Umno Toronto police concerned for safety of man missing since January ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The landscape is virtually treeless around a coastal hub town above Alaska Arctic Circle, where even summer temperatures are too cold for northern-growing forests to take root.Amid thes <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.de>stanley cup</a> e unforgiving conditions, a creative kind of farming is sprouting up in the largely Inupiat community of Kotzebue.A subsidiary of a local Native corporation is usin <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.at>stanley thermobecher</a> g hydroponics technology to grow produce inside an insulated, 40-foot shipping container equipped with glowing magenta LED lights. Arctic Greens is harvesting kale, various lettuces, basil and other greens weekly from the soil-free system and selling them at the supermarket in the community of nearly 3,300. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW We ;re learning, Will Anderson, president of the Native Kikiktagruk Inupiat Corp., said of the business launched last spring. We ;re not a farming culture.The venture is first of its kind north of the Arctic Circle, according to the manufacturer of Kotzebue pesticide-free system. The goal is to set up similar systems in partnerships with other rural communities far from Alaska minimal road system — where steeply priced vegetables can be more than a week in transit and past their prime by the time they arrive at loc <a href=https://www.stanley-c |