Category: Blog Posts

  • Save Our Forest

    Forest

    Yo! Stumbled upon this killer website – the National Forest Preserve Alliance (NFPA, see what I did there?) – and let me tell you, it got me fired up faster than a squirrel hopped up on Red Bull. Since movin’ to Missoula, I’ve realized our forests are in serious trouble, thanks in part to the Bush administration’s “let’s-clear-cut-everything” agenda. Screw that noise! Here, the forest ain’t just scenery, it’s our backyard, our lungs, our whole dang ecosystem. So corporations and whoever else wants to grab a piece, take a hike!

    This NFPA crew, they’re the real deal. Their whole “Endangered Forests, Endangered Freedoms” thing? Basically, they’re using lawsuits, rallies, and even some good old-fashioned elbow grease to keep the Forest Service from turning our national treasures into sawdust. Did you know 95% of our original forests are gone already? The rest? Mostly public land, getting logged with our tax dollars, no less! Missoula’s seen its fair share of deforestation, and polluted water’s next on the menu if we don’t do something. Think about it: when do we stop, before every critter native to these woods is just a memory?

    Time to ditch the chainsaw and get to restorin’, I say! Check out these links: Endangered Forests, Endangered Freedoms Project (sounds epic, right?), Protect & Restore (duh!), and even their About Us page – they’re a real grassroots movement, powered by people like you and me. And hey, if you’re feelin’ spicy, there’s a link to “Stop the Bush Administration’s Pro-logging Agenda.” Go nuts!

    Remember, folks, a healthy forest means a healthy planet, a healthy Missoula, and maybe even a squirrel with slightly less jitters. Let’s get fightin’ for what’s right, one click at a time!

  • Crazy Mountains Aventure

    Crazy Mountains Aventure

    I have been back now for almost a week and finally have decided to take a look back to one of the best back packing trips I have ever taken. Paul and I embarked on a trip to the Crazy Mountain Range last Tuesday and I don”t think I could of guessed that the adventure would be this interesting. The idea was to spend 3 days and three nights in the Crazies and try to climb one peak. I think collectively we mentally decided on Crazy Peak since it was the tallest peak at over 11 thousand feet. Here are my accounts:

    Tuesday the 10th – Travel Day: I awoke Tuesday morning to Paul”s phone call and he said that he thought we could leave before noon so I started to pack. I originally wanted to do a mountain bike ride but if we could actually get to the trail head before dark I was excited.

    I was packed in about an hour and a half and the plan was to leave by 11 AM. 11 came and went and I packed the car. 11:30 I became upset, I could of done a ride and been back and ready before now. I fell asleep in my car waiting.

    Paul awoke me and we crawled out of town at an unbearable pace. Then once on the road we had to stop for gas and that took quite awhile because of a road closure due to construction. i was furious. Hell we wouldn’t even get to grandma”s to drop off one car and my dog until dark. Pissed off or not I continued and finally we reached grandma”s house. I wanted to stay at grandma”s house because it was already getting dark. Paul wanted to go and camp at our original planned spot in the Half Moon Campground. I decided to go with Paul”s idea … otherwise I would of missed the family reunion later on due to being a day behind.

    We arrived at the campground real late, paid the fee, and fell asleep. I awoke to a mountain staring down at me. Wow, what a sight, I thought to myself. I wanted to get going but realized that I was hiking with someone. I would try to do things as slow as possible so as to not seem to be waiting all the time. Slow down and smell the roses … and watch them grow. And grow … then die. ok, that”s what it seems like waiting for me.

    Wednesday the 11th – Backpacking Day: We hiked up the hiking/pack trail that heads West up Big Timber Creek. Along the way we noted several great waterfalls. At about tree miles we found the cut off to hike up to Blue Lake. We climbed the switchbacks that were the best ones I have hiked to date. It was made for pack horses so that is why.

    We arrived at some lakes. Our original goal was Blue Lake and we sought it out. Paul found quite a few spots to camp and settled on one with a great view. I had a gut instinct about a certain place and I didn’t want to camp. We mulled around and found absolutely beautiful spots. After a camping spot expedition up a drainage we found our spot. It was near a Zen garden and high enough to have great views. We hike down to our packs and returned to set up camp.

