April 2024 April is birch syrup season in the boreal forest of Alaska’s interior. It’s a busy time for the Alaska-owned Kahiltna Birchworks, one of the world’s largest birch syrup makers. Company founders Michael and Dulce East started the business over 30 years ago from their remote homestead near Talkeetna, and in 2023 they sold it to Hammers Family Birch in Wasilla. “We have a great relationship with the Easts,” says Ted Hammers, the CEO and co-founder of Hammers Family Birch. “They helped with our 2024 harvest and trained us about the business.” While pure birch syrup is their signature product sold around the world, they also produce birch-based condiments and candies and supply to both local and national breweries, including Denali Brewing Company for its seasonal OneTree Birch Beer. Hammers also now owns Alaska Wild Harvest. Another creation of the Easts, the company buys wild Alaskan berries from independent…
by Tim Lydon It’s been over twenty years, but Lauren Padawer still remembers the moment she fell in love with Copper River mud. While visiting Alaska for a rafting trip, her group stopped for lunch and a midday dip in the river’s cold-water eddies. She was mesmerized when her bare feet sank into the river’s soothing mud, which consists of fine silt that glaciers grind from the surrounding mountains. “I left that trip wanting to know where that mud came from,” Padawer tells Alaska magazine. Soon after, she moved to Alaska and within a few years launched her first soaps derived from Copper River silt. Today, Padawer’s Alaska Glacial Essentials Skincare, based in Cordova, offers an array of cleansers, moisturizers, creams, toners, and more. They’re sold by over 40 retailers in Alaska and online to customers across the U.S. and beyond. Her original signature product is a mud mask called the Glacial Facial, which uses silt to exfoliate and purify skin. Some products are also “supercharged” with wild Alaskan botanicals. But her main stay remains Copper River silt, which she harvests by hand under a permit from the Chugach National Forest. Clad in rain gear and XTRATUFs, she shovels the mud into five-gallon buckets from the river’s delta near…


