April Film Festival
by Donald L. Gibbon
Well, it’s a shame, but you probably missed it! Tucked into the Environmental Film Festival on April 19 was the visit by Chad Kister and his nationwide Polar Bear Survival Tour. This was the “sleeper” of the Festival. Even I as the Festival organizer didn’t know just what was going to happen at this program… but it was amazing. After almost twenty years of working one way and another to protect the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), I finally understand the whole issue, thanks to this remarkable young man, Chad Kister.

A quiet, unassuming guy now living off the grid in Athens, OH (all his electricity is generated by solar and wind power), this guy truly walks his talk. In 1991, not quite yet 21 years old, he undertook to walk or raft from Prudhoe Bay across ANWR and see what it was all about. This would involve covering perhaps 150 miles as the crow or eagle flies, and subsisting off the land for most of the trip. He had a ninety-pound pack, that’s right, 90 pounds and he’s a small man… so rafting was clearly a preferred mode of travel. Unfortunately, it’s not downstream all the way, so this was one rough hike! Just about everything that could go wrong did go wrong, including discovering that Prudhoe Bay activities had virtually decimated the fish populations in rivers on the PB side of the Refuge… meaning he darn near starved, living off roots and berries for quite some time. He eventually reached a fish-bearing river and saved his own life with his fishing rod.

It was one amazing adventure after another. And he’s been back twice more since this first trip, most recently in 2003. But along the way he annotated the story with truths to offset the oil company propaganda (check out anwr.org to get a stomach full of THAT!). One nefarious sample: The present administration claims that drilling in ANWR would only affect 2000 acres. That basically sums the area of the drilling platforms and the main roads connecting them and doesn’t count the thousands of acres of subsidiary development… plus ignores the fact that the roads slice up the entire area into tiny fragments.
Kister’s knowledge and love of the wildlife and landscape came through loud and clear, and a lovely, fascinating, unique place it is. But he spent much of his time hammering at the problems of climate change and the role of energy policy in that staggering problem. It’s a commonplace today to recognize that conservation is the answer to our imported or domestic energy problems. Kister pointed out that if we would just get our TIRES INFLATED CORRECTLY in this country, we could offset the potential production of ANWR!!!
He has written several books on his adventures and his recipes for change If you would like to buy a book or otherwise contribute to Chad’s one-man crusade on behalf of polar bear survival… which is code for slowing or stopping human-induced climate change, contact him at any of the following addresses:
Chad Kister
P.O. Box 31, Athens OH 45701
chadkister at gmail dot com
chadkister.com, arcticrefuge.org