Sunday, April 30, 2006

Trail log and photos from Susan's Birthday


Fern Falls breaking through the snow

The photo album for today is from Susan's birthday back in March. We went to Friday's... and I guess when you tell them it's somebody's birthday, they come by all throughout dinner and tie balloons all over the person. Needless to say, anybody that knows Sue can imagine that she wasn't too keen with people trying to tie balloons to her arms and her head... She put a stop to that very quickly, but it sure was funny to watch her get ticked off!

I am going to keep track of the trails I hike this year. I had done it in 2003 but I can't remember how many gazillion miles I logged that year.

Today's Trail: Fern Falls, 6.6 miles round trip (trailhead was closed so added 1.6 miles to distance). Originally planned on hiking to Fern Lake but the weather kept changing from blue sky and fluffy white clouds, to total cloud cover and light rain, then nice again. There is still some snow along the trail when you get near the falls (and probably all the way to the Lake), but was firm enough that I didn't post-hole at all (which would have sucked, since I was wearing shorts!) By the time I returned to my car, the mountains were enclosed by clouds - good thing I turned around!

I had planned on doing this hike yesterday with Joe, but he forgot his hiking boots! GOSH! He's not a very good mountain man, ha ha! I gave him the grand tour of the Park and we did some hiking around Lumpy Ridge... where he found a dead elk, which was kindof neat in its own morbid way. Coincidentally, we were eating deep-fried ice cream at Ed's when the bartender introduced us to the guy right next to us... who owns the only official tree company in town, Mike's (and the guy's name was not Mike, but Adam... he just bought the company). It's a small world up here!

...Now, I'm talking to a few bikers here in the coffee shop about winter here - guess it's really really windy, but they ride every month of the year up here too. Don't really get snow accumulation either. It's great talking to locals! Don, Marcy and Steve. Need to remember that!

That's all for now, I've got my Sunday routine to follow - Desperate Housewives and Grey's Anatomy tonite, pack up my stuff so I can head West again for the week, catch up on email, blah blah blah.

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Enjoying the peace and quiet while it lasts...

I have a little bit of  time this morning to not only catch up a little better on this journal, but also call everybody that has been great enough to try to get ahold of me lately - been so busy with work, play, and life in general, time just flies when you have phone calls to return! So I'm back in the coffee shop, drinking a mexican mocha (with cayenne pepper)! Can you tell I'm having fun?

A little tidbit of Rocky Mt. National Park information:  They just released the Elk Management Proposal for public review this past week. It might not seem like a big deal, but the day they released it to the press, the park was swarming with news reporters and video cameras. There's just too many elk in the park, plain and simple. Hunting is not allowed and they have no real natural predators here (though I've heard the coyotes sometimes hunt in packs like wolves and have taken a rare sick or young elk down), so the population has exploded and taken quite a toll on the vegetation and resources in the park. The park has been working on this before I worked here in 2003, and their recommended action is to cull the herd through hunting - not just for the general public, but by rangers and/or other private individuals doing it at night, as not to disturb people. The scientists and employees in general, including myself, all favor this choice. A few of us are really into the idea of reintroducing wolves... but that's a bit more complicated.

Unfortunately, the general public doesn't want to see Bambi get shot, so to speak. It doesn't help when the news plasters personified images of "baby elk sticking its tongue out to catch snowflakes" and portreys hunting as murder. It will be interesting to see what happens. I'm pro-wolf in general, but there's gotta be good science and good management to deal with the complications of human-wolf interaction. The park needs that natural balance of predator-prey, and until/if ever wolves are "welcome" here, hunting is the best choice. Read it yourself if you feel so inclinded and see what you think! It's out there for public comment, and if you have an option, let them know! Unless you don't favor hunting. Ha ha just kidding. :)  The National Parks belong to everybody, and we all have a say in how they are managed.

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Didn't plan on spouting off dorky science stuff, but I love this place. The park is so central to this community, my livelihood, my social life, and my hobbies... it gets a little personal sometimes. :)

I think I was briefly explaning what I've been up to and why I've been so busy. Cisco and I are the only people devoted to Mountain Pine Beetle (MPB) and hazard tree work... and since the problem is so severe, we have our work cut out for us. We are given a lot of freedom and not much supervision to accomplish our tasks, because we just have SO MUCH to do - it feels good to be important and trusted enough to have say in how and when things get done, despite that we are both only seasonal.

