Upperco resident Olivia Holbrook spending summer as glacier guide in Alaska

Holbrook is a rising junior at Hamilton College

Clinton, NY (08/10/2021) — Upperco resident and Hamilton College rising junior Olivia Holbrook is spending her second summer working with a glacier guiding company in Alaska. In this blog post, the geosciences and art major shares what she loves about her summer job.

I first thought about guiding in Alaska after reading an article about a Hamilton alumnus working at Exit Glacier Guides while I was applying to colleges. My freshman year, I connected with a glacier guiding company in the Matanuska Valley of Alaska through my geology professor Cat Beck. I worked on the Matanuska Glacier for one summer and quickly fell in love with guiding - it combined my passions of science and the outdoors while being active all day.

This summer I'm working at Exit Glacier Guides as an ice climbing and ice trekking guide. I hike up the Harding Icefield Trail every day and spend about seven hours on the ice, hiking up with stops for interpretation. I also trail run after work, so the moment I sit down I fall asleep! It can be quite arduous at times - clients can be difficult, and the weather can be damp as Seward, Alaska, is considered a temperate rainforest. We call rain liquid sunshine! But the job is very rewarding. I tell people about the glaciers, and show the evidence of climate change firsthand. Everything I learn in the classroom can be applied when I tell clients about glacial maximums, the type of rock that surrounds Exit Glacier, and how glaciers form and recede.

Another thing I love to tell people about is the Harding Icefield. Exit Glacier originates from the Harding, which is about the size of Rhode Island and looks like Antarctica, a huge mass of ice that is 3,000 feet deep. I've taken a ski plane up onto the icefield - just one of many experiences I have had living part-time in Alaska.

I have guided Hamilton students, including Meg Manning a fellow geosciences major who works for Apogee Adventures. The community of Hamiltonians who work in Alaska is small but growing. Maya Weil-Cooley is working on the Matanuska Glacier this summer and will be visiting me for an end-of-season trip before we return to Hamilton in the fall and share a quad in Eells [Residence Hall].

Holbrook is a graduate of Hereford High School

Originally founded in 1793 as the Hamilton-Oneida Academy, Hamilton College offers an open curriculum that gives students the freedom to shape their own liberal arts education within a research- and writing-intensive framework. Hamilton enrolls 1,850 students from 49 states and 49 countries. Additional information about the college can be found at www.hamilton.edu.

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Media Attachments

Upperco resident, Hamilton College student Olivia Holbrook hangs out over a crevasse in Alaska.

Holbrook sketches what she sees in Alaska and hopes to make prints and sculptures based upon those sketches.

Details shot up close on the Matanuska Glacier.