    The spot was great. We decided to camp at a semi level spot below the Zen garden and use it for a dinning and relaxation spot. Little did we know the tent spot was a horror to sleep upon but the dinning area was awesome. It was a great place to wake up in the morning and a great place to contemplate in the evening.

    Earlier we talked to two young hikers who suggested to take a certain drainage above our camp to get up and onto the ridge. We decided to take that route as it appeared that the two hikers were not geared up for a serious climb and seemed casual like it was easy. We must have ms-understood what they were talking about because the drainage we thought they were talking about would prove to be pretty extreme.

    Sleep that night was horrible. The ground under the tent was lumpy and had huge pits. We had checked before but I think it was a wet area and a lot settled while sleeping upon it. There were no other options at this site. It was the most level. On night two I added filler to the pits and smoothed out the lumps.

    The nights were cold and I was glad because I had a new bag and I wanted to see if the temperature rating was accurate. I would say it is. It is an awesome bag rated at 20. It is made by Slumber jack and I will get my cold bag under the same brand name.

    Thursday the 12th – Summit Day: It wasn’t before noon that we set out for the summit. In the back of my mind it wouldn’t take too long. I needed some rest from not sleeping all night. I slept in the meadow overlooking the lakes and mountains and it felt good. I had taken some Excedrin because of a headache and wasn’t feeling all too stable but off to the summit we went.

    At the bottom the route looked very un do-able. I got a little concerned. we agreed that we would just start up and if it seemed bad we would turn around and try another route. Before we knew it we were walking up the scree towards the chute. Right away we realized that the rock was unstable and that we would not have good strong holds. Figuring that it would get better we climbed on.

    Things got harder and harder and it became apparent that we could not climb at the same time or a rock would come lose and cream one of us. We saw a canyon with snow in it. Getting to the canyon would be lose and difficult but once we got there, we figured. Once we got there it would get better.

    Just getting to the canyon seemed difficult. Things that looked solid would fall away and tumble to the scree below. It was difficult enough to get to the canyon for us to agree it was time to turn around. Paul finally reached it and I took twice as much time to reach it. I had to take chances to just skirt over to where he was. We did not turn and go back down because once up the canyon it would get better.

    It did not get better. the canyon walls were not secure and the snow was slippery and made going slow. Most of all … it was getting steeper as we went. We did not realize it though. At one point Paul upset some rocks that whizzed by me. The situation was bad but … we figured it must get better.

    We were crazed lunatics and I don”t know why. It would get better is the theme and we just kept going up. The pitch got steeper. I knocked a rock loose and it did not bounce a little ways and it did not slide down … IT FELL, then hit the walls of the canyon smashing violently before slamming to the valley below. We suddenly realized that there was no turning back now. Things got quiet.

    I stopped looking for solid holds and took chances. I had to as I could not just spend any more time in this situation. It was terrifying. When I felt I couldn”t go fast I built steps in the loose rock strewn mess to get my mind off the situation and to feel like I was making progress. I knew it wasn”t going to get better. It was going to get worse and I prayed for some hope. A sign that we were doing this for a reason and not to just die. Suddenly we saw a end to the situation and scrambled to the top of the ridge line.

    This was not the hope I was asking for. This was on the ridge true enough but the way we came was not as bad as some of the other options. On the other side was Crazy Lake and the barren landscape that surrounded it. That option would require a decent down the same stuff as we came up but not as long or steep … except for the cliffs at the bottom.

    Paul scaled the rock wall to the left immediately and shouted that it was easy from this point on. I ignored him as he always puts a spin on things. To the left was another rock climb but what was beyond could not be seen. I imagined it a steep rock ridge with sheer cliffs on both sides. I sat down and started to panic. Paul was getting impatient at my inability to climb to his perch but screw him I thought. The world doesn”t spin for him … for me everyday I deal with some slight sense of vertigo and today was a bad one probably because of too much sleep.

    Paul was going to go towards the summit and had me convinced after a while that it was too bad. I stammered around an edge and climbed to where he was perched. By this time he was rock hopping up the ridge showing me “How Easy” it was. Once again putting a spin on it all. I looked at the ridge line and could tell that it got worse and the climb would be difficult. I did not want to continue and just wanted to get back to the spot at where I just rested. As I climbed down I told him to go on without me.

