Commuting
A little while I moved a little further away from the office. This has some advantages as well disadvantages. My new place has a partial view of the Ottawa River and is twice as large as my old place. One of the disadvantages is that the commute is a little longer. But it satisfies one of my goal of being able to run, blade, ski, snowshoe and cycling to work depending on the season. My commute recently has been a little more challenging over the last two weeks. I had only been living in my place for a few days when the transit company decided to go on strike just as our first major snowstorm descended on the city. This created major havoc as the bus drivers decided to protest in front salt/sand depot in unplowed and unsanded roads. I’ve considered this situations as a bit of an opportunity as it has allowed my to explore my new neighborhood on foot, something, I otherwise would not have done. Each day I hike 6 miles/10 kilometers round trip to the office using I can in about an hour depending on the footing. By bus this commute would normally take about 15 minutes. Each day has been different as I’m making good use of my iPod as some days I listen to swing music, jazz and occasionally a string of symphonies. I have learned about the various plows and sanding trucks the city uses to keep the roads clear. I’m starting to see familiar faces and can sort of gauge who is late and who is early. I have been able to recall what black ice looks like and what consistency of snow is the most and least slippery. As you can see much goes through my mind on my hour to and from the office. I’ve been comparing notes with my briefer as to who is loosing the most weight as a result of our extended commutes. My daily adventures will most likely end soon as I head home for the holidays at the end of the week and the city will eventually have to settle with the strikers. While the drama continue I still have to see what it us like to winter run to the office. I also openly wonder what expressions I would get as I visibly stow my snowshoes in my cube after a commute through the hinterland along the Ottawa River.
Hazards of snowshoeing
This weekend I learned first hand about one of the perils of snowshoeing in the Spring, weak ice. We had an impromptu gathering of the people that went on the recent Adirondack trip. We headed up to a href=”http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gatineau_Park”span style=”border-bottom: 1px dashed rgb(0, 102, 204); background: transparent none repeat scroll 0% 50%; cursor: pointer; -moz-background-clip: -moz-initial; -moz-background-origin: -moz-initial; -moz-background-inline-policy: -moz-initial;” class=”yshortcuts” id=”lw_1207532558_0″Gatineau Park/span /aon the north side of the span style=”border-bottom: 1px dashed rgb(0, 102, 204); background: transparent none repeat scroll 0% 50%; cursor: pointer; -moz-background-clip: -moz-initial; -moz-background-origin: -moz-initial; -moz-background-inline-policy: -moz-initial;” class=”yshortcuts” id=”lw_1207532558_1″Ottawa River/span. The snow is melting quickly but there is still a thick base of granular snow. Our goal was to have lunch at Pink Lake. We initially started out by bushwacking in a northwesterly direction. After scrambling through a couple of thorn patches we decided to try and find the main trail. It was at this time that we ran into a wet problem. We had to trek between two lakes divided by a land bridge. The hump of the land bridge was quite steep. My first attempt at getting up span style=”border-bottom: 1px dashed rgb(0, 102, 204); cursor: pointer;” class=”yshortcuts” id=”lw_1207532558_2″the hill/span was unsuccessful. One of my legs slid down onto the weak ice breaking through the surface of span style=”border-bottom: 1px dashed rgb(0, 102, 204); cursor: pointer;” class=”yshortcuts” id=”lw_1207532558_3″the lake/span giving me a soaker. One foot was icy cold while the other was toasty warm for the recent exertion. As more and more people went up the slope it became more slippery. A couple of soakers later we decided to take an inland route rather than trying to scout along the edge of the lake. We made it to Pink Lake and took a more direct route back to the car.br /br /br /Sent from my span style=”border-bottom: 1px dashed rgb(0, 102, 204); cursor: pointer;” class=”yshortcuts” id=”lw_1207532558_4″iPod/span
Adirondacks 2008
span lang=”EN-US”o:p/o:p/spanst1:date year=”2008″ day=”28″ month=”3″ st=”on”span lang=”EN-US”Friday March 28 2008/span/st1:datespan lang=”EN-US”o:p /o:p/span p class=”MsoNormal”span lang=”EN-US”It was under spring-like conditions that the a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952060740676770″uOttawa /aOutdoors club headed south to the st1:place st=”on”Adirondacks/st1:place for a long weekend of winter camping, mountain climbing and snowshoeing. The weather conditions would be a mystery until we arrived at the trailhead. st1:city st=”on”st1:place st=”on”Ottawa/st1:place/st1:City is within a hare’s breath of setting a seasonal snowfall record. Would there be more snow in the Lake Placid? On our way south we stopped at st1:place st=”on”st1:city st=”on”Malone/st1:City, st1:state st=”on”NY/st1:State/st1:place for the traditional Friday fish and chips pre-trip meal. We briefly detoured to Price Chopper so I could buy fig newtons and pretzel goldfish. /span/p p class=”MsoNormal”span lang=”EN-US”o:p/o:pAs we headed