bland and without passion

The lines make me tired.
Riding in the back seat on the way home from a weekend in Oregon. My driving shift just ended and now it’s my turn for a nap or something. According to the battery meter on this laptop, I only have about 26% left to write – that’s cool, because seeing the scenery go by out of the corners of my eyes is kinda making me sick. We just passed a town called Balls Ferry – I’m laughing on the inside.

Oregon was awesome. I flew in Friday night around 11:30pm, just as Sharaun and Ben were driving up to the Portland airport – timed perfectly. We spent Saturday bumming around, and ended up getting a new pack for Sharaun at RIE (the no-sales-tax-havin’ policies in Oregon made it a good buy), as well as some nice long underwear for me – you know, to keep the boys warm on cold overnight campouts. Saturday night was a mini family reunion of sorts at Ben’s folks’ place, where Ben and his siblings came together for some BBQ ribs and a multitude of other foodstuffs. Went to bed that night on an air mattress with a full belly and happy heart.

Sunday morning we woke up early, thanks to the cell-phone alarm (those things have really changed the way I do a lot of stuff), and packed up for the road-trip to Smith Rock. We stopped in the touristy town of Sisters on the way down, and walked a few shops before grabbing lunch at some place where I had an awesome prime rib sandwich. (My goal here is to *not* mention food in every paragraph, so as not to appear a complete glutton). Less than an hour later we had pulled up to the bivy camping area at Smith Rock and were picking pads and setting up camp.

Smith Rock is an awesome state park, they’ve put a heck of a lot of work into the place to make it very people-friendly. With it’s hundreds of climbs, it’s a seriously popular destination for sport climbers from around the world – and at almost any time you can see people tied in and climbing all over the rock-face. I likened it to be at a skatepark, watching some really good skateboarders at their best. Watching those climbers was great, we sat and watch a couple groups for a quite a while on our hikes, it’s just to fascinating – kinda makes a fella wanna try out the sport, y’know? (Maybe if I didn’t have to haul all the extra poundage up with me, I’d give it a go).

Anyway, we did a couple short hikes to some scenic spots. Really nice hikes, strenuous but not very long at all so not killers. The camping was also great, since the weather was gorgeous I didn’t bother putting the rainfly on the tent, giving us a great view of the stars at night. It’s great waking up and looking through the mesh at a sky full of stars, especially out there where there’s no artificial light to obscure any – it’s like the whole sky is speckled. When I was leaving Houston on Friday, I was actually thinking I’d rather go home to Sacramento and relax – but after the weekend I’m really glad we went. The combination of all the recreational time and work-related travel-time I’ve had lately has really been like being on some blissful extended vacation. Going back to the office for a four-day week tomorrow is gonna be like putting the shackles back on.

That’s it for me today, bland and without passion, but that’s it. Dave out.

balls y’alls, balls

On the move again.
Balls y’alls, balls. Once again I’m sitting through this 5hr presentation. Man, I thought I’d seen the last of it back in Taiwan, but here we go again. I mean, for real, I know this thing by heart now – even the parts that aren’t mine. It’s like we’re the cast of Cats or something, can you imagine how bored they must’ve been of performing that play? I bet any cast member could fill in for any other cast member. I mean, I could speak to everyone’s stuff – but I probably couldn’t answer all the questions like they can. Really, I don’t even care. My stuff is at the very end, so I’m gonna blow through it and get out of here.

Well, everyone I know back in my hometown in Florida has abandoned ship and is heading for higher ground. (Everyone is, or everyone are? Is, right?). Anyway, there were mandatory evacuations in Rockledge, my old stomping grounds, even though the only people the cops were actually forcing out were mobile home owners. I suppose that’s good, God has demonstrated again and again his opinion of mobile homes. He hates them so bad, he’s made them tornado and hurricane magnets – poor mobile home people. But really, if it’s in the definition of your house’s name that it can be easily moved – you might’ve thought you’d have some idea. Anyway, to all my people in Florida who may be reading this entry huddled by candlelight in an emergency shelter – good luck and hope you and your stuff stays put and stays dry.

I’m not too excited about flying right now, another 3hr+ flight to Portland. We had a 7am meeting this morning, and since my head is still on PST time it was really a 5am meeting to me. Waking up at 6am (4am in my brain) after staying up to watch Kerry’s midnight RNC rebuttal was tough, so I’m pretty freaking tired – so I plan on sleeping the entire flight. Having to wear dress shoes today is not helping my busted big toes either, and they are throbbing in my shoes now as I type. As soon as I get outta here I’m throwing these clunkers in the trunk and putting on my flip flops. Easier to get through airport security that way too, since I’m obviously not hiding any bombs in my Reefs.

I was thinking about how seasoned I am now to the whole traveling thing. Back in college, I remember getting on a plane in Florida to go to my job interview in California – and only vaguely remembering how to do the whole thing. I think the last time I’d flown before that was when the whole family moved to Florida in the first place., twelve years prior Now it’s all familiar, the security check-in, the terminals and baggage claim, everything. While I’m far from what I’d consider a frequent traveler (comparing myself to some others I work with), I do travel enough that I consider myself and airport and rental car veteran. Give me a hotel room, a company meal-ticket, and some frequent flier miles – and I’m good to go.

Sometimes, when I’m in a crowded pace, I like to stare around at the ladies and play a game in my head called “who would I do?” It’s a pretty simple game really, I just look around and pick out girls who, if it came down to it, I would hump. Now, since the game is all hypothetical, it’s not a problem being married or anything – and it’s fair to assume, for the purpose of the game, that all girls who I chose to do would indeed give in to my attentions. So, right now, at the George Bush International Airport in Houston, Texas, terminal C37 – there are about eight girls around me who qualify. I mean, that girl over there with the long brown hair: I would totally do her. Oh, and this older-berry of indeterminate ethnic origin sitting to my right: totally do her. Blondie in the pinstriped pants across the aisle here: put her on the list, ’cause I’m totally doin’ her. Anyway, you get the picture.

Guess that’s it for a Friday night, I’m sure no one’ll be reading this until Monday morning anyway… but at least I only missed a day this week. Dave out.

untucked

Open me.
I’m gonna try my best to not let this week’s travel keep me from writing, but if there’s nothing going on worth writing about then I don’t mind skipping a day. I think that could be a potential pitfall actually, forcing myself to write every day regardless of whether or not there’s something to write about. Because Thursday I leave early for Houston, I’m attempting this Wednesday double-up to get myself ahead on the days. I’ll spend Friday once again up in front of customers, wearing my best “I know what I’m talking about” face. Pull some ill-fitting khakis over my ass, tuck in a nice blue dress shirt, brush my hair and fill my breast pocket with business cards. The portrait of a corporate slave, bowing and scraping for a paycheck and some stock options. Why couldn’t I have been a cowboy or rock star?

