Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Estes Park has been busy lately

I get home from getting my truck fixed yesterday and notice there are a bunch of cop cars and SUVs just a couple houses down from the Rock Inn and my street. I pull up to my cottage, where another government SUV is parked outside next door. My arrival was greeted by two unhappy and heavily armed men that were standing on either side of my neighbor's cabin, looking down into the creek area and sortof "junkyard" area that is behind my place on the other side of the drainage. These men were sporting bullet proof vests and semi-automatic rifles. Hmmm.

Ends up they had the whole area - from highway 66 just down from the Rock, down the next sidestreet where the junkyard area is, and my place was on the perimeter on the other side - surrounded by sheriffs and marshalls. I asked the guy closest to my place, apparently a "Sheriff Negotiator" according to his vest, what was going on. Well there's been a fugitive on the loose that busted out of some prison in Washington and, lucky me, they think he's been hiding out in the cars/campers/junk that is just down behind my place about 200 feet. Nice. Another sheriff suggested we stay indoors until they knew for sure what was going on.

Of course, I had left my place unlocked because well that's just what we do up here sometimes. Not like I have anything worth stealing... But I never counted on a potential "armed and dangerous" fugitive being lose. I opened my bedroom and bathroom doors cautiously, and timidly peeked up in my loft... just to be sure, ya know. ;)

They were out there for a while but they think they missed him and he fled the area again. Darn. A cute officer came to my place and gave me a card, telling me to report anything suspicious, and offering up a compliment to my handsome dog. "At least you have a dog to protect you if anything happens." To which I replied, "Are you freaking kidding me?? He's nothing but a big chicken!"

In the meantime, across town there were multiple drug busts. Yes, this all happened yesterday. They were busted for a cocaine ring. Thank god, get that horrible stuff out of here. This weekend there was also a bust for a suspected meth lab (apparently that's big up here in the mountains... which is funny, since it's mostly retired old people and stoners, who aren't into that kind of thing... guess it's the creepy "other" locals that don't hang out in the nice restaurants or the national park??)

 


Ready to roll, right outside my bedroom window

Going to New Mexico tomorrow is sounding better and better. ;)

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

One more road trip before I start working

I'm hanging out at a coffee shop in Boulder while Truck is getting recall work done. I've just signed myself up for a couple volunteer trails projects with the Colorado 14ers Initiative, finished my taxes, and just generally tying up loose ends before my busy season at the park begins. I'm so excited to start working on the 16th! I've run into my new boss and coworkers and it seems that it's big news that I left hazard tree and moved on to special projects! Everybody thinks I made the right decision. In fact, I just found out this morning that Cisco, who worked haz tree with me last year, just told our boss that he is not coming back either! That's what happens when hard work, dedication and innitiative are ignored - you lose good employees! I'm sure our old boss is ticked off, since he really didn't know what/where/how/who was going on at any given time and he really wanted both of us back because we know what's going on (and the new crewleader has NO idea). We kept casual records of what we did (which we weren't really asked to do but figured it would be a good idea) but they're gonna have a hard time getting up to speed with everything we did last year.

Oh well! I'm gonna have a good season, and that's all that counts. ;)  I guess the first part of my job is going to be demolition! Hell yeah! Getting paid for destruction!

I am leaving either Wednesday or Thursday for New Mexico to hang out with Tim for the weekend at Bandelier National Monument. Looking forward to those hot springs again! That's the last time I'll see Tim until the end of April. I'll be back here by the 12th to pick Jenna up from Denver, and she leaves on the 14th. Logan and I start doggie obedience training the 16th (as well as it being my first day of work). My birthday is the 18th! So much stuff going on!

I forgot to mention in my last entry that Chris Thile is playing in Ann Arbor, MI at the Ark on June 8th, if any of you folks are interested. Looks like it's $25 and trust me, it's worth it!

And I'd like to mention that if anybody out there is interested in volunteering for Rocky Mountain for a certain number of hours a week, for at least a couple weeks (think of it as a vacation), you do get free housing for some jobs. I don't know specifics, but it's a way to live in the park and have fun outside! In fact, most national parks have volunteer programs like that. Heck, you can even do it in Hawaii at Haleakala, or the Virgin Islands! So if you or anybody you know wants to volunteer - from trails, to wildlife, to ranger programs, or campground hosts - you should check it out! Even if there aren't "current openings" here, you can always contact the volunteer coordinator, or contact me and I'll put you in touch with people in charge of resource managment, or trails, or whatever, and maybe you can set up something else that isn't posted.

