![]() |
|
|
The above photo (click to enlarge) was taken during an overflight to monitor conditions on the Yukon River, 12 miles downriver from Galena. U.S. Fish and Wildlife pilot Brad Scotton watched as Maynard floated down the Yukon River on an ever shrinking sheet of ice. Unfortunately, Scotton had to turn back and so we're left to wonder if Maynard the Moose made it off the ice or not. They're pretty adept at swimming so we'll hope Maynard made it to shore and is now working his way home.
The next time you think you're up the creek without a paddle, think of Mayanrd the Moose and remember it could always be worse!
|
Thinking about buying or selling real estate in Fairbanks or Interior Alaska? We know Fairbanks real estate – Think of us as your local experts.
Search Fairbanks homes for sale, sign up for free new listing notifications, view Fairbanks market statistics or browse our virtual relocation package. Have questions? Contact us online or call us at (907) 699-6024. We would love to hear from you. |
![]() |
|
|
Do you have a hankerin' for some fudge? Does the thought of freshly made chocolate pecan fudge make your mouth water? If so, I know just the place you need to check out.
Located in downtown Fairbanks, The Fudge Pot is a Fairbanks treasure. They have been satisfying Fairbanksans sweet cravings since 1997 with some of the best fudge in the state. Do you like plain 'ol regular fudge? How about mint chocolate or my personal favorite, butter pecan. I'm telling you, this stuff is so good it'll make you swallow your tongue. Well, ok, not really but it is darn good stuff.
In addition to mouth watering fudge, the Fudge Pot also serves espresso and delicious deli sandwiches. Enjoy a sweet treat or lunch while overlooking the Chena River in downtown Fairbanks. Just across the street from the Visitors Center on First Avenue, The Fudge Pot is sure to be a hit with everyone in the family.
Don’t forget to check out their gift shop with t-shirts and Alaskan souvenirs too. There’s no telling what you’ll find you just can’t live without. You can also order their delicious fudge online and have it delivered right to your door. Yummy!
|
Thinking about buying or selling real estate in Fairbanks or Interior Alaska? We know Fairbanks real estate – Think of us as your local experts.
Search Fairbanks homes for sale, sign up for free new listing notifications, view Fairbanks market statistics or browse our virtual relocation package. Have questions? Contact us online or call us at (907) 699-6024. We would love to hear from you. |
![]() |
|
|
I've heard the April showers bring may flowers bit all my life. Without the rains there would be no bountiful floral harvest to enjoy. How sad would that be, I ask you? Pretty sad indeed.
I just have one little itty bitty question. If April showers do indeed bring May flowers, does it matter if the April showers are FROZEN? We woke this morning to find a beautiful white blanket of snow covering the ground.
As if that wasn't bad enough, Mother Nature was, and is, dropping snowflakes like, well, Limbaugh does Oxycontin. It's everywhere.
This snow day message was brought to you by... well, me silly. Have a great day and be safe out there.
That is our backyard, which only yesterday was snow free. When life gives you lemons, go make lemonaide, right? So since Mother Nature gave us snow, I'm going to go make snow cream. Yummy!
|
Thinking about buying or selling real estate in Fairbanks or Interior Alaska? We know Fairbanks real estate – Think of us as your local experts.
Search Fairbanks homes for sale, sign up for free new listing notifications, view Fairbanks market statistics or browse our virtual relocation package. Have questions? Contact us online or call us at (907) 699-6024. We would love to hear from you. |
![]() |
|
|
Your real estate resource for Fairbanks and Interior Alasaka

The University of Alaska Fairbanks campus is the flagship of the Univeristy of Alaska Statewide System. UAF holds the honor of being one of the few, but certainly the northernmost, of America's Land, Sea and Space Grant institutions, offering 25 certificates and 161 degrees in 115 disciplines ranging from bachelors to Ph.Ds.