I’m sitting in a hotel in Houston, belly full of beer, steak, garlic-mashed potatoes, and some kinda Jack Daniels ice cream. Business travel is at least nice for the meals. The flight wasn’t bad, and I got a lot done this morning before leaving. Y’know those ultra-productive days where everything seems to fall into place? When you’re able to get everything that you wanted to done and more? I love those days. Tomorrow it’s back to work, but for now I can sit here and watch W address the RNC. Then I guess Kerry is gonna talk in Ohio, it’s a fun-filled night for politicos.

Last night the Killers at the Boardwalk was a good show. As usual, the tiny Boardwalk was packed wall-to-wall with the cream of Sacramento’s emo-youth. Tousled, jet-black haired, lanky youngsters with dark thick-rimmed glasses and untucked concert tees. Doing their best to wear their angst and societal aloofness on their sleeves for all to see. Girls decked in once-again-cool 1985 makeup and hairstyles, with plenty of pink and poof. And me, a guy in his late twenties. A guy wearing jean shorts bought as Sams, Reef flip-flops, and a red and blue striped preppie shirt, untucked. With a brown corduroy Nike hat covering my thinning hair, I realize I’m fast becoming the outsider at these shows – and I like it. I wanna be that old guy my friends I and I saw at the Ween concert back in 1994, the one we laughed at because he wasn’t wearing what we were wearing and looked so out of place. The one who just didn’t care and came out to hear some good tunes. What am I talking about?

I’m not writing anymore, Dave out.

ascending, part 2

Summit!! Part II!!
I feel like I haven’t been at home at all recently. Two weeks in Taiwan, four days hiking Whitney, and now a two-day work-week before I leave Thursday for Houston – only to fly right into Oregon for another weekend of camping and hiking at Smith Rock.

Went to the doctor today to have him look at my mystery wound. Y’know, every time I go to the doctor I’m in and out in like 30sec. I always feel so dumb for even going. I walk in, wait for 15min in the reception area reading Field and Stream, follow the nurse who called my name while she weighs me and directs me to wait in another room. The doctor comes in, reads off the chart, “So you got bit by a spider eh?” “I dunno,” I reply, “I think so, but that’s what I’m here to find out.” So I show him the bite, he pokes and prods it with his finger and declares, “Yeah, looks like you got a spider bite.” I’m paying for this? WebMD coulda told me that, ya quack.

Tomorrow night is the Killers show at the Boardwalk, it’s like my Hollywood-life never slows down y’allz. I don’t intend to live like a rockstar, it just kinda happens. Flying around the world to this place and that, hiking up mountains, going to see concerts, freebasing with naked supermodels – it’s just old hat for me. So all y’all sit back and hear me now? I’m finna talk right to ya and bring Whitney, Part II. It’s another long one, you ret? Damn right you are, lemme at ’em.

With the Ford now drivable, our attentions switched back to dinner. Sometime earlier, Anthony and I had informed the rest of the crew of the toilet situation on the trail – and let them know that we’d be expected to pack out any “waste” we were responsible for creating. Needless to say, the girls weren’t too happy to hear the news. The over-pizza conversation consisted largely of the logistics of mountain pooping. If you’re unfamiliar with the whole concept of no-trace hiking, it’s simple to explain – you leave nothing behind, it’s as if you were never there.

Pooping while hiking or climbing involves using a “crap bag,” which is nothing more than a plastic bag that has some dry kitty-litter stuff in the bottom to absorb odor and capture liquids. The kit comes with that actual crap bag, some toilet paper, another resealable bag to put the crap bag in when you’re done, and a little antibacterial handy-wipe. You can get them at the beginning of the trail and they’re also located at the two on-trail campsites. If you’re hardcore, you carry a sort of big PVC pipe-looking thing with caps on each end. This oversized pipe-bomb-looking apparatus serves as both a “toilet” (you stretch the bag over the opening and sit down on it), as well as an airtight waste transportater. If you’re low-tech, you just carry around a bag filled with your own poo.

We all tired our best to make use of the facilities at the pizza place, in the hopes that we could stave off the urge for the rest of the weekend. I tried my best, but the bathroom was right off the mini-arcade room, which was teeming with kids and full of loud blips, bloops, and pinball noises. The door lock didn’t really convince me, and the commode was such that if the door did open – I’d be aimed front and center towards the arcade room. All those factors, and the fact that nature just wasn’t ready, meant I’d have to wait. There were functioning toilets at Whitney Portal, but nothing above the hike’s start the next morning. I think it was this development that gave Anthony his second major idea of the trip. Since his first idea: the paperclip fuse, worked so well – he floated idea #2 to the group: Imodium AD. I mean, I’ve taken Imodium before – and it works. It’s like a bowel-cork in pill form. Anthony figured we could all take some Imodium, and not have to worry about pooping for a few days. I theory, it was a brilliant idea.

Of course, questions were asked: Where does it all go? Is it safe to hike around for four days with all that just “stored” up in there? Think there’ll be any adverse effects? But, in the end, we all overcame our fears and decided we’d do it. We’d pick up some on Saturday morning before hitting the trail, when we’d come back down into town for our send-off breakfast and fuse-replacing errand. With that settled, we drove back to camp and crashed for the evening. The night was uneventful. No bears, no nothing. Just the sound of the day hikers beginning their treks around 3am. Marching upward towards summit with headlamps lighting their way until the sun came out. We all slept fine.

We woke up shortly after sunrise the next morning and broke camp right away. We packed all our gear and loaded up the car. It was Saturday morning, the morning we were going to hit the trail. We drove the few miles back into Lone Pine and arrived at the cafe here we’d be breakfasting around 8am. Coffee, omelets, and gravy-soaked biscuits once again littered the table. Recognizing us for hikers, a man asked if we were “coming down or going up?” There must be a huge transient population of hikers in that town, “going up” and “coming down” are as ubiquitous to conversation and understood as “please” and “thank you.”

Once again, we all gave our best effort to the local facilities – but all came up short. A quick trip to the Napa auto parts store and we had the replacement fuse for the truck, and one extra just in case. Next stop was the local market, where Anthony scored a box of Imodium with enough pills to dose the entire crew. Happy, full-bellied, and excited, we made the drive up to Whitney Portal one more time – this time with the luxury of having the windows down thanks to the new 30A fuse.

Back at Whitney Portal, we took care of the final details before saddling our packs: we rented two bear canisters (small plastic barrel things that you store all food items and smelly toiletries in, bears can get into them), put all non-essential food/toiletry items in one of the available bear lockers, and made sure the car was clean. We filled all our water containers from a potable faucet for last time, and all used a gulp or two to wash down a couple Imodiums each. After bungeeing the then-empty bear cans to Anthony and Ben’s packs, we put our burdens on our backs and headed towards the trailhead. For a lark, we used a scale at the trailhead to weigh Anthony and Ben’s packs – they wanted to see who’s was heaviest. Anthony’s clocked in right under 50lbs while Ben’s was a measly 40lbs. No one else bothered to weigh, but I know my pack was significantly lighter.

