Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Banging in the New Year

I have realized that I am not as engrossing as some of my other friends in writing, especially when one has a gift of gab, and often find myself slow on posting up stuff. So here I am with suddenly a zillion things to ramble about, 3-4 days later sharing my New Years celebration.

My good friend Jamie and her beau organized yet another amazing cabin trip like the Tulip Tree cabin or Myron Glaser. This time we went to much ballyhooed Mutton Top Cabin which was very near Morris Cabin. Needless to say despite shoving 9 people and 7 "dogs" into the cabin, it was a phenomenal and novel way to spend New Years eve. Avoid large crowds, avoid drunk drivers, and still be with some (sadly not all) of your great friends.

The days were spent chopping wood, chillin by the fire (some went hiking), spending time with firends - the night cooking, playing games, and ... chillin by the fire. We ate well too... so much for roughing it.

A few rebellious cabin-goers defied the no dress up pact (darn that was smart of them) and thus Jon & Alexandra promptly got declared King & Queen of the ball (oddly King didnt get to be King). Its hard to just put a narrative to the weekend, but here are a few cherished memories:

An AMAZING Sunset over the cabin & Valley

Wacthing the cold front moving over us, a thick line of clouds passing over and revealing brilliant stars overhead.

Waking up in the morning looking into the valley with just the hill tops visible as a blanket of low clouds/fog cover everything else - breathtaking!

Chopping the big 20 foot log of a tree and hauling another 25 foot fallen from the tangled vines & brambles for the bonfire.

Who would ever think you could have Pho at a rustic cabin! Thanks to Linny, we did, and made my stomach very happy.

Regretting a cool waterfall hike, yet I wouldnt have had my Tree experience if I had gone.

Hanging around the bonfire with Glog, Icewine & shooting off cheesy bottle rockets!
Stars Stars Stars!

Playing Bag of Nouns on Team Short Bus (since we were apparently soooo horrible we could be compared to ... well....). Bag O nouns is played by each player on a team writing 5 nouns on 5 slips of paper. Then in alternating order each team needs to guess as many words drawn from a bag/hat etc, which need to be guessed by the teams in 3 consecutives rounds via Taboo like fashion first, then bu using only one word, and the third round only in charades. Some interesting words people came up with:


Va-jay-jay, female pee funnel, Darren Biggs, Rickets, Buffalo Nickel, 3 different states, Jalopy, F-1 Racing, Quattro (think "Menage a Trois" +1, but in Latin), Grape Ape, and various other sundry & mundane words, of which I should seriously challenge!

Seriously this was a good way to cap off the Good Times in 07, and a Bang up way to ring in the New year (more on that later!)

Monday, October 22, 2007

Of Horses, Steeples and Ferry's



Another year now comes with the coming of the International Gold Cup Steeplechase at the Plains in Loudon County, VA. Along with the spring cousin, the Virginia Gold Cup, these are great day of fun at the horse races with the gang. Our amazing coordinator Jeff once again needs a big congratulatory applause for this the 4th year. Bookie duties were handed back to Alexandra (since last time she was missing). Big difference though was that this year was the first time I lost money on betting on the horses (albeit only $4). Of note though was one of my friends and his comments on women chewing gum. He calls it "bovine", unless of course its some trashy girl...

So lots of fun was had by all, otherwise I leave you all to some helpful advice from Jon on the horses, and the more eloquent AB.

Next day was another early one as Carmel, Rob, Minah & I headed off to Harpers Ferry for a day of hiking, leaf peeping, and some historical stuff. Got to hike the Maryland Heights trail taking the road less traveled up to the Old Stone Fort. With our warm weather the leaf changes have been disappointing until this trip - finally fall weather is upon us, and this was a great weekend to usher it in.



Notes about Harpers Ferry:

  • Don't go expecting a real town - it feels allot like Colonial Williamsburg in many ways, lots of fun to still be had though
  • Don't miss the Ice Cream shop in town
  • Check out the Cemetery at the highest point in town.
  • Explore lock 33 on the C&O Canal. There is nothing that stops you walking on the canal itself
  • Jefferson Rock Is climbable - just don't let the park rangers catch you.
  • It would suck to be a Civil war soldier - apparently all they did was build rock walls
  • Apparently almost any panoramic picture of Harpers Ferry will include that church steeple, theres no way getting around it.
Topping off a graet weekend is having my team win two games straight in a row - both Sat & Sun nights. No not the poor Dolphins who can't win this year at all, but the Red Sox. I believe it happens to be what we were wearing - lucky Pirate gear and lucky Dog - Reagan!!!!