The next couple weeks are hectic. We have until mid-June at the latest to accomplish any active MPB work - that's when the beetles fly, and once they spread to new trees there isn't much that we can do. We are getting this huge dumpster-like bin called an "air curtain burner" on Monday on the West side, where we will be burning the mass quantity of beetle-killed trees for the next month. And we all know how much I enjoy a good bonfire! Next week, the pesticide contractors are coming to spray the trees we have been marking to protect them... we've been so busy though that as of right now, we still have 700 trees to mark. Not sure how that is going to work out, with the Air Curtain Burner going on, plus we need to supervise the contractors on both the East and the West sides... Then, there's always hazard tree work that pops up unexpectedly.

Oh, and it makes it a lot harder when the park goes from being relatively quiet in April (~67,000 in April last year) to busy (I think ~117k in May) to insane (~600k+ in July??) and we have to shut down roads or work in campground areas. It makes it that much harder. Should be fun! :)

For 4-5 days a week, I live in an apartment in Granby and party with the laid back, great folks on that side. Met a lot of cool people - Mark, Keith, Doug and Sandy, the trivia team - drank a few and watched too much Denver sports... I miss the Wings! On the weekends, I live in Estes at my "real" apartment, you know the one with all my stuff. This weekend, a lot of people are moving in and starting on Monday, so our housing area will no longer be as quiet as it as been. Probably the weekly/nightly bonfires and too many parties will start up. As if I'm not already sleep deprived! And I mean that in a good way! :)

Speaking of sleep deprived, I finally got to hang out with one of the former crew leaders, Lonnie. It was a pleasant surprise to find out that he is still around. Him, Cisco and I tore it up until 4 am Thursday night, watching the Nuggets and catching up at Kelli's Dance Club (real hoppin' place too, with like 6 of us there, ha ha!)... I left my car downtown because I don't drink and drive, so Cisco drove us all home. Of course, the next morning when I biked the few miles from my apartment to my car, it decided to get cold and snowy again. That's what I get for being a responsible drunk I guess! Anyway, Lonnie is big into running so if I get up to speed I'll have somebody to train with. It will be a while before I can keep up with him though!  

Now I'm just hanging out, waiting for Joe to show up so I can introduce him to "real" mountain living up here! The weather is cold but I think we're going to go for my first hike in the park since I arrived. Hell, I haven't even driven all the way up Trail Ridge Road to where it is closed yet either... probably do that too!

Speaking of TRR, I met the guys that drive those HUGE plows and rotor-snowplow thing (I need to get a picture of it on here) and they said they are 4 miles from the Alpine Visitor Center - the top of the road. At this point, the snow is SO DEEP that it's a matter of how many FEET closer they get per day - 25+ ft. snow banks, a little at a time. I am going up there and if I am VERY nice, Doug might let me operate some of the equipment. They hope to open the road by Memorial Day, like usual.

Oh yeah, one more cool funny thing (at least to me) - I got trained how to operate a 13 speed dump truck last week! The ones at my last job were all automatic, and I never drive standard CARS... so it was quite a treat to learn how to deal with that split-speed transmission, old school beast! Jake brake and everything! I gave poor Ron whiplash at least a couple times but picked up on it pretty quick I suppose. Let me say this - it is honestly a work out to double clutch and shift through all those gears!

Off to adventure into the wilderness! Miss you all! And I have to give a big thank you to the people that helped me through my last week in Michigan - Linda, for driving out to help me move and drive back and forth too many times, my stepdad for his last minute life-saving help fitting everything in storage and cleaning my apartment, and a certain somebody who took off work to help me chill out and relax while playing Grand Theft Auto... That was a rough week and without them, I would have never gotten everything done and kept my sanity. And of course everybody else who took me out for my birthday and all those going away parties and for understanding when I just left without really saying goodbye... Thanks for being so awesome!

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Snow makes for fantastic photo opps...

I am exhausted from my week on the West Side of the park again, and this coffee shop is closing shortly... But I had some GREAT photo opps this week!

I'll post some nice sized ones on here of my favs, but I'll put them all in the photo album for this entry.

I love 4 day work weeks... but it makes for a LONG DAY of dragging brush!

Sunday, April 23, 2006

Muley Deer!

Mule deer in my front yard, elk in the back yard. A few more photos, because everybody loves pictures!