Day one’s hike consisted of getting from Portal, around 8800ft, to Trail Camp, about 12000ft. The distance we needed to cover was about 7mi, over which we’d be gaining roughly 3000ft in altitude. The Whitney trail is extremely well-maintained, and really easy to follow. The first 2mi or so are still well below the tree-line, so you’re hiking up surrounded by trees and plants and brush, crossing a couple streams along the way. The initial ascent is a bunch of switchbacks, which criss-cross you up the mountainside. About 4mi up the trail the land levels out and you find yourself in a valley of some sorts, with a stream running through. We stopped to pump some fresh water from the stream and relax a bit. We’d hit the trail at about 11am and were making pretty good time. The initial switchbacks were, for the most part, tame – and not too taxing.

Shortly after the land levels out, you actually descend a bit into the first camping area – Outpost Camp. Still below the treeline, there are nice green bushes and fresh water running through the camping area, and some non-functioning solar toilets as well. Our camp, however, was still another 3mi up the trail at 12000ft, so we kept on rolling right past the pitched tents and shady trees. Having come 4mi already, I was feeling pretty OK. The trail hadn’t been to steep or too demanding of me yet, and although I was definitely the slowest member of our crew, I didn’t feel like I had been holding everyone up too much. That changed.

After you leave Outpost Camp, the trail changes. You leave behind the sandy, gradually inclined switchbacks and move onto some of the steepest hewn-rock staircases of the whole hike. Meandering and switching back and forth through the rocks, you gain a lot of elevation pretty quickly. The trees and green plants start to thin out and everything becomes the dull grayish-white of rock. Soon you’re taking massive steps up tall rock stairs, walking on crunchy shards of broken rock, and out of the protection of any shade-offering foliage. A few minutes of this and I was beat. I was stopping to rest much more frequently, holding up our whole procession. Pretty soon it was bad enough that Anthony suggested we all take a break for lunch at a “meadow” which was “just up around the bend.” Feeling pretty beat down, I walk-rested the remainder of the way up the rock trail.

Eventually, the trail mellowed a bit and we found ourselves in Anthony’s meadow. Not really much of a meadow, but at least a welcomed green spot with a stream running through. There were some nice flat grassy areas and we picked on to squat on. Unshoudlering our packs, I took off my shoes and kicked back with some beef jerky and a Cliff Bar. Anthony told the story of is first visit to the meadow, back when he attempted the Whitney day hike and was taken out by AMS. He’d gotten sick somewhere around 13000ft and hiked back out to this point, where he attempted to sleep off the sickness for a couple hours. At something probably around 11000ft, some of us decided to take a nap as well.

I dozed for about 20min and woke with some new energy. Leaving the meadow it was back to the now familiar rock-staircase climbing up to Trail Camp. My power-nap, however, gave me the stamina to push ahead with a relatively acceptable number of breaks, at least in comparison to the pre-nap frequency. By the time we hit Trail Camp, it was around 6pm. Melissa was feeling pretty lousy, the altitude was getting to her. I remember coming up on Trail Camp and really being able to tell we weren’t at sea-level anymore. I didn’t have a headache or dizziness or nausea or anything like that, I could just tell I was getting winded a lot faster than normal (I know, I had to bust out a stopwatch). Anthony and Melissa both immediately setup camp and crashed for a while. Sharaun and I scouted for a nice campsite with some shelter from the wind, and eventually ended up with one up a hill a tad from where Ben pitched his tent. Anthony and Melissa had chosen a site closer to the water.

Trail Camp is a pretty desolate place, not what you’d typically think of when you talk about going “camping.” You pitch your tent among the rocks, on a small dirt “pad.” Around a few of the sites, people have stacked rocks high to form wind-barriers – since the temperatures can get pretty frigid at that elevation. There’s a large snow-fed lake that serves as a source for fresh water, and a pair of non-functioning solar toilets to match the ones 3mi below at Outpost. Rocks suddenly become everything to the imaginative backpacker: tables, chairs, beds, shelves, etc. You eat your food off of a rock while sitting on a rock and looking at rocks.

Luckily, our weather this weekend turns out to be perfect – nothing less than stellar. The temps at Trail Camp that first night are enough to make us bust out fleeces, gloves, and beanies, but nothing unbearable. Soon all the tents are pitched and we’ve pumped some fresh water from the lake for dinner. Anthony and Melissa are back up and about, and Melissa seemed to be feeling a little better. Sharaun and Ben are both complaining of headaches but so far I feel fine. It feels great just to “be” somewhere. To have no pack on my back, to not have to walk uphill anymore for a few hours, to just sit.

Sometime during those exhausted twilight hours, Anthony began boiling water for dinner. Remember the menu? First night at camp was our chicken and rice meal. Anthony poured half the ziplock bag of rice into the not-yet-boiling water (remember, we’re at 12000ft here – and if you’ve never taken physics, there’s some kinda fancy axiom or principle that says it’s harder to boil water the higher up you are). Anyway, the rice never did get soft and the bullion just wasn’t strong enough to impart much of a chicken flavor to the whole thing. On top of that, the pouch-chicken wasn’t exactly farm-fresh either. Dinner was welcomed by all though, I think. Five trail-weary hikers huddled around one steaming pot, all picking and eating with individual spoons and forks – like a Chinese family-style dinner (always wanna minimize the dishwashing when you can, y’know).

After dinner Ben and Anthony cleaned up while I lounged on my favorite recliner (big rock). Around 8pm it became apparent that there is nothing to do at Trail Camp. When it gets dark, it gets cold, and we were all beat anyway. So around 8pm I was the first to announce my intentions of retiring. At first I got a few protests from those who wanted to play a round of cards by headlamp-light, but soon all were following my lead to their tents. After some tooth-brushing, and bear-canister securing and placement (100ft from your tent) – we were all ready to hit the hay. I took out my contacts and placed them on the bedside table (rock outside the tent), and got ready to outfit the tent for our two night stay.

Our tent is decked out in pretty nice, a small backpacker model that comfortably sleeps two adults. Two Thermarest self-inflating air mattresses cushion our sleep while helping us not lose all our heat into the cold ground. I pitched the tent with the rain fly, as it offers some extra heat retention overnight and gives you a nice covered place to put your shoes when climbing in. Inside we’ve got enough room to stash our packs and gear at the foot-end, and lay our mats and bags out. Both our bags are pretty compressible, down, and light. Sometime last year I bought us a couple of Cocoon liners, like big fabric condoms for your body, that you pull over yourself before getting in your bag. Not only do they offer a few degrees more insulation, they protect the bag from a dirty camp-ass and are easily washable. Mesh pockets on either side of the head-end conveniently hold all loose items like sunglasses, watch, headlamp, beanie, etc. Finally, a small mesh canopy at the peak of the tent holds a headlamp for overhead light while bedtime preparations are made – and makes a nice contact-lens case holder overnight.

