The black line shows the Tutka Backdoor trail from Tutka Bay to Taylor Bay, Alaska. (Map by Bret Higman/Ground Truth Alaska)

The black line shows the Tutka Backdoor trail from Tutka Bay to Taylor Bay, Alaska. (Map by Bret Higman/Ground Truth Alaska)

Point of View: Trails thrive with community care

Building a trail across the steep and crumpled country of the outer Kenai Peninsula was a crazy idea

By Erin McKittrick

For the Homer News

Our floatplane motored past peaks protruding through pillows of cloud. I was sure we’d get turned back to Homer again, until the pilot dropped into a fog-free Port Dick, then slipped around the corner to drop four of us at the beach at Taylor Bay.

My fellow passengers were hiking Tutka Backdoor, while I was running it ahead of them. I took every step of the 32-mile line to Jakolof Bay alone, keeping company with the echoes of dozens of people. In one spot, I remembered a crew rolling boulders into place with rock bars. In another, we’d spent hours taking out a salmonberry thicket. I remembered the shivering soggy camaraderie in the week of pouring rain, the chainsawing run that went past midnight, and all of the impossibly terrible bushwhacks in the places the trail didn’t end up going. Each cut mark, each bit of tread, had a story, and a person, behind it.

Building a trail across the steep and crumpled country of the outer Kenai Peninsula was a crazy idea that only became possible because the community embraced it. In five years, over 100 people, adults and kids, spent nearly 1,500 person days building Tutka Backdoor.

Trails have always been about community. Historically, most of our trails were built informally by hunters and travelers. The trails that survive are the ones that continue to be embraced by their communities. Our ecology isn’t kind to trails. Mud slides and washouts take them out, devil’s club bristle over them, beetle-killed forests fall on them, salmonberries lock their thorny canes across them, and even a bloom of pushki and ferns can render them invisible.

In the past couple decades, I’ve watched trails around Seldovia and in Kachemak Bay Park disappear. Some were old logging roads. Others were designed as trails. The ones that thrive are the ones the community cares for, whether it’s the Friends of Kachemak Bay Park keeping Grace Ridge and Sadie Knob clear, the Homer Drawdown group clearing trails in town, or Seldovia residents taking it upon ourselves to keep our own local trails in shape.

We’ve learned a lot about how to build trails better since the early days of informal hunting trails. But community labor is as important as ever to keep trails open, safe and amazing. The Homer Foundation has generously provided a grant that will allow us to bring together professional trail experts, community volunteers, and park staff on an expedition this summer to plan for the best future of Tutka Backdoor. We hope it will provide not just a plan for this trail, but a model for how to bring community to all our trails.

Erin McKittrick is an adventurer, a consultant and a science/outdoors writer. She lives in Seldovia with her family.

Nonprofit Needs

The Homer Food Pantry is seeking frozen protein in the form of fish, chicken or other meat. If you know of a visiting fisherman who is unable to ship out all of their catch, remind them to take it to Homer Fish Processing and tell them it is for the Food Pantry.

For delivery of frozen food, call 235-1968 to make arrangements. Or, plan to bring it in any Monday between 8:30 a.m. and 3 p.m.

More in Opinion

A vintage Underwood typewriter sits on a table on Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2022, at the Homer News in Homer, Alaska. (Photo by Michael Armstrong/Homer News)
Letters to the editor

Masculinity choices Masculinity is a set of traits and behaviors leading to… Continue reading

Gov. Mike Dunleavy gestures during his State of the State address on Jan. 22, 2026. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
Opinion: It’s time to end Alaska’s fiscal experiment

For decades, Alaska has operated under a fiscal and budgeting system unlike… Continue reading

Northern sea ice, such as this surrounding the community of Kivalina, has declined dramatically in area and thickness over the last few decades. Photo courtesy Ned Rozell
20 years of Arctic report cards

Twenty years have passed since scientists released the first version of the… Continue reading

Larry Persily. (Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: World doesn’t need another blast of hot air

Everyone needs a break from reality — myself included. It’s a depressing… Continue reading

A vintage Underwood typewriter sits on a table on Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2022, at the Homer News in Homer, Alaska. (Photo by Michael Armstrong/Homer News)
Opinion: Federal match funding is a promise to Alaska’s future

Alaska’s transportation system is the kind of thing most people don’t think… Continue reading

Larry Persily. (Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Dunleavy writing constitutional checks he can’t cover

Gov. Mike Dunleavy, in the final year of his 2,918-day, two-term career… Continue reading

Photo courtesy of the UAF Geophysical Institute
Carl Benson pauses during one of his traverses of Greenland in 1953, when he was 25.
Carl Benson embodied the far North

Carl Benson’s last winter on Earth featured 32 consecutive days during which… Continue reading

A vintage Underwood typewriter sits on a table on Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2022, at the Homer News in Homer, Alaska. (Photo by Michael Armstrong/Homer News)
Letters to the editor

Central peninsula community generous and always there to help On behalf of… Continue reading

Six-foot-six Tage Thompson of the Buffalo Sabres possesses one of the fastest slap shots in the modern game. Photo courtesy Ned Rozell
The physics of skating and slap shots

When two NHL hockey players collide, their pads and muscles can absorb… Continue reading

Alaska’s natural gas pipeline would largely follow the route of the existing trans-Alaska oil pipeline, pictured here, from the North Slope. Near Fairbanks, the gas line would split off toward Anchorage, while the oil pipeline continues to the Prince William Sound community of Valdez. (Photo by David Houseknecht/United States Geological Survey)
Opinion: Alaskans must proceed with caution on gasline legislation

Alaskans have watched a parade of natural gas pipeline proposals come and… Continue reading

Van Abbott.
Looting the republic

A satire depicting the systematic extraction of wealth under the current U.S. regime.

Larry Persily. (Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: It’s OK not to be one of the beautiful people

This is for all of us who don’t have perfect hair —… Continue reading