    Paul was having a problem with my decision but by then I could care less, I wasn”t going any further. He finally took off for the ridge. I settled down in my cubby hole and started to freak out more. Things got worse and I realized that there was no way I was willing to go in any direction. I ate and drank fluids while at the same time the sun beat down and burned the hell out of me. I put on more sunscreen.

    I realized that this situation was beyond what I wanted to be in at the moment and we needed to work on getting down. I figured Paul could come and climb this one with some one else and that he needed to bad his idea of going higher. I shouted up the ridge for 15 minutes but knew he couldn’t hear me because of my position. I began to think, what if he didn’t come back. Believe me this ridge looked dangerous and I really didn’t believe his chances where perfect. “Ok”, I told myself “your on your own”.

    I tried the ridge down and chickened out. “Ok Ill wait for him” … “No I have to work on something” I decided to practice going around to the downward side of the ridge. I made an attempt and then came back a few times. I made myself sit for 15 minutes straight because all my activity and thoughts were driving me nuts. I just wanted to sit and relax. And I did.

    I don”t know what happened. Maybe it was the food and drink that finally caught up to me. Maybe things seemed a little more balanced. When I got up and climbed around the little riser it seemed like second nature … “wow” I thought. Things seemed stable and I looked around. I saw a Karen and finally realized that I had just been given that hope I was wanting. A Karen is a pile of rocks to symbolize a route. This was the route up. Everything seemed fine from that moment on. I went back and made an arrow for Paul to see when he got back. To me this trip down was not up for debate because I was going down the sane way.

    I started to go to the Karen and noticed how suddenly I was enjoying the view and finally a route. I almost could see that after years of using this route it seemed as though I could see a trail through the rocks. I took in the view and built some Karens of my own to help others that freak out like me. To the West was a sheer cliff and to the East was a crumbling pitch that went down to Crazy Lake.

    At one vista point I saw Paul descending my way and snapped a picture. I was glad to see him and hoped he would see my arrow. In any case I would see him at camp. I walked the ridge and reached the low point of the ridge between Crazy Peak and another mountain to the South West. I felt positive that my instincts to follow the ridge would be the way down. I could still see signs of a route. I heard a voice and it was Paul.

    I turned around and he was pointing down towards camp. “Aren”t we going down the ridge”, he asked. He wanted to go down where he figured was a way down. I answered that I am going my way and that he could go any way he wanted. No way was I going to get talked into another route. I knew the way down. He seemed upset but for once I really didn’t care how anybody felt. I was finally having a good time and I was going my way and I am glad that I did.

    So instead of climbing down a technical scary ridge I enjoy a longer walk up and then around to another ridge which came down more steeply but easily manageable. Paul followed although I don”t think he wanted to. I enjoyed the views and spotted a Marmot (could of been a rock chuck but at that elevation who knows). Now that I think back it could of been a Wolverine as this place was supposed to have the largest population.

    Paul boot skated down the rest of the way and I made my way down to the green alpine tundra. I had made it down and I was thinking my higher power to be there. At that point was a snow field and a lake which ran from the bottom of it. The sights was great and we took it in and rested a while.

    Friday the 13th – coming Down: The trip back to camp took us over two ridges and drainage which were all spectacular. Once back at camp we sat ate and reflected. The night overcame us and we settled in for our last nights high in the Crazies.

    In the morning we broke camp and headed down. Before heading down all the way we took a detour at Blue Lake. We saw some huge waterfalls on the way in and decided to go in search of them.

    We hike around then down a valley for some pretty spectacular views of the Thunder Falls. I lost two pieces of my camera on the way climbing down the rocks and we only was able to retrieve one. We got thirsty because we left our water behind. we only planned a little excursion but instead it became a pretty long one. we decided to head back to Blue lake.

    Once at the lake we sat and enjoyed the views. I filtered some drinking water and relaxed. Finally it was time to depart and we found this old trail that was the original one into the lakes. It took a short cut over to the switchbacks. Once there we retreated the way we came. Just before we got back to the car we decide to take a look at Big Timber Falls.