That first night, every move I made found me out of breath. I was extremely cold from the minute I got in the tent, and my face felt very flushed. Touching my forehead, Sharaun said it felt like I had a fever – and indeed a fever is exactly what I felt like I had. I pulled my Cocoon over me, but was still freezing, so I snuggled into my bag and mummy’d it up around my face. Strange, since Sharaun wasn’t even all the way in her bag – I’m usually the hot one. I woke up only a few hours later chilled to the bone and still feeling very hot-in-the-face. Recognizing this for a true fever, I undid my bag and took a couple Excedrin I’d packed with me before falling back asleep. A couple hours later I awoke drenched in sweat, having obviously broken my fever. Odd, I’m not sure if I just overexerted myself – or if it may have had something to do with my spider bite. I lean more towards overexertion because I’ve experience the exact same thing on a Half Dome hike before – so perhaps I’m susceptible to it. Anyway, whatever it was it was gone by morning and I was good to go.

Sunday. Summit day. We awoke early with the morning light and popped out of our tents into the chilly alpine-glow. After a cinnamon-raison bagel and some instant coffee, I realized my Imodium must’ve called in sick – so I headed down to the busted solar toilets to poop in a bag. The whole “bag” thing is way overhyped? I found it not at all uncomfortable or unnatural to poop into a bag of kitty litter. The whole thing is totally hygienic and clean, so it didn’t bother me at all. Returning to camp, I triumphantly announced my feat to the crew – who were all somewhat proud and amazed that I had dared brave the poop bag (OK, not really, but it sounds funny). After a brief discussion, Anthony decided to bring a couple poo-bags along for the summit hike. A decision that, in hindsight, seems nearly a foretelling? but we’ll get to that.

Let me lay out the day’s task: The Whitney Trail goes right through the heart of Trail Camp, 2.2mi on up the hillside to a point called Trail Crest. The portion of the trail between Trail Camp and Trail Crest is all switchbacks. So famous are these switchbacks, that they are lovingly called the “ninety-seven switchbacks” by Whitney hikers. It’s about a 1600ft elevation gain over the course of the 97 switchbacks to Trail Crest. At Trail Crest, the trail switches over to the “backside” of the Whitney range. From this point it’s a mere 1.9mi to the Whitney summit – 1.9mi of 13000ft+ tumbled-rock trail, climbing all the while to the eventual apex at the summit. This was our task for the day. 4.2mi and approximately 2500ft of elevation gain, all at pretty extreme elevations.

I had heard tell about the 97 switchbacks, and we trudged up to them around 8am Sunday morning. Packed light, only Ben had a full pack – and it was stuffed mostly with some warm clothes in case the summit temperatures were frigid. We all carried some water, but I got the lightest load of all (not coincidence I’m sure, I had some very thoughtful companions who knew I was probably the least-likely to succeed simply based on my being out-of-shape). I hand carried two one-liter Nalgene bottles of fresh water, both which would serve to quench my seemingly unending thirst. Everyone else had fanny-packs with water and some snacks. Again, the temperatures were perfect and there wasn’t a cloud in the sky – we struck out in shorts and t-shirts.

For all the hype, the switchbacks weren’t nearly as bad as I had expected. Sure, they were steep, and repetitive, but I didn’t feel like they kicked my butt too bad. I mean, I was even kinda proud of my pace and endurance over the first 2/3 or so. To keep Whitney honest, and keep us busy, we decided to count off each switchback as we rounded the corner to the next. Somewhere in the twenties Sharaun started counting in Spanish, which didn’t work out too well. We reverted to English and pushed ahead. Passing other hikers with the obligatory “good morning” and “how’s it going?”

Right around number thirty-something, we heard a loud, deep, rumbling sound, not unlike a jet passing overhead. However, the sound was familiar as we’d heard it the night before – and it was too short in duration to actually be a jet. What we were hearing was a rockslide, the mountains were actually shifting and changing before our eyes. Rounding the next switchback, we were presented with an awesome view of the aftermath. Huge voluminous plumes of dust were spilling out into the valley below, all but clouding over one of the two lakes near our campsites. We watched in awe as the dust moved in slow motion, covering more ground and growing fatter and taller all the while. Snapping some pictures, we were bummed that we weren’t one or two switchbacks higher, where we may have been able to actually see the slide.

Switchback after switchback, we continued onward and upward. The dust eventually reached us, dirtying the air somewhat before finally dispersing. Somewhere around the nineties, I started getting tired. Ninety-seven was, of course, the longest switchback of them all – stretching on for what seemed forever before topping out at Trail Crest. Finally, we’d beaten the switchbacks. At Trail Crest you can finally see the backside of the Whitney range. Far below you stretches the Sequoia National Park and King’s Canyon. And not much farther down the Whitney trail the John Muir Trail winds it’s way up from King’s Canyon, ending a 211mi run from it’s beginnings in Yosemite by t-boning into the Whitney Trail somewhere between Trail Crest and summit. From here it’s only 1.9mi to summit, but Lord? it’s hard.

I actually felt semi-OK upon reaching Trail Crest. The views on every side were breathtaking, and I wasn’t too beat up. From what I could see, the trail continued around the backside of the mountain range, and out of my view where I knew it must wind its way up to the Whitney summit. I think it took us just about three hours to complete the switchbacks, or less than one mile per hour. After a brief rest and some celebratory pictures, we were off again.

The backside trail to the summit, the final two miles, is different from any other part of the trail thus far. The rocks are redder, if that even makes sense, and the whole thing is just “harder,” period. Remember, you’re at 13600ft at Trail Crest, and that’s damn high folks. Things just aren’t as easy anymore. I thought I needed to rest a lot the day before, but it was nothing to those final two miles. With probably a mile left to summit, I began seriously considering giving up. By now we had rounded a crucial bend and could actually see the summit and it’s most distinguishing feature, a little tin-roof “hut” right on top. That damn hut looked a million miles away, and somehow it wasn’t getting any closer no matter how far I walked. You’d think being able to see the summit would hearten you, but not then and not there. It’s like the carrot dangling ever-in-front of the rabbit? leading him on and on into an eternity of futility.

By now my resting-to-walking ratio was seriously ridiculous. I would literally walk 20ft and need a rest, out of breath and heartbeat thumping in my head. We were still climbing with each step, but my need for rest was crippling the group’s pace and morale. Anthony was ready to forge ahead, and although he hadn’t said anything he later admitted he was already feeling the beginnings of AMS, my frequent stopping not helping him at all. After a short rest, and some serious pep-talking from Ben – I arose and just started walking.

All I remember is just trying to keep walking. I tried my best to regulate my breathing so I could keep going. It wasn’t my muscles that were protesting, it was my lungs. Somehow, I just kept going. I must have walked for 5min or more, maybe 10 but then again maybe I’m remembering too much. The fact that everyone kept up as I led in my spurt reinforcing to me the fact that I was only holding everyone else back. What’s worse, time was beginning to be a real issue – we couldn’t afford to get stuck on the mountain if it got dark. We had figured we had to be heading off the summit by 2pm to give us plenty of time to get down before dark, and my slowness was putting that into question.

Not wanting to ruin anyone else’s trip, and now getting measurably closer and closer to the summit, I powered through another 10min commercial-free push. By now we were somewhere on the back ridge of Whitney itself. When I rounded the last real “turn” in the trail, I could see people headed up the back of Whitney herself – and my spirits sank. I was spent, utterly and completely, and here before me was another trail? another climb? it looked unending, people disappearing over a horizon where my brain imagined yet another stretch of never-gonna-get-there climbing. It was the second time I gave thought to quitting, to sitting down and giving up.