With fellow Red Sox fan Mary, and her dog Reagan doing Blue Steel thus intimidating the Indians into loosing

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Sometime Life just Slides by You

YES - LITERALLY !! In this case it was a rock slide! On Memorial day I went and hiked White Oak Canyon/Cedar Run along with Mary, Jeff & AB from last week and joining us this time around: Jon, Ruthie + Gary, Steph, Cat, Paul, Yvonne, Dave (Connelly), Ann, Ray and Amanda This was the second hike for me in 2 weeks and was just as rewarding as the Old Rag Mountain hike, though in different way. Where Old Rag was a rock scramble with oneYES literally! Though in this case I am talking about a Natural Rock Slide that we searched high and low for on Memorial Day when we went hiking to White Oak Canyon. The second big hike amazing vista after another, White Oak Canyon/Cedar Run trail is an amazing hike full of waterfalls. We had a decent sized group come out and was lots of fun despite steep climbs at point that to me seemed pretty tough. I almost want to do this again just to stop at every little waterfall and enjoy the sound and simple energy gained from being in nature.

It was pretty neat in that there were not so many people on this popular trail (due to Memorial day vacationing) and the water was running at a rapid pace due to a fierce super cell storm passing by the region the night before (Super-cells are the type that create good possibilities of tornadoes). But the following morning the day was sunny for the hike. What more could we have asked for.

So on to this slide.... yes a natural rock slide! Apparently there could have been more water, but really we didnt need anymore - I only wish the water was heated! It was FREEZING!!! Well freezing for me - if you dont know, I AM a cold water wimp. Anyway there are a decent amount of pictures, I surely recommend this hike! (the full rock slide is shown to the right)

Now I am looking forward to more... such fun!










above left: Why doesnt this ever happen to me?
above center: Water dancing on the rocks
right: getting across the stream

More pictures are ----> here

Sunday, May 20, 2007

The man who went up the Mountain .....

I Finally Hiked OLD RAG MOUNTAIN !! Yes after how many years of wanting to do a real hike in the mountains I finally did do it. It all stems from my first trip ever to some real mountains way back in like 97 to the Smokey Mountains. Back then I was in much better shape, and went with a group that I would have hoped that at least one or two wanted to do a decent hike. It ended up that not even once did they intend on going. I took a few short hikes in the forest next to the forest we were in, but there were no marked trails to do.


Before that, the most I had done in the mountains had been to as a child and back in '05 El Yunque Carribean National Forest located in Puerto Rico (happens to be the ONLY Rain Forest in the US National Park System). El Yunque has all these various small waterfalls that I just find amazing. What is really interesting is the way the cloud cover just rolls around it. It can be clear as a lighthouse lens one moment - then swirled over in a mist cloud the next. I remember as a child in Puerto Rico (mainly over the summers I spent there), how I would look out the windows of my Abuela Mercedes' condo; on one side the aqua blue ocean as far as th eye cold see to the north. To the South, we would see the cloud covered mountains. This on an island that you can drive cross-wise in 2 hours. Always we would look to the mountains for the coming rain that would cut our stay on the beach a bit shorter and send us inside, and on occasion, not even care - we had sand castles to protect!!

Well anyways, as usual I digressed (and will again for sure), not that it matters - I did mention that I rambled right?

So for this hike to avoid the crowds most of us awoke somewhere around the 5:30am, give or take - and met at a Starbucks. Settled into three cars and made our way to the trailhead by 8:30am. For me the hike seemed good for the first part - somehow thinking that I could keep up with Kevin & Jeffrey, even if for a short while. Well after 30 minutes that prospect was quickly fading - still not bad for me. I started to slow so that Alexandra passed me next...

Most of the hike I did mostly alone. Got to stop at a small stream going up the mountain where I refreshed myself. Took a few pics, and settled in to a good pace until I ran into Scott who was taking pictures of ... well everything. In a way I didn't mind doing a good portion alone - especially the switchbacks and all. It just really lets you concentrate on your little world, the here and now, only the breeze and birds making noise. Now it was useful to have Scott at this part - just having the extra person for the beginning of a rock scramble is re-assuring. Having only ever done the rock scramble at the Billy Goat Trail by Great Falls this was totally different!

With 8ft drops straight down (wasn't so bad once you figured out there was a tiny ledge about 3 ft down), and a 3 foot jump from one boulder to another of which I worried way too much about since I was alone at that point, and worried about my knee at that point. In the end after 5 minutes of trying to find a different path around, I just shrugged and jumped.... rather easily in hindsight. The other big hurdle was a crevisse which was extremely difficult to get up to get up as there were no foot or hand holds. I caught up to AB at this difficult point (but she had some stored up energy and took off like a bat out of hell after she got up that part) and this was probably the closest point to actually hurting myself here when my foot started slipping, but somehow I just grabbed hold of something readjusted my foot and pushed off just enough to be able to wedge myself somehow, then reach for something a little bit higher where I was able to pull myself up. In retrospect - I was lucky.

But there were so many cool rock formations. Round boulders balanced precariously, triangle shaped caves, cool steps that apparently were similar to some on the Inca trail (according to Carmel), and this amazing massive boulder that just overhung somehow from the rest. The vistas were like nothing I have ever seen before. But as I kept being amazed, I would go just a bit higher, and see one even better, until finally I reached the summit (3,291 ft. !!) and was TRULY surprised at the view, and AMAZED that I had completed this hike up (going down is always easy for me).