    The falls were in this huge gorge and the sight was awesome. These falls are beautiful and I decided to visit them one fine rainy day for some real photography. Back at the car we packed up and went back to my grandmas but not before running into a bear and a snake on the road.

    The bear was on the edge of the plains where the run into the mountains and the snake we saw on the road about 5 miles from the highway. The rattlesnake was eating a bull snake which had been ran over. When a rude woman driver ran them both aver the rattler freaked out which was quite a sight.

    I have been back now for almost a week and finally have decided to take a look back to one of the best back packing trips I have ever taken. Paul and I embarked on a trip to the Crazy Mountain Range last Tuesday and I don”t think I could of guessed that the adventure would be this interesting.

  • Crazy Mountain Adventure

    Well I am just about off to an adventure in the Crazy Mountain Range. We plan to go to my Grandma's in Roundup first to drop off Marcy and park Paul's car. We will leave here around 11 AM. We should leave Grandma's house by 5 PM. We will reach the trail head and camp at the campground at around 8 PM.

    Wednesday We will be in the Crazies as well as Thursday too. Friday we will come out and go back the Grandma's to clean up. Saturday is the family reunion. That's pretty much the plans. I had better get to packing. I was just online to post some freaky dreams I have had and to post some pictures of the Warren Peak Climb.

  • Planning Crazy Mountains

    The Crazy Mountain Range is reported to rise dramatically some 7,000 feet above the Yellowstone River Valley and the surrounding plains 15 miles northwest of Big Timber. They cover an area of 136,547 acres in which my friend Paul and I plan to explore a small chunk of it. It is a road-less area and we will be accessing it from Big Timber Canyon Road from the East. The Crazy Mountain Range is reported to rise dramatically some 7,000 feet above the Yellowstone River Valley and the surrounding plains 15 miles northwest of Big Timber. They cover an area of 136,547 acres in which my friend Paul and I plan to explore a small chunk of it. It is a road-less area and we will be accessing it from Big Timber Canyon Road from the East.

    These formations stimulate the desire to reach a higher place but also geologists who say there is an abundance of trapped gas. I think Ill climb around a little before technology is used to ruin this remote wilderness wonder. In the past nineteenth century railroad land grants, now mostly passed on to other parties, make coherent resource management difficult. Efforts to preserve this place as a wilderness have failed in the past, but conservationists have once again proposed wilderness designation for the Crazies. I am in support of such efforts but for the moment, however, the Crazy Mountains remain the most spectacular alpine range in Montana without wilderness protection.

  • Friend Packs to Leave

    Well Sunday is here and Paul is packing to go home. I am sitting in Liquid Planet posting my dream and some pictures hopefully. I will probably only resource the up coming trip to the Crazy Mountains. That is planned for Tuesday through Friday. Tonight we are hiking Sentinel and doing nachos afterward with a movie. As usual tomorrow is my get things done day so Laundry, house clean, car clear, and grocery shop is on the agenda.

  • Riding and Staying Up late

    Riding and Staying Up late

    I awoke this morning trying to remember what I did that made me sleep in. I made coffee and completed notes and a map of last nights ride.

    After last nights ride at Woods Gulch Paul and I stopped in on our friend Chuck in the Lincoln Hills Area where we parked. We were there till late and after we stopped in at Hardies for a mushroom burger. It was real late as I crawled into bed and listened to another installment of a book on CD I have been working on.

    Today I hope to ride Blue Point a new loop I have thought of. Check it out in my forum if there is such a thing any more. Remember blogs live longer than web pages or sites.

  • Ho Hum, Another Summer Day

    Ho Hum, Another Summer Day

    Well this morning I feel like a major disappointment. I wanted to see Lucy and Niko off at the airport but things went wrong and I missed them. The thing that makes it worse is that I promised to be there. I feel so terrible.

    Today I am taking a day off from extreme activity. I will work on getting some things done that I want to do. I want to figure out how to hang all my maps at home and also get a compression bag and a fly for my tent. Another thing I would like to do is hag at the Liquid and play on the Internet … update my hikes.

    Tonight Paul is coming to the Thursday Night Bike Club and I hope he has fun. I always do and until last week found a great new place to ride. Tonight is in the Lincoln Hills Area and I don’t know what else we can do there.