I kept going, one step at a time. Soon I was on Whitney’s back, climbing up that ridge. About then it had become obvious that we were all probably going to make it to the summit, and the rules changed. It became every man for himself, those who were previously holding back for my sake forged ahead over the last few hundred yards, leaving Ben and I back on the trail. I didn’t mind, I would have done the same thing. Honestly, I was amazed I had even made it this far at all. I just remember cussing, and talking to Ben, saying things like “Oh man Ben,” and “Damnit Ben.” I would watch my feet take a few steps, lift my head upward and try to assess and forward progress, and repeat.

Ben stayed with me the whole time. The day before, he had said “If you don’t make it Dave, I don’t make it.” There was also a standing ultimatum that those who didn’t summit didn’t get any mac-‘n’-cheese that night, not that that was much motivation to me in my current state – but it did help to have Ben there. Ben later confided that he never once felt out of breath or taxed, not at any point during the trip. Which makes me all the more grateful for his role in championing me up the mountain. I guess he could see it on me though, less than 200yds from the summit I was beat-down. He suggested we take a short rest, which looking back now is pretty absurd considering how close we were. I crashed on a rock for 15min while Ben just sat there.

When I got up, we crested the horizon and we were there. I asked, “Is this it?,” to which Ben replied “Yup.” “Dang, we were close.” I sauntered up past the little tin-roof hut, seeing Sharaun and Melissa among the few other summiteers on top. I walked right to the little plaque bolted to a rock that proclaims Whitney the highest place in the states – and almost busted out crying. Maybe it was the mountain-sickness, maybe I was just tore-up, but I swear I nearly broke down sobbing. I made it! I climbed the highest mountain in the “lower 48” states. Awesome.

Despite being bone-tired, I felt great. I didn’t have the first sign of AMS, no headache, no nausea, no nothing. Anthony, however, was not feeling too hot and was ready to get down. Sharaun, was also not feeling too hot – her stomach giving her some unmistakable warning signs that her Imodium may have also gone fishing instead of standing guard that day. It may sound funny, but the Whitney climb is a very “gassy” one. The gasses in your body are changing shape as the elevation changes, and it provides for a lot of burping and farting – or as Ben calls it: offgassing. I thought Sharaun was experiencing something like that, since I had been dropping bombs all the way up the trail – but apparently hers was worse.

Here we were, on top of Mt. Whitney – and the Lord was telling her she needed to do something you don’t even like to do at a friend’s house? how terrible. Flashback to four hours earlier back at camp, when Anthony fortuitously packed a couple poo-bags, “just in case.” And you guessed it folks – Sharaun had to take a dump on top of the world. Thankfully, the little tin-roof hut we’d had in our sights for the last mile-and-a-half has a small room with a door. There is apparently no reason for this room, there’s nothing inside of it at all. Not able to wait, she took the bag from Anthony and headed inside – posting Melissa as a sentinel guarding the door from the outside.

Now, when I used the crap-bag earlier in the day – I was able to stretch it around a normal toilet seat and sit on it, making the whole thing very familiar and quite easy. But like I said, there was absolutely nothing at all in this little hut (yeah I know the real name is the Smithsonian Hut or whatever, I don’t care), so she had nothing. I can only imagine the wall-sit position and precarious balancing that must have gone down. She came out saying she was “mortified,” and carrying a not-too-discrete white bag marked “human waste.”

We stayed at the top for maybe 20min before heading back down. It was 2pm and we wanted to be off the mountain and back at camp before dark. While leaving, a small plane flew over and started circling the peak – it was amazing. Banking and turning circles around the people on the summit. I think it was probably Ben’s wet dream come true or something. On top of a mountain watching a plane fly around? I mean what could be better, maybe an Olsen twin on each arm at the same time? No wait, that’s my fantasy. Either way it was awesome to see this guy do some Whitney fly-bys.

On the way back down to camp, Ben ended up carrying Sharaun’s poop in his pack so she could better navigate the trail, Anthony lost his lunch several times, and we all got a bit delirious on the 97 switchbacks. They are never-ending in both directions, let me tell you. Mac-‘n’-cheese was a fitting reward for our ~9hr summit trip, and we ate like kings (even though the “ham” smelled suspiciously of tuna and looked like cat food). One more night’s sleep and a 6mi hike downhill later – my toes throbbed as I realized just how badly I need new hiking shoes. A quick stop in town to buy a bottle of wine and “thank you” card for the ranger responsible for the whole trip – we headed over to the pass-pickup ranger station and Anthony dropped it off for her in appreciation of our last-minute passes. The whole thing seemed so very chivalrous and nice to me, that Anthony’s one class act y’all. Six more hours on the road, and we were back.

Whitney was hard, but it was worth it. When I signed the logbook on top, I wrote “You almost beat me Whitney? but not today.” And that’s for real.

That’s it, I’m done. It’s nearly midnight again, Tuesday this time – and I’ve been writing since I got home – no joke. I did nothing tonight but write and eat dinner, that’s it. Seems I’ve also fallen into the late-day blogging again, which I don’t like. I’ll have to double-up to try and get on a better schedule again.

Re-re-re-reading yesterday’s entry, I think I’ve corrected more than a few of the grammatical and syntactical errors. I’m sure though, that this new one will have just as many, if not more. So give me a break if it sounds a 5th grade and whatnot, OK? And by the way, I think I’m going to lose the toenails on each of my big toes. They are all black and loose – I really need some new hiking shoes. But really, what are a couple toenails in exchange for this story to tell? That’s what I thought.

I’m not really planning on posting pictures of the whole Whitney thing, I spent all my time writing the novel that spans this and yesterday’s entries. Thankfully, however, Ben has already erected a beautiful pictorial shrine to our pilgrimage over at his fine site. It’s where I’ve been getting all the nice links to punctuate my story. If you’re the visual type, head on over and match his pictures with my words – go on, it’s fun. Don’t be scared.

A “talent for the written word” eh? Your hear that? That’s sixteen pages in Word. Dave out.

ascending, part 1

Summit!!
So, first off – it’s a bit shocking to see visitors to my other sites commenting on my blog. However, welcome to you all, new readers, happen-upon’ers, etc. Although I may feign some kind of “self-policing” by appearing to desire the blog’s audience stay limited, in reality I of course want it to grow. So come on in y’all and sit down whilst I spin ye a yarn.

I debated even attempting to write this tonight, being that I wanted to write a killer piece detailing this weekend’s events. I mean, I’m tired, I’m busted, and I don’t know how much tolerance for detail I have right now. I might start off all figurative and literary, and end up all matter-of-fact and dry. Who knows, but I’m going to give it a shot. So sit down, here goes the story of Mt. Whitney, 2004.