Originally founded with a federal land grant in 1915 (44 years before Alaska Statehood) on what was a federal Agricultural Experiment Station, the University of Alaska, then known as the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines, was born. After receiving funding from the Alaska Territorial Legislature and the completion of the first building in 1922, the college opened its doors to the first class of students. A faculty of six offered 16 classes to a student body of six. Commencement in 1923 consisted of a single graduate.
In 1931 the federal government transferred the entire Agricultural Experiment Station to the college. Four years later the Alaska Legislature renamed the growing campus the University of Alaska to reflect the school's expanding role in research, teaching and public service. The Geophysical Institute was established in 1946 out of a need for scientific polar research with the first Ph.D. being awarded in 1955.
The University of Alaska had the distinct honor of hosting the Alaska Constitutional Convention in 1955 which produced The Constitution of the State of Alaska. The constitution was adopted by the delegates on February 5, 1956, ratified on April 24, 1956, and became effective when the Alaska Statehood Act was signed on January 3, 1959.
We the people of Alaska, grateful to God and to those who founded our nation and pioneered this great land, in order to secure and transmit to succeeding generations our heritage of political, civil, and religious liberty within the Union of States, do ordain and establish this constitution for the State of Alaska. Preamble to Alaska's Constitution.
The Alaska Legislature created the Institute of Marine Science in 1960 and the Institute of Arctic Biology in 1962. UAF took over operations of the Poker Flat Research Range in 1969, which provides launch facilities for NASA and the Department of Defense. It is the only university owned rocket range in the world.
In 1970, UAF was designated as a federal sea grant institution for marine research. Today the School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences operates the 133-foot research vessel Alpha Helix for the National Science Foundation out of the Seward Marine Center. The Alaska Native Language Center was established by an act of the Alaska Legislature in 1972 and in 1975 the University of Alaska statewide system was created, with additional campuses in Anchorage and Juneau.
Signficant changes continued with the opening of the University of Alaska Museum of the North in 1980. UAF enrollement topped 5,000 students for the first time in its history in 1981 as well established rural campuses in Bethel, Dillingham, Kotzebue, Nome and the Interior. Education centers in Fort Yukon, Galena, McGrath, Nenana, Tok and Unalaska provide additional education services to rural Alaskans.
In 1991 NASA named UAF as a space grant institution, thus becoming a Land, Sea and Space Grant institution, one of the few land, sea, and space grant institutions in the United States.
UAF's public service role is filled in part by the statewide Cooperative Extension Service with its eight district offices. Public broadcasting stations KUAC-FM and AlaskaONE TV, the first public stations in the state, are headquartered at the Fairbanks campus.
Today UAF is the only doctoral-granting institution in Alaska, offering Ph.D. degrees in anthropology, several of the physical and natural sciences, mathematics, and engineering. Master's degrees are offered in more than 50 fields in the humanities, social sciences, northern studies, physical and natural sciences, and in professional fields such as engineering, justice, education and business administration. Interdisciplinary programs are possible for students who have a research focus in areas where UAF has faculty expertise and research facilities available.
![]() |
Welcome to UAF's Fairbanks campus
UAF welcomes visitors to campus anytime of the year. Pick up a campus map and visitors' guide in a parking lot shuttle station, at the UA Museum of the North, Wood Center or Rasmuson Library and go exploring. Reduced shuttle service operates throughout the summer. Summer guided tours Guided walking tours | Guided campus tours for prospective students | International Arctic Research Center | Geophysical Institute | Arctic Region Supercomputing Center | Cold Climate Housing Research Center | Botanical Garden | Poker Flat Research Range | Large Animal Research Station | More things to see and do Take a Virtual Tour of the Univeristy of Alaska Fairbanks Campus. |
| In addition to the main campus, classes are offered at the Tanana Valley Campus (TVC) located in downtown Fairbanks. TVC opened its doors in 1974 and provides career and technical education, academic preparation and lifelong learning opportunities for all Alaskans.