    Tomorrow is Friday and I will probably go riding and plan the weekend more. I want to do Sheep Mountain and hike Triangle Peak. Paul and I have to plan our trip to the Crazies also.

  • Vertigo

    Vertigo

    This morning I awake from numerous dreams none of which I can remember. Yesterday I had vertigo after a morning ride. I can say this. It wasn’t the ice cream I had right after breakfast. lol. Why because I ate the rest of it last bight before bed and this morning I feel fine. I do feel a little ruff from the extreme activities from last week and last weekend in particular.

    Last Sunday I climbed Warren Peak in the Pintlars with Paul, Ethan, and another guy. I cant remember his name but I do know he used to work in Denali National Park in Alaska. The hike was strenuous and long … around 10 hours. The day before I did a very strenuous bike ride. I did Mount Dean Stone. In my attempt I ran amuck and got lost. I had to hike a bike up Mitten Mountain before riding the ridge over to Dean Stone. Very strenuous activity.

    I have most of my bills paid off and CITI along with MBNA are completely paid off. The VW loan (my car) is under 10,000 along with back child support. So I should be sitting pretty. My only tarnishes are my student loan and this computer load from Best Buy. I must pay off Best Buy before one year but for now it is no interest. Now I just have to find a job.

    Well today I hope to get out to do the Wallman trail out at the Rattlesnake Wilderness Area. Yesterday i took Paul riding out there and we saw a bear crossing the wetlands high up in the corridor. That was before we flatted twice getting to. Last night I met up with him and his family Niko and Lucy for some pizza and bowling. I started to have fun but after a beer started to feel angry and resentful. I don’t know why. Well I am starving and I cant remember my dream last night so I better sign off.

  • Vertigo

    Vertigo

    I just had some vertigo today and I am finally getting up. Still feel weird. Going to meet Paul, Lucy, and Niko for a pizza buffet and then bowling. The weather is a little stormy here but cant complain.

  • Boulder Point Adventure Completed

    Boulder Point Adventure Completed

    Yesterday, which was Thursday, I planned an outing into the Rattlesnake Wilderness. Marcy did not come with me. The first part of this adventure biked up the Rattlesnake Corridor to a point where I stashed my bike and put on the hikers. The second part of me hiked up to the saddle between Boulder Point and the unnamed peak to the northwest. I checked out Boulder Point and then topped the un-named high point…

    Terrain Distance (approx): approx. 32 miles (rt)
    Climbing Distance: 4,180 feet
    Highest Altitude: 7,422 feet
    Trip Time: approx 5 hours

    8:25 AM – Left the car at the main Rattlesnake Trail head. I hampered this adventure at the beginning because of a fanny pack (newly bought) that was not working correctly. It is a Kelty and I would recommend that no one purchase one of these fanny packs. The reason is that how they locate their suspension straps are bogus. The only way to wear this one is upside down. That’s crazy. The absolute worst fanny pack made in the world today.

    10:00 AM – After about two hours delay I got underway and rode for about an hour up the Rattlesnake Corridor. After the switch back and rocky scree section of road after the Franklin Bridge, I took a break and watched some moose.

    10:20 AM – About a mile and a half past the high wetland on the left there is a sign in for the wilderness. A little past this post is a trailhead for trail 52. Continue along the corridor and keep an eye to the right for a sign that signifies the Porcupine Creek Trail.

    10:45 AM – I reached the trailhead for trail 504 (Porcupine Creek Trail). I stashed the bike and dawned the hiking shoes. The trail heads off North East alongside the Porcupine Creek. The trail goes through burned sections of forest, so pay attention as the trail is hard to find.

    12:50 PM – The trail comes to a T. I took the right and stopped for a jerky break on the rock cliffs overlooking Boulder Lake. The sun was high, and the day was nice. No bugs made the day even tastier. From here there are views of Mc Cloud, the highest point in the Rattlesnake, the Mission Range, and the Swan Range.

    From here go over the ridge down and take a right at the junction of trail 333. Go about off the ridge and take a trail up the ridge to the top of Boulder lookout. The trail is off to the left. I returned up the ridge and continued through the junction that I came to first. The prime point here is the mountain top within view to the north. It is a short 1/4 mile climb.

