When Quannah Rose Chasinghorse Potts thinks about the harsh Alaskan winters of her childhood, she remembers when it would get so cold that cars and buses wouldn’t start. On those days, she and her siblings would hop in a sled and a dog team would pull them to school. Quannah, now 18 years old, is a member of the Han Gwich’in and Oglala Lakota tribes. She grew up in the remote interior of Alaska, a region known for wide stretches of forests filled with conifer trees like pine and spruce. Quannah’s tribe, the Gwich’in people, are believed to have lived on this land for more than 20,000 years.
Quannah Rose Chasinghorse Potts remembers the harsh Alaskan winters of her childhood. It would get so cold that cars and buses wouldn’t start. On those days, she and her siblings would hop in a sled. A dog team would pull them to school. Quannah is now 18 years old. She’s a member of the Han Gwich’in and Oglala Lakota tribes. She grew up in the remote interior of Alaska. The region’s wide stretches of forest are filled with conifer trees like pine and spruce. Quannah’s tribe, the Gwich’in people, are believed to have lived here for more than 20,000 years.