Showing posts with label hammock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hammock. Show all posts

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Floodwood Loop, St. Regis Wilderness Area, Adirondacks. Day 1

So the story of this trip goes back to Vinnie's prematurely ended campaign on the Long Trail.  The story of the lost toe nail and inflamed Achilles is his to tell.  The original plan was for me to meet his weary party for their final week and provide a much needed resupply.  

My intention was to get off the grid and be unreachable for a week.  This is becoming more and more a necessity for my survival, and the advent of Sarah's deepening interest in camping and Emmett's tolerance to it, has given me new vigor.  There was no way we would be doing a Long Trail backpacking trip as a family though, and when the opportunity arose to do some recon in the Adirondacks (a place in which Sarah and I both have interest), as Theodore Rex once said, "I took it."  The limiting reagent for this trip became the single vehicle.  At 4+ hours from home, the drive was onerous enough without having to make it in two cars.  There are several circuitous routes in my ADK paddlers guide, so we looked for one with shorter portages (carrying an 80# canoe is a PITA) and more wilderness.

Vinnie had already bought a lot of backpacking grub, so we went mostly with that.  We added a six pack and some whiskey because it was a luxury afforded us by the canoe, and some cheese, honey, and oatmeal.  That way we could add flavor to the dinners and eat warm breakfasts since we were not going to be rushing into 15 mile hiking days.

As I get older (read; achy, weaker, fatter, less resilient), I am finding, fortuitously, that I can keep biking and that my other interests seem to compliment my abilities.  Besides the biking, and arguable the interest in craft brews, I'm finding less desire for self destructive pastimes.  The canoe has been such a breath of fresh air.  It is beautiful, interesting, has a learning curve and an always present skill development, gets me away from people, and an almost endless variety of optional gear to look at, research, and get.  And with the addition of overnighting with it, I can add chopping wood and building fires.  It's almost a complete package.

Enough of that for now.  Here are some pictures of our first day. (Some of these are mine, some are Vinnies.  Sometimes I know which is which, and I'll indicate.)


This photo is out of order... and possibly out of focus, I just realized.  Anyway, I can't believe we didn't take more pictures of Betty loaded up, but I want to give her her due.  At almost 200k, she got us and all our gear to ADK and back again.  The canoe looks pretty good on her, too.

The trip was pretty easy and straight forward, it was just long.  4+ hours is a long way to drive.  Fortunately, central NY and ADK are beautiful.  




We launched from Floodwood Rd into Floodwood Pond.  At #12 on the map.  We stopped at St. Regis Outfitters (Mark is in the 8th photo on their scrolling slide show) and talked to Mark for a bit.  He was super kind and helpful.  We talked to him when we got done, too and he pointed us to two more great spots.  Big thanks to Mark! 

The water was glassy and the paddling was easy.





Pure bliss.  Thanks for packing the beer, Vinnie.  Not sure I needed an 8%er on day one in 80 degree weather, but sometimes sentiment trumps practicality.  



Here she is, fully loaded and not very well organized after lunch.  I think we did pretty well for our first trip.  Vinnie would have preferred his hiking pack to the deck bag, and I admit it would have been a lot more comfy on the portages, but all the books recommended deck bags, so there you go.  After looking at thwart bags for $80, I scored a mountain hardware fanny pack at Old Goat for $15 and it worked perfectly.  Bonus points for strapping to my body during portages.


On the ride up, we wondered about whether we'd see loons or even hear any.  Not only did we, they wound up being like our totem animals for the trip.  After our first amazing campsite on Copperas Pond, where we watched and listened to a family of loons all evening, we looked for loons to indicate good campsites and fishing grounds.  They treated us right.  This family had a male, female, and two chicks.  They communicated all the time and the male and female took turns hunting and watching the chicks.




We fished for awhile.  I was interested in having fish for dinner.  Vinnie was altogether more obsessed.  Neither of us know anymore about fishing than what we remember from our youth.  Vinnie even brought his childhood fishing rod (more about that later).  Neither of us got more than a nibble on Copperas, but it was enough to keep us going for a long time. 



Sorry these are blurry, but they get the point across.  This guy swam right by us, with both hooks in the water and grabbed a fish, showed it to us, then took it over to his chicks.  I'd call him cocky, but he's a loon.



Some of the following sunset shots are mine, and some are Vinnies.

 K
 K
 V
 V

Vinnie's shot, I think, of our first camp.  And Vinnie's shots follow.



Crap spread out everywhere for dinner.  We kept a generally cleaner camp than it appears.


