After uneventful successes on the float out and the hardest part of the road home, I thought I was all set. I took my time enjoying the scenery of the south slope of the Brooks Range in the morning.
About 20 miles north of the Arctic Circle, I started feeling strange vibrations in my car. I thought perhaps I was getting another flat, so I checked and the tire pressures were fine. Then I assumed the problem might be due to the front struts, which needed replacing anyway. After ten minutes or so the problem quickly grew much worse. I realized perhaps the lug nuts were coming loose on the tire I changed up north, and I started to pull over at a wide spot in the road where the big rig coming up behind me could pass.
I was too late. My front left tire popped off the car as I slowed down and pulled over, and that corner faceplanted into the dirt. The tire spun out into the wheels of the passing truck and got kicked around a couple times before rolling away unharmed. The trucker stopped and help assess the damage: no fix was possible in the bush.
With my satellite text messenger (DeLorme InReach SE), I contacted my dad and he called a tow truck. It had to drive all the way from Fairbanks up past the Arctic circle, but I was actually back in town by 10:00 pm. Towing insurance to take care of this $1450 bill was the best $0.87/month I ever spent.
Next year I'm planning to try something a little different: a caribou hunt that does not end in some sort of rescue.