    2:10 PM – Summit of un-named peak overlooking Boulder Lake. From here return the way in. It will take about 1 hour and 15 minutes to get back down to where I stashed my bike. The bike ride back to the trailhead is just a little over an hour to an hour and ten minutes.

  • Shultz Talks About Trails

    Shultz Talks About Trails

    Good morning.  Today I head out for an adventure into the Rattlesnake Wilderness. I will bike into the wilderness and then hike up to my destination.  I am trying something new today.  I bought a water purifier so I don’t have to carry so much water.  Last night I enjoyed a summer picnic at Carla’s house.  I have a feeling we will be good friends because she likes to hike and bike.  Her friends do as well and that should be good. 

    If not for the long winters, the northern Rockies timber town of Missoula (population 57,000) would certainly keep company with Moab and Crested Butte as one of America’s fat-tire epicenters. But the rolling and steep terrain, bisected by well-maintained singletrack and logging roads, is ridable only from June to October, a short enough season that obsessives don’t live here and itinerant bikers haven’t caught wind of it. The result is blissfully empty paths — in spades. “If you include logging roads, there are thousands of miles of trails,” says local rider Sam Schultz. “There’s a lot of variety, a lot of really fast, hard-packed, and smooth rides.” The 18-year-old Schultz, who is the youngest member of the U.S Under-23 National Mountain Bike Team, divulged his list of the best trails in Missoula.

    For a warm-up Schultz suggests an easy spin up the main drag of the Rattlesnake Wilderness and National Recreation Area, a gravel road along Rattlesnake Creek that turns into a rough doubletrack. By the time you’ve pedaled to Franklin Bridge you’ll have covered eight miles. From there you’ve got multiple extension trails to choose from, including Woods Gulch Trail, an epic ride with a 2,500-foot elevation gain in 22 miles. “It’s the longest climb in Missoula, a good four-hour ride with three hours of uphills,” Schultz says. Heading northeast from the trailhead, located on the east side of the Rattlesnake road, you’ll slog up toward 7,650-foot Sheep Mountain. Snowbowl Overlook Trail starts at the main Rattlesnake trailhead, 4.5 miles from downtown, with a seven-mile climb up steep but ridable singletrack to a ledge above the Snowbowl ski resort and views of the slopes. After that? “A superfun descent from slow, steep, technical, and rooty to really fast with gradual turns.

    Sam Shultz in a article I cant remember
  • Post Nap Thoughts

    Post Nap Thoughts

    Just got up from a nap.  Thought I would log on to comment on today’s ride in Lolo. I am heading out the door for a project. It is two actually. One is to upgrade my bike carrier with new pads and the other is to make map hanging in my apartment more attractive and easy. Right now I use duct tape. Tonight is a party at Paul’s friends house. I hope to meet up with some playmates here in Missoula. Chow.

  • Forest Fire Season Beginith

    Forest Fire Season Beginith

    Well fire season has begun.  There is  a forest fire in Lincoln Montana.  Yesterday I could not see the surrounding mountains as I rode my mountain bike.  I guess the smoke had made things hazy.  Yesterday I guess a man fell in a glacier and died up in Glacier Park.  Montana is not for the meek societal types.

    Paul and Lucy are at Yellowstone Park and I have enjoyed the return to my active lifestyle.  While they are here I have been sitting by the phone waiting for them to get out and do something.  I guess I didn’t realize until now that they don’t do as much as I thought.  That’s fine though but I must get out and enjoy what’s left of my summer more.  Next year this time Ill have a job. 

    In a couple weeks I am going to get a job.  Probably right after the reunion.  Actually I cant wait.  I just hope it is a good enough job to live in Missoula.  I figure only 1200 a month is needed to live.

  • Hike to Stewart Peak

    Howdy, folks! Bill here, and today, I’ve got a hiking adventure on the horizon. I’ve set my sights on conquering Stewart Peak in the stunning Rattlesnake Wilderness. Marcy decided to sit this one out, so it’s just me, the trail, and the great outdoors. I’m itching to get going, and as soon as I finish penning this journal, I’m off!

    Yesterday was a decent day, but you know me, I can’t stay cooped up for long. Although I did indulge a bit too much in the food department, and I’m starting to think I need to keep that ol’ appetite in check. Tomorrow marks the start of another week, and I’m eagerly looking forward to a grocery run. Marcy’s down to bread and eggs, poor thing!