About 2 or 3 days ago, the wind was howling worse than I've seen in months. It literally made my truck rock back and forth in the driveway; I thought my roof was going to fly off! The clouds were low and tight around Long's Peak and I have never seen them move that quickly - it was probably hurricane strength up there at 14,000 ft! The weather goes from warm and sunny, to snowing, to windy, to warm, to snowing again... in a matter of HOURS. We've only had one good thunderstorm so far, and once we had a thunder snowstorm. The trees and bushes here in Boulder are already sporting some little leaves; the pasque flowers are JUST starting to bloom up in Estes, and definitely no leaves for another couple weeks at least!

There's quite a buzz going on still about the Park's proposal to cull the elk herd; the debate is getting quite heated, on top of that. I just read this article stating that our "harsh winter" killed off quite a few elk and there may not be "as much of a need" for culling, at the least in the short term. In fact, this whole "hunting elk" in Rocky is sparking off a national debate and proposals to congress regarding hunting in any and ALL National Parks. Beyond the debate of whether elk should be culled at all, is the huge debate on whether park sharpshooters, restricted hunters, or a totally open, public hunt should be used to accomplish the task. I'm totally against an open hunt to any and all public; I mean seriously, you let the public go in there, do you think they will kill the weak or nasty elk?? They'll go for the ones with big racks that look nice; this is NOT the purpose culling. The state just wants it because they want more revenue.(I have little faith in the general public as a whole on any issue... hence, we had George W. in office for 2 terms!) And, I'm very against any legislative measures that can open up ALL national parks to hunting; the possible implications and consequence of doing that are just too wide-reaching. For example, now that grizzleys are delisted in Yellowstone, does that mean they'll start hunting those again? I just don't trust it, not yet at least. There's still plenty of people/government officials out there that think we shouldn't have brought grizzleys or wolves back in the first place. Any excuse to kill them and some of them would see them all killed again!

The one thing I really got a kick out of from that article about Rocky Mountain is this: "Beetle infestation: Baker said the mountain pine beetle epidemic has had a significant impact on the park's trees, especially on the western side. He said biologists are spraying "high-value" trees in areas where visitors are more plentiful, but he described the larger battle against the rapacious insect "kind of like sticking a thumb in a dike." "You can't stop the beetle, so what we are doing is dealing with the aftermath," he said."

Know why that's funny? Because the "biologists" spraying high value trees means Cisco and myself; mere seasonal bio techs. We determined what WE thought were high value; marked all those trees; and supervised the sprayer company ourselves. Our "biologist" boss had very little to do with it. And know who was dealing with the aftermath? Yes, Cisco and I. Two measley little seasons with so much responsibility... and we got no credit; I didn't even get an interview for the crewleader job; Cisco wasn't even CONSIDERED. It still cracks me up that scientists in offices say "beetles only hit x number of feet up a tree" and "they only hit trees bigger than x inches diamter" and "they only fly for a small period of time in x month"... So often this summer, what we saw in the field was so different than what we were told as "fact". But alas, our knowledge and experience apparently count for nothing. Ok, so I'm still a little bitter... ;)

Another thing I just read about the Fish and Wildlife Service... looks like my old place of employment, Red Rock Lakes NWR in Montana, and other refuges I detailed out on fire - Charles M. Russell, probably Bison Range, Fish Springs, Browns Park, etc etc - are all getting even less funding. Those places were already working with a skeleton crew! Our poor public lands... so much demand, but so little resources/money to staff/protect/manage them!

That's all for now that I can remember. Busy busy busy! Gearing up for another great season in the mountains! VISIT ME!

Monday, March 26, 2007

My employment dilemma

No, I still haven't decided between special projects and hazard tree. I've been going back and forth about it all weekend. Saturday, I decided special projects - learn some new skills, make some more money, diversify a little bit... Yesterday, I decided hazard tree... Grand Lake in the spring, a little bit over overtime for the first month or two, running a chainsaw...  And then I remember that it is a DEAD END and I'll be seasonal until either 2009 (if I'm LUCKY) or until I leave Rocky!

So, I am procrastinating while I think about it. I'll probably wait until this afternoon and then just whatever blurts out of my mouth is my decision. Either way, it's not like I won't have a great summer - how can I not love doing ANYTHING in this beautiful park! It's not like there is a wrong answer. It's just a matter of, you know, some day being MORE than a seasonal!

Tim and I went down to Boulder, got sushi, and went to that e-Town Chris Thile and the How to Grow a Band show... and once again, I have to totally rave. I didn't realize that this guy was the same guy that started playing mandolin at age 5, was in the band Nickel Creek by age 8, and is just unbefreakinglieveable. They are a bluegrass/swampy old time sound, and every musician was so talented - from the fiddle (Gabe Witcher) to the banjo to the upright bass to the guitar. Check out their myspace pages and have a listen... Especially their version of the White Stripes' "Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground". :)  On top of that, Chris is HILARIOUS and when there were some "technical difficulties" during his interview, he kept us entertained. I'm convinced he's a member of the ADHD club with his rambling stories and fidgeting. Takes one to know one!

.... Need to continue later. Gotta gab with Steph!