TVC offers more than 40 certificate and associate degree programs in such fields as Allied Health (Certified Nurses Aide, Dental Assisting/Hygiene, Health Care Reimbursement, Medical/Dental Receptionist, Phlebotomy, Nursing, Radiologic Technology, Emergency Medical Services and Medical Assistant), Accounting, Applied Business (Computer Application, Human Resources, Finance, International Business, Marketing, Public Management & Tourism), Automotive Technology, Aviation Maintenance Technology, Certified Public Manager, Construction Management, Cosmetology, Culinary Arts, Diesel/Heavy Equipment, Drafting Technology, Emergency Medical Services, Information Technology, Law Enforcement Academy, Paralegal Studies as well as Professional Development and the Alaska Small Business Development Center |
![]() |
Ready to earn your Real Estate Ph.D and make an educated decision about buying Fairbanks real estate? Search Fairbanks homes for sale or sign up for our Realty Retriever - he'll automatically send you new listings as they become available without even mussing the corners of the page.
Next Stop: Fairbanks Financial Services Directory
![]() |
|
|
The Fairbanks North Star Borough School District is comprised of 34 elementary, middle, junior, senior, career tech and charter schools as well as several alternative learning programs. A staff of 1,908 teachers, counselors, principals and district administration serve a student population of 14,103. Although varying from school to school, the district teacher to studen ratio is 1 in 22. Instructional services and student activities account for 72.5% of the school district's budget, which translaters to roughly $9,300 spent on each child in the Fairbanks district. 2006-2007 District Report Card Short Version.
State law requires every child between 7 and 16 years of age to attend school. Any child who will be 5 years old on or before September 1 is eligible to attend kindergarten. Children must be 6 years old on or before September 1 to attend first grade. New students need to enroll at the school they will be attending. When schools are closed for the summer, new students are encouraged to register in the Student Records Dept. in the FNSBSD Administrative Center, 520 Fifth Ave. (452-2000, x361).
A copy of the child's birth certificate is required for all pupils entering kindergarten and for first graders who haven't been enrolled in the district before. All new students must submit proof of immunization before being admitted. Please bring a copy of the student's transcript or report card to help with class placement. Also, proof of residency (utility bill such as phone, water, electric, etc.) is required at the time of registration. View Immunization Requirements for the FNSB School District.
* Anderson Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Arctic Light Elementary
* Ann Wien Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Badger Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Crawford Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Denali Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Hunter Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Joy Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Ladd Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Nordale Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* North Pole Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Pearl Creek Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Salcha Elementary - Routes (.PDF)
* Ticasuk Brown Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Two Rivers K-8 - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* University Park Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Weller Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Woodriver Elementary - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Ben Eielson Junior/Senior High - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Hutchison High - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Lathrop High - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* North Pole High - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* North Pole Middle - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Randy Smith Middle - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Ryan Middle - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* Tanana Middle - Bus Routes (.PDF)
* West Valley High - Bus Routes (.PDF)
View School Boundaries by Street Name (.PDF) - FNSB Bus Rules (.PDF). View the various Official FNSB District Calendars. FNSB Athletics. FNSB After School Programs. 2007-08 School Lunch Menu & Nutritional Analysys.
FNSB Board of Education Members. FNSB School District eMail Finder. 2007-08 Board Meeting Schedule and Audio Archive. Updates from Superintendent of Schools Nancy Wagner.
Additionally, Fairbanks is also home to Bible Baptist Christian School, Fairbanks Montessori School (907-451-8485), Fairhill Christian School and Catholic Schools of Fairbanks, which consist of Immaculate Conception Grade School and Monroe Junior/Senior High School.
Seaching for a new home in a particular school district? Search Fairbanks homes for sale or sign up for our Realty Retriever - he'll automatically send you new listings as they become available without even mussing the corners of the page.
Next Stop: The University of Alaska Fairbanks
ActiveRain Corp. is not responsible for the accuracy of the site's content (which is written by members of the ActiveRain Real Estate Network) and does not endorse the views of the real estate agents, mortgage brokers, and others listed here.
Powered by the ActiveRain Real Estate Network
© 2013 ActiveRain Corp. All Rights Reserved