The crew (Melissa, Ben, Anthony, Sharaun, and myself) had taken Monday and Friday off work, giving us a long four-day weekend. The event had been planned for months. I mean, it had to have been, really. So many people want to climb Mt. Whitney that they only assign overnight or multi-day passes via a lottery system. You call or go to the website months in advance and specify a range of times you want to hike, and then they pull the names out of a hat and match them with available dates – and that’s when you’re going.

Our trip was intended to be do-able by all. And by “all,” I mean me. See, I’m the weak link in the chain with this crew. With the exception of me, everyone else is in great shape. Instead of some gung-ho commando journey, we took a very practical approach to the hike – breaking it into three days. From Whitney Portal (8,360ft), where you park your car, to summit (14,496ft) is about 11mi. Our trip was designed to get us the most high-altitude acclimation time possible before trying to summit. Friday night we’d camp at Portal (8,360ft), Saturday we’d hike to Trail Camp (12,000ft) and spend the night, allowing our bodies some time to get used to the thinner air. Sunday we’d summit and camp again at Trail Camp, and Monday we’d hike the 6mi back to Portal and drive home. Doing it this way would hopefully help us a) not die of fatigue, and b) not fall victim to AMS.

Maybe I should back up a bit first. Anthony and Ben, with friends, had attempted Whitney before – but their initial attempt was a one-day (fifteen hour) marathon hike. The day-hike passes are much easier to come by since those folks are supposed to be off the mountain by midnight the day of their pass. Ben had made it last time, Anthony stopped a little more than two miles from the summit – succumbing, like one in every four that tries Whitney, to AMS. AMS – Acute Mountain Sickness, is nasty – and manifests itself in many ways, all of which we’ll get to later. But just to baseline here, it effects “most” people in some form or another once you get somewhere above 10,000ft.

So back to the planning – Anthony got the lottery results sometime back in May. We had scored a weekend multi-day in late August. I made big plans to get in shape and whatnot before the hike, yeah – OK. So the getting in shape thing never panned out really, whatever. We had talked about doing Half Dome again, just to wear-in our bodies for the hiking “season,” but something always came up and August rolled around before we knew it. To my credit, I did wake up at 6am one morning in Taiwan and hit the hotel gym for 30min on the bike. I mean, that’s worth something, right?

Thursday night: I’m out of work at 5pm, everything’s taken care of for my absence – I’ve got it all covered. Ben and I get together and decided now is as good a time as any to plan the meals for the weekend (being as it’s the night before we leave and all). Wednesday night Sharaun and I had made trip to REI to get her some trekking poles, in hopes she could shift some of the burden onto them and save her problem knees some stress. Having all our gear ready, food was the only open item. Benz and I hit Raley’s and invented the menu as we walked the aisles.

Two dinners and two breakfasts, not to mention lunches. When it came down to it, the menu fleshed out as follows: Saturday night would be chicken and rice, Sunday night was macaroni and cheese with ham. We knew from the getgo we wanted mac-‘n’-cheese, y’know, the kind with that gooey cheese splooge that squeezes out of the shiny foil package? I think they market it as “deluxe,” but what it really is is cheesy to the max. While perusing the “potted meats” aisle for possible carnivore-friendly additions to our pasta/rice starch staples – we found what we considered to be a sign from God. Small, vacuum-sealed, foil packets of meat.

We snagged a couple chicken and a couple ham – which would comprise the dead-animal food group of our evening meals on the trail. We picked up some yummy white rice and a container of those condensed-chicken bullion cubes you used to see in your mom’s cupboard and had no idea what they were for. We figured we could mix the rice, bullion, and chicken. Likewise, the mac-‘n’-cheese and ham combo sounded equally rad. For breakfast we got some instant coffee, instant oatmeal, and cinnamon-raison bagels. They key theme centering on things that need nothing other than boiling water to prepare. Lunches would be on-trail and simple, buffet-style, if you will. One of a myriad of Cliff Bar flavors, perhaps a chew or two of beef jerky, or maybe some trail-mix. Ben and I headed home, un-packaged all the items and re-packaged them in pack-friendly ziplock bags, and left them to be distributed among the crew come morning.

Friday morning started off great, being that I wasn’t getting ready to go to work. Everyone met at the local greasy spoon for a pre-weekend breakfast. Omelets, grits, coffee, and gravy-drenched biscuits filled the table. Spirits were high, and we were all more than ready to hit the road. Full bellies and a carload of packs later, we finally hit the road around 10am. Stopping to gas up the Explorer before heading up 50 towards Tahoe, Ben lamented again about his mistrust of our chosen vehicle. It was also about this time that Anthony decided to call and get the full details on how we’d get our passes. We’ll take both of these items as separate paragraphs, respectively.

See, I gotta admit – I’ve let the Ford slip a bit. Being that she’s been, for the most part, a backyard workhorse these past months, I’ve neglected her washing and maintenance. She’s got cracked exhaust manifolds which give her a nice “ticking” sound on acceleration, and something’s wrong with the CV joints or brakes or something to where she makes an ugly and protesting “grinding” sound when making slow stops. Other than these two mechanical defects, and her “wash-me” exterior – she’s running like a thoroughbred. Back to the story.

We’re gassing up prior to the ~6hr trip to Whitney. Anthony has the confirmation for our passes, and we’re wondering if we have to pick them up today or if we can wait until tomorrow morning (being that we won’t actually be on the trail until that day). He calls the ranger station on his cellphone. I hear, “You mean they’re cancelled? Uh-huh. 10am, I see. OK, so for the whole weekend? All the passes are gone? OK, I misunderstood.” My heart drops, and no one in the car says a word as he hangs up. No one wanted to ask, are they gone? Are we screwed?

We continue to climb into the mountains, trees lining the road. Eventually Anthony comes clean: “We were supposed to pick them up by 10am today. They’ve cancelled them all. It’s my fault. It even says so right here on the confirmation.” Man, talk about crap. We weren’t 10min from home and already it was looking bad. I hadn’t told anyone yet – but I wasn’t turning back. I was gonna go to Whitney no matter what. If we somehow managed to get passes, so be it – if not, so what. Some of the crew quickly came up with the alternate plan of driving to Half Dome and doing that again, if the passes fell through. One thing was clear – no one wanted to turn around just yet.

I drive uphill in silence as Anthony’s mind must have been racing. I pause the music as I hear him get on the phone again, he gets a different person on the other end this time. Turning on his best “help me” pleading voice, he explains the situation to the new listener. We didn’t know, got a late start our of Sacramento, won’t be there until 6pm or so tonight, etc. The new girl takes the info and asks him to call back in 10min. Un-pause music and wait, pause again as the phone moves back to his ear. She got sidetracked, call back in a few more minutes. Music on again, pause again 15min later as the he makes the call yet again.

“Yeah, I messed up. I didn’t know we had to be there by 10am. What? July?! Oh, I really did get all mixed up? this is bad. I’m sorry, I really mixed this up. Really? OK. I don’t know what happened, I applied for the August lottery? I’m sorry. OK. Thanks.”

