Alaskan Pilot Airdrops Thanksgiving Turkeys to Remote Communities

TL;DR Summary
In rural Alaska, Esther Keim continues her annual tradition of delivering frozen turkeys to remote residents for Thanksgiving by airdropping them from a small plane. This initiative, known as the Alaska Turkey Bomb, helps those living off the grid who cannot easily access grocery stores. Keim, who grew up in Alaska, was inspired to start this mission after hearing about a family with little to eat for the holiday. Her efforts have expanded through word of mouth and social media, and she hopes to establish a nonprofit to further support remote communities.
- In rural Alaska, a pilot tosses turkeys from an airplane for remote residents' Thanksgiving dinners OregonLive
- Alaska native delivers Thanksgiving to rural families by airdrop Fox News
- ‘It’s a bird! It’s a plane!’ In Alaska, it’s both, with a pilot tossing turkeys to rural homes The Associated Press
- Thanksgiving turkeys airdropped to remote Alaska homes BBC.com
- Woman drops Thanksgiving turkeys from her plane to Alaskans living off the road system Alaska's News Source
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
2
Time Saved
4 min
vs 5 min read
Condensed
89%
829 → 92 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on OregonLive