south the condition grew worse. It started to snow. The snow was accumulating on the road. span style=”" /spanAs we drove down the park access road we spotted wild turkeys grazing on a nearby field. Further along the road we had to make an emergency stop as a deer was in the middle of the road eating road salt. We arrived at the a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952112280284386″ADK Lodge/a and loaded our backpacks with group gear. This year we would split into two groups as there is a cap of nine people per campsite, we had 15. Under blustery conditions we headed out on the trail towards to a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952168114859314″Marcy Dam/a. We left at an inopportune time as they were four other groups that would be heading towards Marcy Dam at roughly the same time all in search of scarce lean-tos. I was asked to scout ahead and try to get first dibs on the largest lean-to, known as the a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952176704793922″“palace/a.” (N44 09.443 W073 57.079 e=2347 feet) It is the largest on st1:place st=”on”st1:placetype st=”on”Lake/st1:PlaceType st1:placename st=”on”Marcy/st1:PlaceName/st1:place. I got lucky but by only five minutes before the next group arrived in search of an abode. The snowy conditions would work to our advantage keeping the evening temperatures in the mid-twenties. Despite the higher elevation of the st1:place st=”on”Adirondacks/st1:place had received there annual average amount of snow. span style=”" /spanFor supper, we had started with a mixture Knorr Swiss soups mixed with coconut paste. The main course was pasta. While sitting around eating supper a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952198179630434″Steph/a, the leader, offered us some wisdom, what freezes will stay frozen over the weekend. This could mean that your toothbrush, toothpaste, liquid soap or water bottle might freeze and stay frozen. As we settled in for the night, I ditched my snowlion boots and donned my booties and gators. A pair of tights and Gore-Tex shell pants would keep my legs warm. As the conditions grew chillier, I applied more and more layers making it hard to bend forward. On top, I had base layer coolmax top, a REI lightweight shirt, 200 weight Polar fleece vest, a 300 weight Polar Fleece jacket and a Gore-tex shell. I felt toasty wearing all this gear. Before bedding down for the night I dropped a couple of layers./span/p p class=”MsoNormal”span lang=”EN-US”Saturday/span/p p class=”MsoNormal”span lang=”EN-US”I awoke at 0500 to find it was still dark. I dozed off for a couple of hours before getting up at 0730. For breakfast we had a deluxe breakfast of scrambled eggs, bacon and bagels. A cup of black coffee would be all that was needed to restore one’s senses. After breakfast I had my first experience with the cold. It would take two hands to squeeze out toothpaste as it as had frozen overnight. As well, I had to de-thaw my toothbrush in my mouth as it was crunchy from freezing overnight. At 10:00 with bags packed we head west to pickup the Algonquin Peak trail (Junction N44 10.334 W073 57.528). Along the way we were passed by the other group traveling at a brisk place and they were eager to be the first to ascend the mountain. There speed would become a hazard. Over the course of the hike we would gain 3,000 feet. As we climbed we peeled off layers as we were working up a sweat. Along the way we eyed the frozen falls (N44 09.578 W073 58.779 e=3277 feet). This would be a water refilling stop on our return. We stopped at the st1:place st=”on”st1:placename st=”on”Wright/st1:PlaceName st1:placetype st=”on”Peak/st1:PlaceType/st1:place trail junction (a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952254014205378″N44 09.156 W073 59.152 e=3994 feet/a) to put on warmer clothing. At this point we were close to the edge of the tree line. We could see the snow blowing near the peak. I headed out first and did a a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952296963878386″solo /asummit (st1:place st=”on”st1:placename st=”on”Algonquin/st1:PlaceName st1:placetype st=”on”Peak/st1:PlaceType/st1:place summit solo @1400 a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952279784009186″N44 08.613 W073 59.206 e=5115 feet/a). (http://www.peakbagger.com/peak.aspx?pid=6022) On the way up, I had a weird experience as I was breathing hard and sweating profusely while receiving a blast of arctic cold air. The going got a little rough near the top and I was forced to bash my snowshoes’ crampons into the snow-ice base to get a purchase. A misstep could cause one to slide down the side of the peak. I took a self-portrait and headed down to lead the remainder of the group up to the summit. The going was challenging as the crampons on their rented snowshoes were not aggressive as mine. We would use rock carrons for navigation. There was much relief once we back into the shelter of the trees. It was at this point that the fun began. It was child like. We slide down the trail on our bums. Once back at the Wright Peak trail junction we took a a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952339913551410″lunch /abreak. Our trek back to the waterfalls was a brisk one. Using a a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952361388387922″precarious /amethod we refilled water bottles. We took another rest break at major trail junction and