffalo
GLP-1s, A New Shot at Weight Loss
Missouri Photo Workshop
PORTFOLIO
LONGTERM
Grizzly Bears Moving onto the Great Plains
Historical Archive on Rural America
Making Home
Air Force Initiation
FUN
Midnight Sun
Camera Trapping on Blackfeet Nation
Rodeo
COMMERCIAL
Granite Gear
Free Press Fest
Aerie Backcountry Medicine
EXPEDITIONS
Bicycling 2,000 miles to Alaska
Into the Brooks Range of Alaska
BIO
Email me
John Stember
John Stember
RECENT
Montana Drag Wrestling
Fighting Oligarchy
nyt Yellowstone Protest
nyt Federal Layoffs
nyt Grizzly Bears
"I Don't Want to Talk About it"
Montana’s Childcare Gap
Learning Through Buffalo
GLP-1s, A New Shot at Weight Loss
Missouri Photo Workshop
PORTFOLIO
LONGTERM
Grizzly Bears Moving onto the Great Plains
Historical Archive on Rural America
Making Home
Air Force Initiation
FUN
Midnight Sun
Camera Trapping on Blackfeet Nation
Rodeo
COMMERCIAL
Granite Gear
Free Press Fest
Aerie Backcountry Medicine
EXPEDITIONS
Bicycling 2,000 miles to Alaska
Into the Brooks Range of Alaska
BIO
Email me
Folder: RECENT
Back
Montana Drag Wrestling
Fighting Oligarchy
nyt Yellowstone Protest
nyt Federal Layoffs
nyt Grizzly Bears
"I Don't Want to Talk About it"
Montana’s Childcare Gap
Learning Through Buffalo
GLP-1s, A New Shot at Weight Loss
Missouri Photo Workshop
PORTFOLIO
Folder: LONGTERM
Back
Grizzly Bears Moving onto the Great Plains
Historical Archive on Rural America
Making Home
Air Force Initiation
Folder: FUN
Back
Midnight Sun
Camera Trapping on Blackfeet Nation
Rodeo
Folder: COMMERCIAL
Back
Granite Gear
Free Press Fest
Aerie Backcountry Medicine
Folder: EXPEDITIONS
Back
Bicycling 2,000 miles to Alaska
Into the Brooks Range of Alaska
BIO
Email me
 In the 1980s, Steve left his job as a teacher in the Lower 48 and drove up to Alaska with his family to pursue a dream to live on the land. Over the next ten years, Steve and his wife Kathy ran sled dogs, maintained a trap line, and raised their dau View fullsize
 Steve and his wife Kathy, along with the help of a friend, built this wood cabin by hand in the 1980s. To this day, there is no electricity, cell phone service, and the nearest town of 20 people is 20 miles away. View fullsize
 In this part of the Arctic, air temperatures can drop to -50° F and direct sunlight all but disappears below the horizon from November to January. Access is also limited to small aircraft, dog teams, and snowmobiles. View fullsize
 In order to get to Steve’s remote cabin in the fall, Eric boated me and my supplies in a freight style canoe upriver for two days. Eric and his family live in Bettles year round. View fullsize
 Steve relies on his headlamp and lanterns to split kindling and keep the fire going in his cabin around midnight on October 15, 2020. View fullsize
 As winter begins to set in, direct sunlight quickly becomes a commodity. In January, the average length of daylight is only four hours. View fullsize
 Steve and his young dog Loki test out the dangerous ice during the early stages of winter near his remote cabin in the Arctic on October 18, 2020. View fullsize
 Steve stands on the edge of a large bonfire as a day of wood clearing burns in the twilight. With nowhere to process garbage, and to avoid attracting large animals in the area, the best way to break things down that you cannot reuse is by burning. View fullsize
 Steve wanders through the forest looking for signs from the Athabaskan trappers who seasonally used the area before him. View fullsize
 Although Steve brought solar power to the area for the first time during the COVID-19 pandemic, the only type of building power is by problem solving, using your hands, or hauling in reservoirs of gasoline. View fullsize
 Steve looks out over the country during the moose rut in the Brooks Range on Wednesday, October 4, 2020. Getting a moose in the fall is a critical part of the seasonal cycle and can provide meat for the entire winter if stored properly. View fullsize
 In Native Alaskan culture, it is said the lights will come down and take you away if you whistle or draw attention to yourself. The Aurora borealis ripples over the taiga almost every night during the winter in northern Alaska.  View fullsize
 In the 1980s, Steve left his job as a teacher in the Lower 48 and drove up to Alaska with his family to pursue a dream to live on the land. Over the next ten years, Steve and his wife Kathy ran sled dogs, maintained a trap line, and raised their dau
 Steve and his wife Kathy, along with the help of a friend, built this wood cabin by hand in the 1980s. To this day, there is no electricity, cell phone service, and the nearest town of 20 people is 20 miles away.
 In this part of the Arctic, air temperatures can drop to -50° F and direct sunlight all but disappears below the horizon from November to January. Access is also limited to small aircraft, dog teams, and snowmobiles.
 In order to get to Steve’s remote cabin in the fall, Eric boated me and my supplies in a freight style canoe upriver for two days. Eric and his family live in Bettles year round.
 Steve relies on his headlamp and lanterns to split kindling and keep the fire going in his cabin around midnight on October 15, 2020.
 As winter begins to set in, direct sunlight quickly becomes a commodity. In January, the average length of daylight is only four hours.
 Steve and his young dog Loki test out the dangerous ice during the early stages of winter near his remote cabin in the Arctic on October 18, 2020.
 Steve stands on the edge of a large bonfire as a day of wood clearing burns in the twilight. With nowhere to process garbage, and to avoid attracting large animals in the area, the best way to break things down that you cannot reuse is by burning.
 Steve wanders through the forest looking for signs from the Athabaskan trappers who seasonally used the area before him.
 Although Steve brought solar power to the area for the first time during the COVID-19 pandemic, the only type of building power is by problem solving, using your hands, or hauling in reservoirs of gasoline.
 Steve looks out over the country during the moose rut in the Brooks Range on Wednesday, October 4, 2020. Getting a moose in the fall is a critical part of the seasonal cycle and can provide meat for the entire winter if stored properly.
 In Native Alaskan culture, it is said the lights will come down and take you away if you whistle or draw attention to yourself. The Aurora borealis ripples over the taiga almost every night during the winter in northern Alaska.