I brought 3 stoves to try out.  This is a firebox.  It's really cool, but made of stainless steel, and really heavy.  For canoe camping I like it a lot.  It takes all kinds of different fuel, is super sturdy, and you can even set it up like a hibachi.  It's way too heavy to consider for backpacking.  I'll keep it in my emergency kit in my truck.  Chance of emergency use: practically 0.


Nope, that's not Bob Ross in a canoe; ADK is known for it's bugs.  All things are relative, and I would say we really lucked out.  That being said, I wore a bug net and used a lot of spray and slept inside a mosquito net.  Got away relatively pain free. 





We ended the first night with a nice campfire and fell asleep tired, happy, and listening to loons and frogs.

Monday, April 20, 2015

Home on the range

We're now solidly into the spring (thankfully) and have been outside a lot. We get out in the winter, too, and we try not to complain about it, but the warm sun really gets us going. What follows are a few photos of our recent weeks since we got back from Philadelphia.


Now that we're not burning so much wood in our stove, it's time to start cutting wood for next year.  In the spring we approach this chore at a leisurely pace, so for a little bet of fun and exercise I've been dropping some of the trees with my axes.  And lookin a bit menacing at the same time.



Don't worry, I always have attentive supervision.

One day a couple weeks ago Hobbs came out to help me with some homework.  He was so happy and active... I have to admit he was a bit of a distraction for me.


He seems to be asking, "Is that all you've gotten done.  Here, let me poop on your computer; maybe that'll help."


This is an axe head that Nathan gave me awhile ago.  It was a big, beautiful, rusty mess.  After some clean up and a new handle, it looks pretty good.  It cuts even better.  Seriously, this is my new favorite felling axe.


I had to rehang my favorite limbing axe, too.  I love this little axe, and learned, again, about using the right tool for the right job.  This axe is for limbing and chopping kindling.  It is NOT for splitting logs.  So... learned that the hard way.



Three rehung axes and a rejuvenated blacksmithing hammer that I can't wait to use.


One day of my spring break I helped Jenn and Zhora transport some hay bales from one farm to their farm.  They have goats now and goats need food.  We went for a hike to the top of their beautiful property and looked out over the valley.



The farmer's market is officially open!  Cold, but open.


Sarah is teaching me to sew and to use her sewing machine!  I LOVE working with her on anything.  It's such an amazing feeling to teach and learn from/with her.  As always, we have close supervision.


We are in the early days of this complex sewing machine, so there are a lot of direction reading breaks.




This is what it would look like if you put a machine in front of a cave man.  Unfortunately, I am not acting.  This is what I actually look like.


April 7.  Happy anniversary 21st amendment!


Take a close look.  This is what the kitchen looks like right now.  If all goes well, in two weeks it will look completely new!  ... Well, not the nasty linoleum, that has to wait, but the counters will be new at least.


Mom and dad came for a visit last weekend and we had so much fun.  This photo is of the result of the fun.  Everyone needed to take a nap!  I think this is after the Cornell Vet Hospital's open house.  Mom helped out all morning, then we toured it ourselves, then we went to lunch, then we worked around the house... then we napped.  That huge box from frozen turkey taco filling is full of papers that I still need to grade.  Teaching is so cool because we get so much time off and tenure is easy and all we have to do is put some overheads up.


We also worked in the yard and did A LOT of problem solving and prep for the concrete counter tops.  It was great to have Dad around for measuring and problem solving.


On the final night of their visit we carved a few more hours out and had a fire and looked at the stars through the astronomical binoculars Ian and Eleftheria got us as a wedding present.  It was amazing to see the Pleiades and the Orion nebula.  Sarah and I are really looking forward to the next full moon!  Hopefully there will be a full moon sometime this summer when everyone is around.


The next day I had to take a little nap after school.


Indy tried to help rock my hammock.


Sarah has been talking about this drink for a month or so now.  She and Jenn went to a mixology class at the Argos Inn and learned all about shrub and sampled lots of amazing sounding drinks.  I'm pretty skeptical about any drink made with bourbon besides a glass of bourbon, but I'd heard so much about the Woodsman that I had to try it.  We had a wonderful time sipping our drinks, chatting in the sunshine, and trying to tune out the sound of "jazz" coming from the other room.  It sounded like a bunch of drugged emus running through a music shop.  There was quite a crowd gathered pretending to understand it, too.  Kind of like modern art.  I know... no culture.



And this is from this past Sunday.  Sarah  and I finished up the forms to pour the concrete into for the counter tops.  It was a lovely day, made all the more lovely by working together on a house project. 





Strict supervision.


Not related to the countertops.


Not related to the chainsaw.


FINALLY!


What's next?!



Till next time!