I'm bribing Cisco with beer and/or tequila to let me watch Desperate Housewives and Grey's Anatomy tonite. Cheers to that!

 

What to do with all this SUNSHINE?!

Yesterday morning, I woke up and decided I would kick my workout routine into high gear so I can climb those mountains and bike some mean single track. I'm still running on "Michigan Time", so I keep waking up at 5-6 am (I would be 7-8 am in MI) and going to bed around 9-10 pm (11-midnite MI time). What could be better than an early morning run in the mountains?!

Ends up, a whole lot of things are better than that when you aren't used to the elevation!

There is a trail in the park that is right outside my apartment. I get cold induced asthma as it is but I was stubborn and ignored the fact that it was still only 40-45 degrees outside... and that running at 8,600 ft for the first time is like trying to breathe through a pillow... I ran for about, ohhhh maybe a minute or two... And had to stop before my lungs exploded!

Frustrating, but now I remember that's how it was the last time I was here. It took me about 2 months to run more than 3 miles. Fortunately, by the end of the summer I was one lean mean mountain running machine! Ok, maybe not that intense... but much better than I was before!

Anyway, my "run" ended up being a 25 minute hike with a couple minutes of labored jogging and much panting. I'll get there again. I'm too stubborn not to. :)

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Joe moved into an apartment about 1 1/2-2 hours south-east of me, outside of Denver, and I offered to help him move some of his stuff... Which meant I had volunteered to carry his stuff up 3 flights of stairs of course. He's in a pretty suburban area, so once the work got done we went to play in the foothills and wound up in the mountain town of Evergreen for dinner. There is a bar there called the Little Bear, and we paid $4 cover each to listen to some old hippies sing a song that went, "Arf arf arf arf arf arf arf..... WOOF!"  The band was a little goofy but the bar was cool, with upstairs wooden bleachers and live music.

And now today, I'm in Boulder at the Folsom St. Coffee Shop, catching up with the rest of the world and doing some shopping. I think I will take a hike before I try to do any more running. :)

Hope to have some more photos to share soon!

Friday, April 21, 2006

Vagabond Vixen

I'm sitting in a coffee shop in Estes Park, drinking coffee and taking advantage of free wireless internet! Woo hoo!

I started work on my birthday, and my hazard tree partner Cisco was nice enough to take me out... and I ran into a bunch of people that I had worked with in 2003. People either never leave this place, or they leave and come back! I think Cisco and I are going to have too much fun running around the Park with chainsaws and minimal supervision!

Looks like I'll be staying on the West side of the park (a 3-4 hour drive while Trail Ridge Road is closed) for 4-5 days a week on and off for a couple months. The folks over there are great and I guess it's tradition (8 years and going!) to hit up trivia night at some bar every Wednesday. Of course our team, "The People By the Back Door", won - free drinks! I'm gonna have to watch it around those crazy kids... did I mention they're all probably 40 yrs+??

What are we doing on the West side? Here's some dorky science and forestry stuff: There is this insect called the Mountain Pine Beetle, and it does its little life cycle thing inside Ponderosa and Lodgepole pines, as well as a few other evergreens. It's a natural occurrence and usually isn't a problem; however, due to the continuing drought (and I think also in part to fire suppression, so the forest is too thick in some places), the trees are overly stressed and the MPB (beetle) is wreaking havoc on the trees. If you ever go over there, you'll see miles of dead, red pines - all due to the beetle.

What that translates to is that the trees are screwed. Part of our job is to find "high value trees" and mark them to be sprayed with insecticide to protect them from the beetle. This is proving to be harder than we thought - the beetles have hit most of the trees 8" and up and we can't do anything about it. So we run around places in the park and put tape around trees. Another part of our job is to remove hazardous trees - which there are plenty of, because of the beetle. Later on, I will be on rotation to fight fires and hopefully get to see some action!!

It's great to be back here! The sun shines even when it's nasty out, and I forgot how bizarre the weather can be living in themountains - sunny and warm one minute, a blizzard the next... repeat 5-6x in a day, and that's how Tuesday was. :)  Today is looking to be fantastic and I am either going to go hiking, trail running, or find some mountain biking trails that won't kill me!

I've got my work cut out for me this summer, but these 3 day weekends are always fantastic for enjoying my new home!

Here's a photo of a moose on the West side. Hope to have lots more photos, especially since I have a digital camera this time around.

... And I can't wait to either get my motorcycle out here, or get a HARLEY!