Alaskans Didn't Feel A Need To Lock Their Doors Until Recently
In rural Alaska, it wasn't until recently that people even felt there was a need to lock their doors. One reason was that you knew everybody, and they knew you. Another was that you probably didn't have anything worth stealing anyway. Besides, it seemed downright rude to keep your neighbors out. They were the only people who could help you in the days (not so long ago) before helicopters were available to medically evacuate the sick.
![Security in Alaska means locking door with a string. Door latch.](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZUikAqXuiP6FSWdNZ0aT0EIyz95uYV19A585zNFJysFF_E8Ki5opor7B3gjZld4PCoFskYXX4noqlsEazc-vB5ZHyrG45zVyGlbfUg6vUddtw8PtI3k7dUMi_04Q1g6T-N92tS4oJlmc/s400/Alaska_Door_Latch.jpg)
The cabin latch with the spoon was at a restaurant in Cooper Landing, south of Anchorage. And the one with the bear trap (which is disabled) is representative of a kind of comic latch that doesn't really do anything, but which seems to have sprung up in the Talkeetna area, on the Parks Highway, back in the 1970's, when Ray Genet, a McKinley mountaineer, used traps like this in a number of cabins.
![Security in Alaska means locking door with a wolf trap. Door latch.](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEii2BX88-EcM44i0eaccXwa5hp3F1GW3jSOA0CE_sUN14pvSLb0x9msJ5REHHuxFxsl7ceGltv2PfHipw5QXUeqbM8tG20pNoKctdhMModyGRqfvrA8D5yL_L9oWvIy7rplB_sCbbJL1AE/s400/Alaska-Trap-Door-Latch.jpg)