| Alaskan Bush |
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The Bush is a cultural as well as geographic division of the state of Alaska in the United States . Most Alaskans refer to any place besides Anchorage , Fairbanks , Juneau , and the towns of the Kenai Peninsula and Mat-Su Boroughs as falling within the Bush. The Bush is generally described as any community not "on the road system," making it accessible only by such means of transportation as: Snomobile/snowmachine, plane, boat, etc. Two kinds of Bush communities exist in Alaska: The Bush Hub and '''The Bush Village'''. THE BUSH HUB Bush Hubs are isolated small or mid-sized towns that serve as a central base for surrounding rural communities, such as the bush village. Characterized by their large, busy airports, bush hubs are used by many village dwellers as little more than a transfer point between home and a metropolitan destination. Residents of Bush Hubs typically enjoy many of the luxuries bush villages do not have, such as running water, flush-haul sewage treatment, and slightly relaxed alcohol laws. Bush hubs tend to share a number characteristics that generally include:
Bush Hubs of Alaska: Barrow , Nome , Kotzebue , St. Mary's , Bethel , Dillingham , Dutch Harbor , and Cordova . THE BUSH VILLAGE Each hub town services a multitude of Rural settlements and villages. The Bush Village presents a way of life that differs vastly from that of even its closely related parent hub. The Bush Village has a unique and profound kind of isolation that seldom is fully understood or appreciated by non-village dwellers. The following is a description of a particular village in S.W. Alaska, but the isolation of any Bush Village can be characterized by at least part of the following:
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