NATIONAL NEWS

PHOTO ESSAY: In rural Alaska, collecting driftwood saves time, money and brings jobs

Jun 30, 2025, 6:02 AM

Jake Pogrebinsky smokes a cigarette while diving his boat on the Yukon River looking for logs to co...

Jake Pogrebinsky smokes a cigarette while diving his boat on the Yukon River looking for logs to collect, Tuesday, May 20, 2025, in Galena, Alaska. (AP Photo/John Locher)
Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP Photo/John Locher)

GALENA, Alaska (AP) — As ice breaks on the Yukon River, Jake Pogrebinsky looks at the water from shore, searching for a large log floating downstream.

When he spots one, he hops into his wooden motorboat and roars toward it, chainsawing any roots or branches that might still be attached, a hand-rolled cigarette never far from his lips. Then he drags the log with a rope toward shore, where eventually it will be used in the community here in central Alaska.

Pogrebinsky, 59, has been collecting driftwood in this remote, sprawling village of Galena for as long as he can remember. It’s part of his job, but it also brings him great joy. “Doing this, it’s the greatest time,” he said.

Plucking logs from the river provides jobs and heating

Naturally felled and chopped trees and logs have long journeyed down rivers and oceans, transported by winds, waves, currents and ice, some eventually swooped up by people for building, heating, tools and more. Indigenous people have done the practice for millennia and it continues today. Rather than paying to barge or fly in wood, Galena residents say gathering floating logs not only saves money and energy, but also allows people to connect with their environment.

“It provides local jobs. We’re using local materials, we’re using local labor,” said Brooke Sanderson, tribal administrator for the local Louden Tribe.

Most of the collected driftwood becomes firewood for heating during bone-chilling winters, but it is also transformed into sidings for new energy efficient homes being built for members of the Louden Tribe.

Collecting large floating logs is just one of the village’s sustainable practices: For nearly a decade, locally harvested trees have been shredded into wood chips that heat a bustling boarding school. And soon, a nearly-completed solar farm will curb the town’s reliance on expensive, imported diesel.

In the summer of 2024, the tribe set up a sawmill — which Pogrebinsky operates — to process driftwood and trees into lumber. They had tried to harvest trees off the land but it was too time consuming and labor intensive, said Sanderson. Collecting driftwood, she said, was more worth people’s time.

Pogrebinsky can tell you all the reasons why. For one, the river carries a lot of good wood the village generally wouldn’t have. “The quality of material is very high. … They can be permanent materials that would last decades.”

And by the time he catches a driftwood, most of the logging and branch removal has been done, and the bark has washed away. “It’s amazing. It saves so much energy,” said Pogrebinsky. A good season brings in so much driftwood that you can hardly see the water, he added, and a boat is nearly impossible to use.

Pulling out driftwood also has environmental benefits

Enda Murphy, assistant professor of civil engineering at the University of British Columbia who has researched coastal driftwood, said too much can smother vegetation in sensitive ecosystems and consume oxygen that fish and other species need. But these floating logs can also transport seeds, plants and serve as perches for birds and hiding spots for fish. A big question researchers are still working to answer is: How much is too much? And when does it start having adverse impacts on the environment? “This is something that we don’t really fully understand,” said Murphy.

With Pogrebinsky’s help, the Louden Tribe is working to get more people to collect driftwood from the river and sell it to the sawmill, and in the process reap all the benefits of being in nature.

“A big part of the idea is to encourage people to go out and do this. To see the value of this. To experience all the marvelous things that I have experienced,” said Pogrebinsky.

___

Pineda reported from Los Angeles.

___

The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP’s environmental coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment

National News

FILE - Cuban doctors arrive at the Jose Marti International Airport in Havana, Cuba, June 8, 2020, ...

Associated Press

Trump moves to toughen US policy on Cuba

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump has instructed his top Cabinet officers to review U.S. policy toward Cuba, ordering them to examine current sanctions and come up with ways to toughen them within 30 days. In a memo Monday, Trump said the reviews should focus on Cuba’s treatment of dissidents, its policies directed at dissidents […]

35 minutes ago

Associated Press

Inmate fatally shoots North Carolina officer before being caught in stolen vehicle, sheriff says

MURPHY, N.C. (AP) — A federal inmate escaped from custody at a medical clinic in western North Carolina and fatally shot a detention officer with his own gun Monday, then fled in a stolen vehicle before being captured in another county, a sheriff said. The inmate had been taken to an orthopedics office in Murphy […]

3 hours ago

FILE - A voter drops off their ballot at a dropbox on Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, in Portl...

Associated Press

Voters favored casting early and mail ballots in last year’s presidential election, report shows

ATLANTA (AP) — Casting mailed ballots remained popular among voters in last year’s presidential election, even as President Donald Trump has tried to undercut the process through a wide-ranging executive order. A a target of conspiracy theorists since the 2020 election. The findings, based on data collected at the local level and submitted by states, […]

3 hours ago

Associated Press

New York City doctor pleads guilty to sexually abusing patients in hospital

NEW YORK (AP) — A doctor pleaded guilty Monday to sexually abusing sedated patients at his New York City hospital and raping women who were unconscious at his home. Zhi Alan Cheng admitted to abusing seven women, including three female patients he was treating at New York-Presbyterian Queens hospital, the Queens district attorney’s office said. […]

4 hours ago

President Donald Trump answers questions from reporters as he meets with Congo's Foreign Minister T...

Associated Press

Trump vents online about service provider after conference call marred by glitch

WASHINGTON (AP) — On Monday afternoon, the president of the United States was just another person complaining online about his service provider. Donald Trump wrote in a pair of posts on Truth Social that he was trying to hold a conference call with faith leaders from all over the country but was unable to start […]

5 hours ago

FILE - Barry Morphew leaves a Fremont County court building in Canon City, Colo., with his daughter...

Associated Press

Husband of Suzanne Morphew back in Colorado to face murder charge for a second time

DENVER (AP) — The husband of a woman whose remains were discovered over three years after she was reported missing on Mother’s Day 2020 has arrived in Colorado to face a first-degree murder charge in her death for a second time. Barry Morphew was being held in the small city of Alamosa on Monday, 12th […]

5 hours ago

PHOTO ESSAY: In rural Alaska, collecting driftwood saves time, money and brings jobs