Silence in the car again. Finally Sharaun blurts out, “They were for July?!” Yes indeed, we were nearly an hour into a trip that was booked for the last week of July – only problem was, we were headed down in the last week of August. Not only had Anthony missed the 10am deadline caveat to the passes, he had the whole trip planned a month later than the passes were issued for. To his credit, he did only specify August on the lottery form, and the dates we got lined up with a weekend in August and would’ve been mid-week had we done them in the correct month. When he got the confirmation, he naturally assumed they were for August.

Long story short, Anthony poured on enough charm (over the phone, no less) to score us five last-minute multi-day passes to the Whitney trail. Something that most folks wait months for, and we got it on the drive down from Northern California. Making excellent time, we arrived at the ranger station at 5pm. Walking through the door, Anthony name-dropped his charmed contact’s name to the rangers behind the counter – saying she had reserved him some passes for the weekend. The girls manning the counter pulled out a manila envelope and questioningly eyed the contents as we waited expectantly. Not to worry though, he had managed to pour on enough sweetness for five weekend passes. The other rangers were flabbergasted, apparently Anthony had done no small feat of magic to get this particular ranger to oblige him with last-minute passes. They were proud of whatever it was he did that managed to score us the trip.

As the pass-getting wrapped up, we got the obligatory “clean your car or bears will eat it,” talk – and something new: The solar toilets at Trail Camp were not working, and we’d be expected to pack out all human waste we created on our journey. Hmm? I mean, I’ve known forever that hauling your own poop is just a part of distance-hiking, but I’d never experienced it. I’d seen “crap bags” and “crap cans” for sale at hiking and mountaineering shops, so I was familiar with the whole process – but never really thought I’d have to do it. Luckily only Anthony were listening as they explained that small detail, and it was left to us to choose an opportune time to inform the rest of the crew (mainly, the female members).

Passes in hand, we were set. We drove up to Portal and set up camp, then headed back down into Lone Pine for one last dinner of pizza and soda. Pulling up to the local pizza joint, we parked and decided this would be a good time to clean out the Ford of all bear-yummies – while we still had daylight. The crew set to lifting floormats and scouring gloveboxes and side-pockets for gum wrappers or stray french-fries. I decided to move the driver’s seat to it’s forward-most position to better clean underneath it.

Once more I need to digress and talk about the Ford. Not only does she tick and grind, she has a couple notable pieces of interior “charm.” The vinyl top to the center console is cracked and showing its stuffing, and the driver’s side chair mechanism is all busted up. The seat-recline lever is completely broken off, locking the seat-back in the perma-gangsta-lean position I prefer to rock it. The rest of the seat controls, both driver and passenger, are completely mechanized. Moving the seat forward and back, up and down, canting front or rear, etc., is all done via a wired-panel of switches on the side of the seat. On my Ford, this control panel of switches is all jacked-up. When the seat-recline lever broke, the whole panel became detached and is now hanging by wires which disappear back into the seat somewhere.

So where was I? Oh yeah, I move the seat all the way forward to clean under it. Fine, clean. I go to hit the switch and move the seat back to a drive-able position. Nothing. The seat’s going nowhere. I ask Ben, who’s cleaning the passenger seat area, if he can move his seat – nothing. I check the power windows and locks, nothing. Something’s wrong. We quickly troubleshoot the problem to a blown fuse. Meanwhile we’re still in the parking lot of the pizza joint. Despite the fact that the car is completely bear-immaculate, the driver’s seat is stuck in such a position that the vehicle is now completely undriveable and utterly useless. Not even Sharaun can wedge her legs between the seat and dash and still be able to work the pedals. What’s worse, the whole thing is motorized – there’s absolutely no way to move the seat back manually.

The fuse box in the cab is no help, it’s tiny fuses are all in good shape – although I have to bust out the owner’s manual to see what fuse covers which items. The big fuse box under the hood looks more promising, filled with 20A and 30A fuses, the owner’s manual says that one of them controls “power seats, windows, doors, etc.” A quick check of the fuse-box against the illustration in the manual immediately shows that my fuse box is laid out nothing like the one in the manual, so trying to match up the fuse positions to their respective circuits will be useless. Anthony goes for a visual inspection of all the fuses until he finally pulls what is a very spent 30A fuse.

A quick walk across the street to the local market learns us that the Napa closed at 6pm and won’t be open again until tomorrow morning at 9am. Well, that’s fine – we don’t have to hit the trail until 10ish tomorrow and we’re already planning on coming down for a good breakfast in town before hitting the trail – we can pick up a spare fuse then. But, how do we move the seat now so we can go anywhere? So, three engineers, one blown fuse, and one un-drivable SUV. Anthony comes up with an idea in short order, let’s just close the circuit – fuse be damned. I mean, all we need to do is get power to the seat motor for the 10 seconds it will take to move it back to a drivable position, right? So, we go in to order our pizza – and ask for a paperclip, our temporary fuse. Let’s see 30A try and blow a damn paperclip.

Sensing the humor in our current situation, and the possible mad-cap antics that could result from the paperclip plan – I decide we should document the whole process on film. Our little digital camera can take 3min movies with sound, so I insisted we wait to try the plan until I was rolling and had properly set the scene. Here we are, daylight fading, seat stuck so forward that no one can drive it, all our hopes resting on a bent-up paperclip acting as a makeshift fuse. I think I’ll let the video tell the rest of the story (dialuppers beware, large file).

Basically, Anthony completed the circuit with the paperclip (and his hand), and quickly realized that that 30A fuse was working just like it was designed to. There was obviously a short to ground somewhere (in a car, I think something like 115V to ground, right?) – and that fuse had melted away under the unwanted current. He got the entire short right through that clip into his fingers. A paperclip one minute and a red hot wire the next, he recoiled in pain proclaiming, “Something’s shorted!” Luckily we caught the whole thing on video. Even more luckily, once Anthony’s burned hand confirmed the short – we jiggled the driver’s seat control panel and tried the paperclip again, this time having jiggled loose the short. We were able to move the seat and get a replacement fuse the next morning.

OK, I’m only on the first day of the story and it’s nearly midnight on real-life Monday night. I have to go to bed. Stay tuned for “Part II” as tomorrow’s entry. You’ll get to hear all about exciting things like recreational Imodium usage, poisonous spider bites (a real picture of me, not for the squeamish), pooping in bags, and black and blue toenails. As for what you’ve read already, I wrote fast, and I hiked six miles and drove six hours today – so expect poor grammar and syntax errors… I’ll fix ’em later.

To close, I was deeply saddened to see the first true “blog” I ever read close up shop the other day. I found it one day while I was working an “internship” at Raytheon – coding targeting systems for tanks in ADA (read: downloading gigs on gigs of Dead from Sugarmegs). R.I.P. DAaR.

Dave out.

in front of God and everyone

I remember those panties like yesterday.
Today I woke up at 5am and, despite laying quietly in bed for another 15min, couldn’t make myself fall back to sleep. Since getting back from Taiwan I’ve once again been lucky and experienced no “jetlag,” but I can’t help but think my early-morning pep is somehow related to the 15hr time-change I went through this weekend. I already decided that if it happens again tomorrow I’m going to make the best of it and go spray the yard for crabgrass before work. Intro paragraph over.

