The Mysteries of Snow
Over the Christmas holidays I have been staying at my folks place where I have been happy to be away from the Ottawa cold and snow for a while. I knew that the absence of snow wouldn’t last long. Overnight we received two inches of fresh snow which brighten up the muddy front yard. As I was taking Hoover out for his morning walk, I started to notice something that the snow had revealed. The snow exposed all of the local animal activity. As we were walking around the back forty we saw mouse, rabbit, mole, vole and deer tracks in the snow. I spotted where mice had started to eat the bark off tree for food. Flying overhead were red-tailed hawks in search of a daily meal.
Albino/Leucistic Canada Geese
Today on my morning bike commute I spotted an anomaly that caught my attention, a Canada goose with an odd coloring. The bird’s feathers didn’t have any pigments. Once at the office I did a quick google check and Leucistic/albino geese are quick common. Here is a link to more pictures
Leucistic Canada Goose
Geocaching and bouldering
Yesterday I went geocaching and was able to use my bouldering skills. It had a difficulty rating of four and a half stars. The highest rating is five stars. The cache was midway up a pine tree (18 feet). The problem was that the lowest branch was eight feet up. What to do? I had a McGyver moment and saw two possibilities brute force, or make use of my environment. About 300 feet away from the cache were two things that might help, a shopping cart and a oil drum trash can. I opted to take the plastic bag out of the drum and roll it over to the tree. Once the drum was upended I could reach onto a branch and pull myself up the tree. From there I was able to climb up to the tree until I reached the cache. I signed cache log and slowly worked my way down the tree and finally landed back on the drum. I rolled the drum back to its home and was on my way.
The beach
Today, I noticed that the beach along my daily bike commute looked different. It looked unkempt. The groundsman hadn’t leveled or smoothed the sand. The buoys were absent from the Ottawa River and the life guard towers were no longer within inches of the Ottawa River. After a closer look the flag pole no longer flew a red or green flag. The nearby restaurant on the beach had shuttered for another season. The swimming season was coming to an end. All that was left, as I took a last glance was an old geezer wanding the beach with his metal detector in search for some sunken treasure. Further along the path, the trees were starting to show the first hints of fall as there were specks of red in the leaves.
A soggy July — Wettest July on Record
Hiking Old Rag
A little while ago, I achieved one of my goals for 2009 which was to hike Old Rag mountain in the Shenandoah National Park with Jason. Three years ago, we had hiked up Old Rag and set a personal speed record for reaching the summit. This year the circumstances were a little different as both Jason and I would be hiking after three nights and two day of intense swing dancing as part of Charm City Swing’s Lindy500 weekend. We would be hiking with tired and possibly sore legs. This was a good thing as it allowed us to have a more relaxing hike. The trip was made more special as we would be hiking with Jason’s parents, two of his sisters (Heather and Tracie), Bill, Heather’s friend and Jason and I. We all assembled at Jason’s place at 7:30 AM and were headed south a little after 8:00 AM. At around 11:30 AM, we started the hike from the upper parking lot and hiked for about an hour before stopping for lunch. The terrain is a gradual climb. Over the course of the hike, we would climb 2,286 feet and hike just under nine miles. For this trip, I decided to pack along some new technology which I am still experimenting with, a Garmin Forerunner 305. Every couple of seconds the watch would record a GPS reference point. The next two pictures are the route we took courtesy of the GPS watch.


By early afternoon we would all reach the summit and it was time to rest our legs. As the hints of a sunset started to appear we took some pictures and started our descent. But before doing so Jason and I had to have a picture taken close to where we were photographed a couple of years back. It was good to record this moment. The descent was a little slower than the ascent as we were hiking with tired legs. By early evening we were back at the van. Bill, Heather, Jason’s mom and I headed down to the stream to dip our feet into the cold water. It felt refreshing. I’ll close this point with two pictures courtesy of the GPS.


Sea to Summit — Bowl and Mug
When I go out camping and hiking I like to keep the amount of gear I have to carry to a minimum. I recently discovered an new innovation, the Sea to Summit
mug and
bowl. When you are not using them the mug fits inside the bowl and the result is a disc four inches in diameter by 1/4″ thick. To use either of them you push out the centre of the disc and you are ready to go. Before putting the mug to a test in the wilderness I decided to test it out in my kitchen. I added my favourite hot brew to the mug and discovered that it is best to the grip the cup by the black rim and to use two hands when drinking say a cup of hot coffee or tea. I was impressed by how well they worked. The next test will be to see how they operate in the arctic cold of Adirondack winter camping or a local trek in the Ottawa environs.
