If you go, I highly recommend journaling each day. When I was in the Brooks Range it was daylight/visible light from 6:30am to ~11:15pm(end of August). You have time throughout the day.
Your wife and kids can read what happened every day and the journal makes the hunt easier to remember what you saw each day, the guide, stories told while glassing/eating, your thoughts looking at the landscape, what your thoughts were if you get rain/snowed in your tent, etc; It will be nice also as you get older and look back on your hunt.
Obviously take a lot of pictures. I printed all of mine out and put them in a photo album. Then your wife, kids, friends, and other family members can look through them with the journal and read your story.
Your wife and kids can read what happened every day and the journal makes the hunt easier to remember what you saw each day, the guide, stories told while glassing/eating, your thoughts looking at the landscape, what your thoughts were if you get rain/snowed in your tent, etc; It will be nice also as you get older and look back on your hunt.
Obviously take a lot of pictures. I printed all of mine out and put them in a photo album. Then your wife, kids, friends, and other family members can look through them with the journal and read your story.