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February 26, 2006The Best of Thirteen SistersWork sent me to Maryland twice, so I decided to drive down (save the government money, and make the trip a little more fun for myself). An awesome characteristic of my car reared its beautiful face on the way down. 52-54mpg on the way to Baltimore was just one of the benefits of driving a diesel. The others included having to stop at a few different gas stations until one could tell me where a diesel station was... I visited Karina and Gang in Baltimore on Wednesday night, and spent the night on Karina's air mattress. Thursday morning I went to IBM to talk with a bunch of super-cool folks working the (MLS) Multi-Level Security world. Folks from TCS were present, which was particularly cool. We're trying to strategize what is the laughing stock of the systems assurance world (e.g. the Air Force) to be a bit better at cross-domain work. After the meeting, I headed out to Front Royal, the northern end of the Shenandoah Mountains. It's a quirky town...especially the south end of it. I witnessed folks driving an RC car from inside of a real car, going 35mph down Route 522 (RC in the front, real car following). And, of course other western Virginia hickness...big trucks, women with big hair, etc. I got on the trail around noon Friday, to do the Riprap Trail. It promised to be a two-day hike. Guidebooks are usually really conservative with these estimates, but I got a really late start, so I figured I would camp out in the backcountry for the night anyway. I was getting ready to don my pack when a ranger truck drove past the trailhead. He screeched to a stop and started backing up. I had to move fast. I went behind my car, unzipped my pants, and took a leak, making sure to dribble a little on my hands. As he drove up, I zipped up, turned around, and started walking to his truck with my hand out. He only rolled his window down a little ways. Good, I thought. "You have a backcountry permit, son?" he asked. "Yessir, I have it in my bear can. Here, let me get it out." I started reaching for my pack. Wow, I thought, I must seem like the good little trooper. "No, that's okay," he mumbled. "Have a nice trip," he said. "You too." With that, I was off for A Walk in the Woods. Some 4 hours and 10 miles later, I'd find myself back in the parking wondering, "That was supposed to take two days???" Disillusioned, I headed back to town, and bedded down at the Appalachian Trailhead on Rt 522. Early to rise on Saturday, I hit up the next hike: Mt. (north and south) Marshall. The good book from Lonely Planet promised a really nice two-day hike this time. I was a little leery after Friday, but decided I'd give it a try. I tossed on my pack again, and started off at 9am. By 2pm I was actually beginning to think that this was a hike. "I've gone up one mountain, definitely not two yet," I thought. Wrong. I had hiked about 4 miles too far...somehow I didn't even notice when I had topped North and South Marshall...the next one in the chain was kind of a mountain (thought it was North Marshall), and the one after that was also a bump. So I hiked 4 peaks, technically, and the Devil's Stairs... I turned around and started back, having already hiked 11 miles. It was cool...I thought at least I'd get some back country camping. I made it back to Gallow Springs and considered staying there...there was a firepit which might have been nice. Just as I was arriving, some old guys with gargantuan packs slowly made their way into camp...their packs were full, and they had sleeping bags, tents, and camp chairs lashed to the outsides (I guess the insides were full of Brats and Beer?). Wanting a good night's sleep, I decided to press on. Around 5pm the sun was getting low...I figured I'd camp near the top of the real South Marshall. I cooked a fine dinner of ramen noodles and miso soup, and got out the tent (weather was calling for snow and ice). Problem: frozen ground meant no getting stakes in, and no stakes meant no tent with my hoop bivy. I looked at the map, and guessed I was only 4 miles from the parking area, so I went for it. On the way back, about halfway between North Marshall and Jenkin's Gap, the trail ran about 20 feet above Skyline Drive. It was dark. I had put my headlamp on, but hadn't bothered turning it on, navigating as I could in the little bit of twilight that was left. A car was stopped below on Skyline Drive, having problems with about ten deer staring at it in the middle of the road. Wanting to remind the driver that the deer aren't the only wildlife in the Shenandoahs, I ran about halfway down the slope still with my pack on, then turned on my headlamp as I ran across the road screaming, chasing the deer out of the driver's path (and scaring the shit out of the driver, I'm sure). I ran down a really steep incline on the other side of the road, turned off my lamp, and ducked down. The bewildered car very slowly drove on. Around 8:30pm I made it back to my car, stiff, stinky as hell, and feeling more alive than I have in a long time.
Posted by reid at 01:22 AM
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February 19, 2006Vegan Potlucks ContinueI've been going to the weekly Vegan Potluck a lot lately. It's good food, and good company...mostly straightedge college students, mostly originally from the area. Good food, subtle and wry humor, and bizarre activities (like throwing apples at each groins) always make for a...different...kind of Sunday night. A few weeks ago the Vegan Haus held a huge gathering (somewhere around 100 attendees). Since then, we've been getting a much wider variance in visitors, including folks that commute from as far away as Baldwinsville to partake in varietal vegan fair. Some even bring their families, which makes for an interesting juxtaposition of lifestyle. Here's hoping that that the dinners continue, and may our casserole dishes never be empty...
Posted by reid at 12:04 AM
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February 18, 2006Icy ConditionsA few weeks ago, I ran into my old friend Keisuke, cross-country skiing around Tug Hill. Somehow Kei and I always manage to discover the same sports at around the same time. As usual, Kei is more hardcore than I, wearing ski tights, a skiing jersey, fancy boots and skiis and poles while I lag along in borrowed backcountry gear complete with a snow bib, gators, and heavy heavy heavy backcountry skiis and boots. We took off pretty late in the day, getting on the road around 2:30pm. The whole way, I kept back-seat driving Kei, commenting that he was going entirely too fast on snow-covered unsalted roads on a day that promised highs in the mid-teens. We got there safe, at least, and went for a couple of miles of crazy skiing. On our way back, Kei continued driving entirely fast, and acted thoroughly Japanese when we began spinning around on a particularly long and wide turn. "Sorry, sorry, sorry, sorry," he said as we rotated 540 degrees, and landed backwards in a ditch. I'd guess that the temperature when we crashed was between 5F and 10F without the windchill, with winds gusting around 20-30mph. Yeah, cold. Kei went running down the road to find a house, I stuck things out with my trusty Bubble Jacket and tried to dig the car out somewhat. Unfortunately, we required the assistance of a tow truck in a process that took about 2 hours. Fortunately, nobody was hurt, Kei's car is driving (though a rear control arm is bent up a bit), and we were able to make it home to hot tubs and wood stoves...
Posted by reid at 11:53 PM
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February 15, 2006Upcoming TravelPardon the lack of updates. Have had a new car to play with, a relationship to maintain, and one stupid company's lawyers to deal with. As my friend Polar says, "When someone hits you, you can turn or run, and you can pound them into the ground." So I'm going to take the latter route on that issue. Hello, Wiley Publishing, this is Free Speech calling...I have a new project coming out that you're going to hate, and that leftist techno-hippies are going to love. Ahem. After a few near misses with fellow Anizers, I figured I'd mention some upcoming travel dates.
Anybody I know going to be there? I'm planning to stick around the Baltimore/DC/Northern Virginia areas over the weekend, maybe do a little backpacking in West Virginia?
Posted by reid at 06:04 PM
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February 14, 2006A Valentine's Day Fortune
Posted by reid at 06:18 PM
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