Jeffrey had warned me that it could get cold at the top, and he was correct (Darn him again!!). Yet despite a thinner layer than the others already there (Jeff, Kevin, AB) , I enjoyed being at the very summit for about a good 20 minutes before we looked for a sheltered spot for lunch as the others trickled in. In a humorous twist on the hike, I had lost my visor early somewhere on the hike, and I wasn't worried - it was a cheapy hat bought going to Assateague last year with Carmel & W. Dana since I had forgotten one. Yet ironically (or not??) it was Carmel who found it on the trail! When she reached us, I didn't even notice that she had it on!

Well at the top we had our lunch, took photos, and rested a bit before being invaded by all those on the trail behind us: Church groups, young Marines contingent, the "Hansen boys", etc.... it got noisy where there was silence. So we packed it up and started on our way down. Most of it was easy (well for me) and there were no spectacular vistas going down the fire road (a few day shelters only). I did for the first time in sooo many years held a Centipede in my hands! (thanks AB!!) . As children we are fearless - we pick up anything, play with it and so forth. But at some point you are told - be careful of this and that - and you stop doing what was fun - sure it was risky, but it was fun. So picking up this centipede from AB, and letting it crawl on my hands was like a re-awakening of another part of me (combined with the hike) , that is ingrained upon us as kids - don't do this - don't do that. Why not do this- why not do that?? We are ingrained and slowly convinced to agree with society's rules of do's & dont's - we stick to our imagined worlds that has been created for us by others, and breaking free to experience life on our own is a challenge.

Our lives are our experiences. As of late I started thinking to myself this motto of :
"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, Chocolate in one hand, a MOJITO in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming WOO HOO what a ride!"

Of course I modify the phrase to include a mojito instead of a martini or such. But it was about a few days ago, that my friend Eric from Philly found (and I just read it a day or two ago) a much deeper way of saying it:

"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again; because there is not effort without error and shortcomings; but who does actually strive to do the deed; who knows the great enthusiasm, the great devotion, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement and who at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly. So that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat."

This statement was from a man who was a sickly child, yet went on to become a bold and brash President that transformed our country: Teddy Roosevelt. Ultimately that is what this hike presents to me. A milestone in experiencing things that I had forgotten to experience, touch things I was afraid to touch, do things that a year ago I couldn't do. And for that, I am grateful to my friends (& family), because as always - it is from them that you get your encouragement, your motivation, your inspiration and ultimately your achievements.

Thanks to all who came on the trip - pushed me to do more than I thought I could, and just have a fun time doing it all (Jeff, Kevin, Alexandra, Diana, Jaime, Carmel, Scott, Mary and Rob).

Oh & I almost forgot - Burgers n Things - the best roadside food near Sperryville, VA - well especially since we were starved!

For more pictures from the hike click here !

Monday, April 30, 2007

A new chapter in Life

So today starts the new chapter of my life in DC. Where it takes me I don't know yet, but as I start searching for something that finally fits in my life, at least I start it off with a bang.

How about an awesome camping trip to the mountains; along with some of my closest friends (albeit missing a few good peeps). The abridged version for now (since I do have to job search to continue) : 12 of us went to beautiful Morris Cabin in the Shenandoah Mountains. We spent a good night around a roaring fire well into the night enjoying cigars (thanks to Jeff), drink, companionship and Icelandic Black Death. Although it didn't kill us, it might have made us do funny things.

The next morning we headed out on an adventurous hike. It all seemed simple enough with a nicely marked set of blue blazes going down hill, until we stumbled upon a shack at the end of the trail. It's too bad the rest of the group didn't take time to take a short trip up a small beautiful waterfall. Unfortunately I say as they all missed the tranquility of the scene, plus they all left without me!

What a bunch of YAHOOS !! Well luckily good ol' Alexandra and Eric came back down to find my dead carcass on the forest floor, otherwise I would have REALLY missed out on the true adventure. So back up we go along a different trail until we hit a dead end.....

Luckily Jeff decides that he knows the way up (so he says... we don't even have a compass)...and straight up the side of the mountain we go! Thus starts the 3 hour tour, and we all know how Gilligan's Island went... (incidentally we were 7 - the same number as on Gilligan's Island). Thus encouraged, off we go making our own trail straight up 1000 feet up the mountain! Although it was extremely steep and taxing, (how did we get passed those steep rocks, barbed wire, and all those BRAMBLES!!!) we were rewarded by the best view of the Shenandoah Valley I have EVER seen. No picture can do it justice.

We were lucky that we then found a blaze (and the trail) and came out within 1/2 mile of the cabin. That was lucky, quite a few of us came back to the overlook after a well deserved lunch and to relax for the afternoon. Dinner was a wonderful evening with friends especially since I discovered a new type of Brownie Sm'ores - YUMMY!

It all seemed to short by the time we woke up on Sunday morning to pancakes, eggs, coffee, etc.
On the ride home AB was decent enough to point out the WAWA - very cool as I had never been to one before!

So this weekend was just what the doctor ordered for this new phase in my life. (Plus thanks to Carmel for supplementing a few pics for this trip!)

click here for more pics