met a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952417222962834″Peter Fish,/a one of the early Park Rangers. We were arrived back in camp late in the afternoon to find a surprise. Something had attacked the food pack and left discarded package of brownies underneath the bag. A quick check of the bag revealed that the a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952202474597746″martin /amust have a penchant for chocolate. There was some discussion if it would pay us a visit overnight. Would the martin climb into someone’s sleeping bag for warmth? Steph came back to camp a little later to pass along news of the other group. They were a disappointed lot. They didn’t reach summit. Without a compass, a map, or GPS they decided to take a shortcut and see if they could summit by sighting the peak and snowshoeing off trail in hope of beating our group to the top. This wasn’t a wise idea. Midway up the slope they had to turn back as the snow was too deep.span style=”" /spanFor supper we had a couscous stew along with a raspberry, apple flan for dessert. Tonight, would be a colder night as we had a healthy crop of stars visible overhead. In anticipation I added another layer of clothing, a down vest (-15C/5F overnight). /span/p p class=”MsoNormal”span lang=”EN-US”Sunday/span/p p class=”MsoNormal”span lang=”EN-US”Once again I was awake early but didn’t emerge from my toasty sleeping bag until there were others about. Breakfast was hot fruit mixed with a dry cereal. By mid-morning we were back on the trail heading in a southerly direction bound for a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952511712243506″st1:place st=”on”st1:placename st=”on”Avalanche/st1:PlaceName st1:placetype st=”on”Lake/st1:PlaceType/st1:place./a It would be a warm hike. The snow was melting and starting to gum up our snowshoes. We had lunch while sitting on the frozen st1:place st=”on”st1:placename st=”on”Avalanche/st1:PlaceName st1:placetype st=”on”Lake/st1:PlaceType/st1:place. (N44 08.117 W073 57.883 e=2959 feet) The bright sun reflecting off the snow gave many of us the start of a tan on our faces. Once back at camp we had to peel off more layers as there was melt water dripping from the roof of the lean-to. With a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5183952520302178114″lighter packs/a we reached the van in record time. We stopped in st1:place st=”on”st1:placename st=”on”Saranac/st1:PlaceName st1:placetype st=”on”Lake/st1:PlaceType/st1:place for a hearty post-trip meal./span/pp class=”MsoNormal”br /span lang=”EN-US”/span/pp class=”MsoNormal”span lang=”EN-US”a href=”http://picasaweb.google.ca/moulec/Adirondacks_March_2008/photo#5184365322493898578″map/abr //span/p
Raining and running…
On my way to work today, I felt compelled to take off my winter gloves. Something unexpected was happening where I live; it was raining for the first time this year. It felt good to feel the rain landing on my hands. If you live in Vancouver or Victoria, British Columbia, I think this thought would come with a groan as it is always raining on the west coast. This can mean that warmer weather is on its way. There was a downside to this warm trend. The snow is starting to melt forming large puddles that one must dart between. This is made more challenging at night when it is hard to distinguish between the black road and a puddle. This became more apparent during my a href=”http://www.runningroon.com/”Running Room /aworkout in the evening. I ran down to the store trying my best to avoid getting a soaker but failed miserably. The workout took the form of four mile warmup followed by 5 x 1km repeats on 90 seconds rest. It was my first speed workout of the year so it sets a benchmark on which I can only improve. (4.04/4.09/4.24/4.24/4.22) On Friday, I head down to my folks place and will run in the a href=”http://www.burlingtonrunners.com/goodfriday/”Burlington Good Friday 10 mile race/a. The race is long enough that I can only treat it as a training workout.
10 days to go before my next winter adventure
Tonight, we had our planning meeting for the uOttawa Adirondacks winter camping, snowshoeing and mountain climbing meeting. Steph, one of the guides, walked us through our gear list and hammered home the fact that we will need two sets of clothes, our day outfit that will get wet during the day and our night set which will keep us warm, dry and toasty overnight. During these meetings he likes to put the fear into the foreign-exchange students so that they take him seriously when he says to pack warm clothing. This year he toned it down a bit. I think this will be the fifth trip that I have taken with Steph and they are always fun and interesting. We talked about peaks and will likely climb a href=”http://www.summitpost.org/mountain/rock/150395/algonquin-peak.html”Algonquin Peak/a or maybe a href=”http://www.summitpost.org/mountain/rock/150567/phelps-mountain.html”Phelps mountain/a this year on Saturday. The weather-of-the-day will determine which peak we attempt to summit. I talked to Steph about changing the trip date in 2009 to the April 3-4 weekend so that it does not conflict with the Boston Tea Party. It would be awesome if a href=”http://jasonplancaster.com”Jason /acould come on the trip in 2009. With Easter coming up rather quickly, I’ll be visiting a href=”http://www.mec.ca”MEC /aa couple of times over the next couple of days to load up on provisions.