http://www.rei.com/product/767560
Sea to Summit bowl
http://www.rei.com/product/787278
Sea to Summit X-Mug
Lindy 1 Summary
Basic footwork leaders: left, right, left-right-left (triple step), right, left, right-left-right (triple step)
1. Lindy Hop basic
– rock-step, triple forward, step step, triple back (8-count)
– stay in closed position
2. Send Out
– rock “send” (leaders send followers out on 2)
– begin in closed, move to open position
3. Into closed
– leaders: back-together (on 1-2)
– followers: walk forward on 1-2
– begin in open, leaders catch and stop followers on 3-and-4, end in closed
4. Side pass
– leaders: back-together, bring left hand across body to lead follower to turn
– begin and end in open
5. Flip flop
– begin in closed with “circular” rock-step, move hand to shoulder blade
– leads open “door” on 1-2, then close on 3-and-4
– switch hands on follower’s back, then rock step on opposite foot
– to end, bring hand and arm back around follower’s hip (closing the space)
6. Rotating basic
– same as basic, but leads rotation towards right shoulder (clockwise)
– triple step back on 7-and-8
7. Lindy circle
– begin in open position, and same beginning as into-closed
– leaders: wait for follower, then start rotating clockwise
– triple step back on 7-and-8 (end in closed position)
8. Under-arm Tuck-turn
– “circular” rock-step, and move hand to shoulder blade
– close “door” on 3-and-4 (leader’s left and follower’s right hand squishing a
– leaders: turn followers out (clockwise) and draw “C” with hand
9. Swing out!
– begin in open position
– leaders: back-together, triple-step (moving 180 degrees)
– followers, walk forward, matching leader’s shoulders
– on 4, face-off position
– on 5, leaders look then step to side 90 degrees
– end in open position
Urban jetboiling
Tonight, I did something that has been on my “ToDo” list for a while is some Jetboil cooking. On Friday, I was over a MEC buying some bike stuff and grabbed two package of AlpineAire dinners. The idea is to test out meal in an urban setting before experiencing them in the wild only to discover that they are no good. I sort of wanting to make an adventure out of cooking dinner so I loaded my Jetboil, Nalgene bottle, utensils and roll of toilet paper into my backpack and headed out along the Ottawa River. The sun was starting to set so I couldn’t travel too far but a handy park bench was nearby.
Both dinners required two cups of water and the nice thing about the Jetboil is that it has a 2 cup/16 oz mark on the inside of the pot. I set up the stove and had my first load of water ready to heat. The first dinner was AlpineAire Wild Tyme Turkey. The Jetboil was steaming in under a minute and I loaded the water into the pouch and gave it a good stir and set it aside for 10 minutes. The second batch of water was heated even faster and was loaded into the AlpineAire Pepper Steak Rice pouch. At this point it was time to get out the toilet paper for all the wrong and not obvious reasons. While both pouches were steeping I dried off the inside of the Jetboil pot and the lid and put the stove away and waited.
The Wild Turkey dinner was tasty but not as filling as the Pepper Steak Rice. A note -to-self to really stir the Pepper steak before serving as the salt and pepper tend to accumulate at the bottom of the pouch. The Pepper Steak Rice dinner would feed two people well. The Wild Turkey when combined with something else would feed two people satisfactorily.
The Perils of Poor Packing and Chai Tea
Today I learned about the perils of poor packing first hand but was able to make a quick recovery. In my last entry I talked about how I wanted to try running to work soon. Today, I awoke really early and decided to run to work. I packed all my work clothes and shower stuff into my backpack; it was a full and heavy load. I made a critical mistake of not closing my zipper sliders at the top of the bag and not to one side. With all the giggling of my bag the zipper started to peel open and things started to fall out along the route. One of the first things to fall out was my winter hat and office access badge. I only discovered when checking into the office of my fatal error and was lucky that I had other identification. After showering I decided to retrace my steps and found my access badge hanging from a tree as someone had seen its value and picked it up. My loss was only a winter hat. As I run home tonight I’ll stopp by MEC to buy a replacement and will most likely carabiner my zipper slides together.br /br /My second adventure today deals with Starbuck Organic Chai tea. For a long time, I have been a fan of their Early Grey teas but found at times it contains too much caffeine. I switch every so often to the Tazo Organic Chai Tea. To the folks at Starbucks when you say you want Chai tea it brings up two connotations, one cheap and the other expensive. The cheap version is some hot tea with a Chai teabag and the other is the Chai Tea Latte. Today, I was downtown for a meeting and asked for Chai Tea and tried to be clear what I wanted and jokingly the barista just gave me the tea bag in its package. I said sort asked where was the hot water and which we all rolled around laughing as they wanted to figured that I wanted hot tea.