Ok it's later and I'll continue my e-Town show review. After Chris Thile was done, JJ Grey and MOFRO came on. They were a down south blues/funk group, complete with back up singer girls (which I didn't think were very good singers), a trumpet and a tenor sax. As soon as this relatively short/small guy opened his mouth, I was blown away. He belted out songs in a low, gravelly voice that I think anybody that likes Joe Cocker or Tom Waits would appreciate. I would never have expected him to sound like that! I highly recommend listening some music clips on the website.

Tim leaves next week for Bandelier NP in New Mexico for a month. I think I'm going down there to hang out and adventure before I start working on the 16th. And even better... my friend Jenna is coming to visit!! I am sooo psyched, she has never been out here and I've only seen her once in the past year or so. Spring = busy busy busy!!

Oh, and it's official. I'm hanging up my chaps and chainsaw and leaving Resource Management... I'm now a proud employee of Special Projects, in the maintenance division. Looks like I'll be on the construction crew working on some new buildings in the campgrounds, and then doing whatever else pops up. They take up whatever random projects need to get done. I went back and forth and back and forth, but hey - why not give it a shot? Not like I have anything to lose! And, I'll be making more $$$ and working with a couple friends of mine. Time to learn some more random skills... carpentry, plumbing, electrical... it's all part of the job!

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Happy Spring!

Woo! Spring's here! Well ok I guess it was technically on Tuesday evening but I've been busy. I surprised Tim with a little bouquet of yellow daffodils and white daisies for spring; he surprised me out of nowhere and got us tickets to the Chris Thile e-town show on Sunday - like the Yonder show we saw last month, taped for that radio show. :)  The Rock Inn is having the Big Lebowski night tonight - looks like I gotta be Bunny again and see if my bikini will still help me win the costume prize.

Other news is I was offered a seasonal job with "special projects" here at Rocky Mt. I did already say yes to the forestry tech hazard tree job, but obviously I'm not crewleader... If I go to special projects, I will make more money, could start working next week (but still be limited to 1039 hours), and get a pay raise every season I come back ("step" increase - the WG grade is for laborers, and it's way better than the GS that I've been); If I stay at hazard tree, I don't go up in step, and my base pay is fundamentally less as a GS-5 than a WG-5. Plus, I'd get to learn how to completely remodel structures - from the trails lodge on the west side, to rest rooms, to installing water lines to the new fire house... I don't know what to do. I wouldn't be working four 10 hour days anymore and would instead be on 5-4-9's... 9 hour days for 5 days one week, then 4 days the next. I love my four 10s! And I wouldn't get to run a saw every day; though, there is a lot of saw work while building these log buildings.

Well Logan is waiting for me to take him to the dog park. Here's some photos from my St. Patty's Day, and another I found in the archeives. :)

 


Logan looking quite "wolfy" as he discovers how much fun running in a river can be

Michelle and I do probably our 7th or 8th car bomb on St. Patty's Day

Maria, me, Jenna and Steph looking green and exhausted from dancing!

Me, Jeff, Jess and Amadeo back in the "glory days" at 5th Ave

Monday, March 19, 2007

Springtime in the Rockies

It's been warm, sunny, and just awesome up here in Estes for the past week or two. I went down to Denver last week and there were FLOWERS blooming! This came as a shock to me until I realized that it's mid-March, and even back in Detroit the bulbs would be blooming. It might be nice up here in the mountains, but no sign of any flowers! Soon, perhaps...

I FINALLY got my motorcycle moved from my old place in Lyons to my new place up here. Tim was nice enough to help me... because, ya know, we "broke up." Ha ha, whatever. We are still hanging out and having fun together. He worked the door for the Rock on St. Patty's Day, and my friend Maria came up from Fort Collins... It was SO MUCH FUN! Car bombs, car "bombtinis" (car bombs in martini form!), lephrechaun shots, and mass quantities of Guinness... And no hangover!! ;)  Whitewater Ramble got everybody dancing, including Maria and I, doing our Irish Jigs and kicking people in the process. :)

My friend Travis might be able to hook me up with some temporary work with a rafting company in Moab, Utah... so I might be getting out of here for a little bit and enjoying the even warmer weather down there. I am now officially a "forestry technician" instead of a "biological technician", since they switched hazard tree around a bit. I made the top of the cert of course... and I still am ticked off that I was top of the cert for the leader but I got screwed. Looks like I'll be living in Grand Lake for a few weeks like last year, getting tons of overtime and working my butt off. I'm looking forward to it. :)

Here's some photos. Not much but I haven't been on any grand adventures in about 2 2 weeks. ;) BUT, there should be some hilarious ones of St. Patty's Day soon!

From Winter 2006-2007

The view from my backyard - Long's Peak!

 

Logan munching on a pig ear. He's probably at least 55 pounds now!