    But here’s what’s really exciting – later this week, I’m heading out to visit my good friends Paul and Mandy over in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Can’t wait to catch up and share some adventures. Speaking of which, I better give Mandy a call when I get back from my hike.

    So, with the trail calling my name and the wilderness awaiting, it’s time to lace up those boots and hit the road. Until next time, keep exploring, stay hungry for adventure (but maybe not for snacks), and cherish those moments with friends.

  • Damn Movies!

    Damn Movies!

    I just got done with a movie. I thought when I visited a familiar feeling. Sadness! I ask myself why after every movie I watch do I feel sadness. I mean sadness into the core of my being. I feel loss. I grieve, but I don’t know why. I just had an idea. I sat and feel and try to sort this out. I love movies because I get lost in them. They are make believe; I know. Movies let me feel the things I have never allowed myself to feel. I get caught up in the movie and fall in love, I care, and I feel compassion. Great compassion. When it is over I grieve. I never feel those things in life. I won’t let them, and I wonder why. People who know me must wonder if I fell in love or really care in sympathetic interests towards the people that are associated with me.

    But wait. I do in life fall in love and care. But now I look back and reflect. I have always sabotaged those relationships. Unconsciously, I always let them go. I never have told those people how I feel about them only those That I find I can manipulate do I think I feel and I report to them I care and or love. Does this make me a vulgar person? Only if I cannot reverse this and start living!

  • Seeking Paul

    Seeking Paul

    Here I am at the Liquid Planet. I missed Paul at his office (Break Expresso) so I came here. I am really liking this place. Well let us see! Yesterday I attempted to ride my bike along the ridge from Blue Mountain to Petty Mountain. It was hot and I blew myself apart on all the extreme climbs. I gave up before getting close. All in all I did 40 miles and 8,900 feet of climbing. Not bad. That brings us to today. I am fried and sun burned from this mornings trip to Out 2 Lunch festival so I am taking a break and writing some stuff. Tomorrow is the group ride so Ill concentrate on getting my bike fixed up and maybe do a short hike in the morning. Take care all … Happy Summer!

  • Hiking Plans?

    Hiking Plans?

    Good morning! It’s shaping up to be a gorgeous day – the sun is shining, and there’s a crispness in the air. I’m currently enjoying my breakfast of eggs and toast, waiting for my friend Paul to call. We’re planning to meet at the coffee store for a bit of online work.

    Yesterday was pretty productive. Managed to get my laundry and grocery shopping done. In the evening, I joined the Thursday Night Group for a mountain bike ride. We started from the Crazy Canyon parking lot, rode up to University Mountain via trails and the access road, and then the real fun began. We descended the ridge to the saddle between Sentinel, and finally down towards town, then back to the parking lot via single track. It was a blast, though quite a long ride since I biked from my home to meet them and back, getting home around 9:30 PM.

    This weekend, there’s a big hike planned in the Mission Mountains. I’m a bit concerned about the lack of planning, but I’m trusting the experts. I’m also looking forward to joining the Rocky Mountaineers to learn more about mountaineering. Hope everyone has a great day!

  • Big Crash in Tour

    "6 men took their chances but never were let out of touch from a mindful peloton. The small group was whittled down to 4 and then Flecha tried a solo escape only to be caught with 2 kms to the line. Right at the 1 km banner a major crash occurred splitting the peloton and allowing only 12 riders to challenge for the stage win. As they thundered to the line it was Quickstep”s Tom Boonen gritting his teeth and winning clearly over Stuart O”Grady and Erik Zabel"

    1. Thomas Voeckler (BLB)
    2. Stuart O”Grady (COF) at 3″01"
    3. Sandy Casar (FDJ) at 4″06"
    4. Magnus Backstedt (ALB) at 6″06"
    5. Jakob Piil (CSC) at 6″58"
    6. Lance Armstrong (USP) at 9″35"
    7. George Hincapie (USP) at 9″45"
    8. Floyd Landis (USP) at 9″51"
    9. Jose Azevedo (USP) at 9″57"
    10. Jose Luis Rubiera (USP) at 9″59"