Let it snow…Let it snow…
As I type this entry it is snowing. We are within three feet of exceeding the snowfall record set in 1970-71 of 444.1 cm or 174 inches or 14.5 feet. Our current tally is 357 cm or 140.5 inches or 11.7 feet. We are expected to get another foot overnight. As I was heading back to span style=”border-bottom: 1px dashed rgb(0, 102, 204); cursor: pointer;” class=”yshortcuts” id=”lw_1204959671_0″Ottawa/span earlier this week we got another foot. The local newspaper claims that the average resident has shoveled the equivalent of 16 rhinos or 37, 572 kg or 16,970 pounds.br /br /All this snow is good news as it is the first time that I have snowshoed in March. The plan is to trek along the span style=”border-bottom: 1px dashed rgb(0, 102, 204); cursor: pointer;” class=”yshortcuts” id=”lw_1204959671_1″Ottawa River/span for a couple of miles span style=”border-bottom: 1px dashed rgb(0, 102, 204); cursor: pointer;” class=”yshortcuts” id=”lw_1204959671_2″on Saturday/span. Earlier this week, I signed up for the UOttawa Adirondack snowshoeing adventure. It is a long weekend of snowshoeing, winter camping and mountain climbing at the end of the March. I am hoping to convince the organizers to change the date for next year’s outing so that a href=”http://jasonplancaster.com”Jason /acan come along. But with more snow on the horizon I’ll be snowshoeing for the foreseeable future.br /br /SwingD for Fri = 14dbr /br /Sent from my span style=”border-bottom: 1px dashed rgb(0, 102, 204); background: transparent none repeat scroll 0% 50%; cursor: pointer; -moz-background-clip: -moz-initial; -moz-background-origin: -moz-initial; -moz-background-inline-policy: -moz-initial;” class=”yshortcuts” id=”lw_1204959671_3″iPod/span
Dashing through the snow…
a onblur=”try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}” href=”http://picasaweb.google.com/moulec/SnowshoeingInWhiteoutConditions/photo#5144656431340430242″img style=”margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 320px;” src=”http://picasaweb.google.com/moulec/SnowshoeingInWhiteoutConditions/photo#5144656431340430242″ alt=”" border=”0″ //abr /This morning, I woke up to find that we had received four inches of snow overnight. Along with the snow can a brisk wind that was whipping up the snow creating white-out conditions. My plans of doing a 10 mile run along the canal quickly faded. It was time to cross-train. Today, would be a good day to finally go snowshoeing. I put on my goretex pants and add a couple of layers of clothing on top. The conditions were challenging as a href=”http://picasaweb.google.com/moulec/SnowshoeingInWhiteoutConditions/photo#5144656448520299442″visibility /awas bad. Here is a picture of my snowshoes and snowlions in a href=”http://picasaweb.google.com/moulec/SnowshoeingInWhiteoutConditions/photo#5144656405570626434″action/a. I snowshoed for about an hour along the Ottawa River until I reached a href=”http://www.westborobeach.org/history/interactive-map”Westboro beach/a before heading back. I took this picture on my way a href=”http://picasaweb.google.com/moulec/SnowshoeingInWhiteoutConditions/photo#5144656465700168642″back/a. The way back was no easier than the way their as the wind and the snow had just about filled in my tracks making the trail hard to negotiate at times. Once back the mug of hot chocolate was a welcome sight.
Snow…wet and not enough
Overnight, we got our first dose of snow (two inches). It came in the form of wet snow which melted during the day leaving wet slush. I was hoping for more as I’m eager to go skiing as well to start snowshoeing but this will likely have to wait until after Christmas.br /br /Tonight, I had an awesome run, it was one of those “flow” experiences when you run very fast and smooth almost as if you are on auto-pilot. This was unexpected. Earlier in the day, I got my annual “flu” shot and was starting to feel under the weather. Things continued to feel iffy as I was heading down to meet the running group. Once we started out on the run at a brisk pace I quickly moved in the grove and was able to spend most of the workout running very fast which sort of felt effortless.