Whooosh!! (Sound of the blog being sucked through a hole in time, back into the year 1990.)

As a new relatively new teenager, I can remember walking from my house to my then-girlfriend’s house, she lived about a half-mile away (if you cut through some backyards, crossed a ditch, and walked through the woods). I used to love that walk because I knew we were going to make out when I got there. If her parents were home, we’d “go for a walk” and end up off in the woods somewhere rolling in pine needles. If her parents weren’t home we’d just watch TV on the couch when we came up to breath. It was exhilarating, nothing in my life yet could compare to it. I fondly recall swigging a couple gulps of mouthwash prior to leaving my house, maybe a squeeze of toothpaste too for good measure, and trying to swish it around in my mouth for the whole walk to her house. The thought being I’d be minty-fresh upon getting there. To this day I can recall walking under the smothering Florida heat while my cheeks burned, begging me to spit out the Scope.

We had different places to go, but our main objective was to get as far away from civilization as possible. I mean, if any items of clothing were going to get removed, we wanted to be as far out of sight as possible. We’d follow firebreaks or worn trails into the woods for ten minutes or so and then track off into the brush, blazing our own trail to a nice secluded spot. We’d hit the dirty dusty prickly ground as if it were a featherbed, lips instantly locked and hands instinctively roaming. Something about being outside made it all the more exciting, two semi-clothed, hormone-filled kids wrestling in the underbrush. Usually we’d head for nice “hidden” areas, a small copse of trees or grass-rimmed depression we could slip out of sight into. A couple times though, I can remember deliberately walking extremely far out into an open field of knee-high grass and going through our whole routine standing up in front of God and everyone. I mean, where we were there was no one around for miles – but to stand in an open field with the sun beaming down on you as pull her shirt through arms stretched high above her head is, at fourteen, otherworldly.

Whooosh!!

Two big weekends coming up. This weekend we’re headed south to Mt. Whitney, where we’ll attempt to summit the tallest peak in the “lower 48” states. I’m actually pumped because we’re taking both Friday and Monday off work, and camping on a Friday and Monday instead of working on a Friday and Monday just sounds so much better. We’ll spend Friday night camping at about 8000ft in a bid to acclimate our bodies to the higher elevations before moving up to the ~14000ft mark to summit. Should be a great time, and I think with the extra days I may be able to set a pace that will see me to the top and back – providing I don’t get sick. The following weekend I’m off to Houston for a customer visit, and instead of flying home will be meeting Sharaun and Ben in Portland (they’ll have road-tripped their way up earlier in the day). Then we’re headed for a weekend of hiking, camping, and possibly fishing at Smith Rock. I’ve never been to Whitney or Smith Rock, so I’m really excited to see, camp, and hike both.

Then that’s that then. Dave out.

wayne presents

Moses brought them down from a mountain.
Sometimes water sounds and tastes infinitely better to me than soda, like right now – I’m drinking water and it “tastes” great. Intro paragraph over.

Tonight I mowed my sickly lawn with tender-loving care. I edged her, used the blower to clean her of stray cut grass, fertilizered her, weed-controlled her, and all around pampered her. But that’s not what’s important about this story – the important part is the soundtrack I chose for the task. A few days ago I downloaded an album by a group called The Horns of Happiness, simply because I liked their name (alliteration does a whole heck of a lot for me for some reason). Occasionally I’ll do this, grab an album on name alone, and usually it’s a bust. Like they say, you can’t judge a book by it’s cover (as illustrated beautifully by the turds contained within the kickass album covers of Molly Hatchet). Anyway, the album was perfect for our oddly Fall-like weather this week. Some strange hodge-podge of disjointed tunes, sometimes reminding me of anything from the Microphones to Neutral Milk Hotel to Sufjan. Anyway, it’s quickly climbing the charts in my head, gunning for number one with some animal drive? yeah. The music was good, and the lawn’s already showing signs of improvement. Whew! What a relief.

Speaking of our unseasonably Fallish weather of late, bending my mind more and more to thoughts of Halloween. If I haven’t said it before, I freakin’ love Halloween. Ever since I was a kid and my brother and I used a pair of my dad’s old slacks and one of his old flannels to make a mask-covered basketball-headed dummy which we then ritualistically covered in 99? fake blood from Kmart and hung from the basketball goal above the garage. I will repeat, Halloween is awesome. This year will be our second annual Halloween party, and I swear I’m fated to finish the backyard the day before or something. I just want it done y’all, I just want it done.

Man, sometimes I get super sick of people sending e-mails around without checking them out online first for accuracy. I have a family member who is very religious, and therefore very republican and very pro-Bush. Being so republican means that this person is also vehemently anti-democrat and anti-Kerry. What bugs me is how these anti-Kerry pro-Bush mails seem to circulate like wildfire among these “churchy” e-mail “clubs.” Like a right-wing party line, these retired-couples-cum-internet-surfers dutifully forward any piece of tearjerking, awe-inspiring, mushy God-crap that lands in their inbox along down the line to the next person who needs a “virtual hug” from the Lord. Now, I know I’m on the edge of offending people here – and I don’t mean to. You’re more than welcome to need a virtual hug from the Lord, heck maybe even I do, but that’s not my point.

It’s the political mails that really get me – mostly because these donation-plate-stuffing senior citizens just blindly believe whatever trash washes up on their AOL accounts’ shores and proceed to propagate said nonsense to those of us who actually bother to “fact check” the cyber-missives. Without so much as a thought on the accuracy of whatever the internet rumour-mill churned out last, they jot their insightful comments on top of the long line of those before them and proceed to add another column of carats to the left margin of an already unreadable body of mis-tabbed and oddly-spaced text. “I think this is disgusting, shame on us if we elect these men,” reads a comment in the 15th attachment I had to open on the way to the original e-mail which is still another 10 nested “envelopes” down.

And hey, I’m not even that guy who says anything negative about the dems or Kerry is necessarily wrong. Maybe, somewhere out there, there’s a mail about Kerry/Edwards that’s fact-based and worth distributing. But most of this stuff is ridiculous. Where does it say in the Bible that you’re duty-bound to God to forward this rubbish? Thou shalt be staunch republican, may thou never neglect thy duty to forward any e-mail which let’s thy distribution list know thy as such. I mean, you think Edwards flips people off as he runs? Think Kerry’s wife really runs overseas sweatshops? Or maybe that he’s voted to kill every defense weapons bill since ’88? They’re all crap folks, all crap.

To be fair, there’s no shortage of the same going around about Bush – and the tree-huggers can be just as bad about forwarding mails painting him as the grandest fool of an evil-dictator ever to grace the earth? so I suppose it goes both ways.

And to all my relatives, if you’re reading this, I love you dearly.

Time to go check e-mail and get ready for bed. Oh yeah, here’s a picture I drew last week in Taiwan while a co-worker was doing his portion of our presentation. It was the 8th or 9th time we’d given the same presentation to customers, and I guess I was just getting bored. Enjoy.

G’nite all, Dave out.