Saturday, January 21, 2017

Day Camp In The Rain

This is an entry from Monday, January 16th; a day off of school in honor of Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday.
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            The pitter-patter of rain on the tarp reminds me of dreary days, when my sisters and I would get out of the house and go play in the barn.  The rain on that metal roof of the barn was loud; sounding like a torrential downpour even when it wasn’t.  Today is nasty; cold, wet, cloudy, and full of perpetual rain.  I am hiking out in it anyways; probably to say I did, and probably because I wanted to see if I could set up a little “Day Camp” to match the picture I had set in my mind’s eye.
            Luckily I had stacked some dry wood in the garage yesterday in case I went out today; a pile of little sticks from our front yard included as kindling.  I placed all of this into an old plastic dog food bag, lashed it to an old sled (after drilling holes in its sides for the rope that held the bag down), and hiked back into this bottom-land, old growth forest.  I cut a ridge pole for a tarp that I brought, and four skinny sticks that I am using to hold up its corners.  It’s not a perfect set up, but it’s on relatively high ground and with the resources I have it’s the best that I can do.  I’ll learn what works, and what needs to be tweaked so I can improve upon it the next time that I hike and cookout in inclement weather.













            My dog Kora is wet and shivering now, and puddles are forming in the low spots on the frozen ground.  Luckily the wood that I brought is dry, because it’s hard to keep the fire going.  In fact, I have to continue blowing on the embers to keep it cooking my potatoes and eggs.  I did manage to get the fire going with one small piece of char cloth and a little nest of material from a splayed section of twine, since no dried grasses were available for the spark from my flint and steel.  It was nothing less than a miracle.
            Laying out a flannel lined ground cloth under the tarp we had as a roof, allowed Kora to curl up on it and begin warming up.  I gave her some remnants of my meal after I had eaten what I wanted.  I am sitting next to Kora now as I watch the fire (after laying an extra jacket over the top of her), and then I pull out my journal to write for a while.  Due to the fact that the air is chilled, it’s hard to sit for long and write, think, or meditate without getting up to move around, readjust while sitting on the ground, or tend to the fire.  Water from the rain and melting snow is also soaking up through the ground cloth that Kora and I are sharing, and I am starting to get wet.
            Since I first parked the Jeep and started this adventure, it’s been over four hours.  It’s time now to break down the camp, repack everything onto my sled, and begin the hike back.  Since I’ve burned all of the wood I brought in, this time I’ll fill the large plastic bag with both my back and hip packs so I don’t have to carry them out.  I will pull them instead.  It will give me a bit of a break.  Although far from pleasant for most people, it’s been perfect; having the droning of the rain in the woods to myself.
            See you along The Way…

Saturday, January 14, 2017

Tracker

“…once you take the time to look, and realize that there is a world – animal, vegetable, and mineral – in nearly every footprint, you begin to step more carefully.  It is the moments you spend looking, watching, and wondering about what you are seeing that bring you nearer nature.” 
Jim Arnosky, Nearer Nature – 1996.

Kora and I are out today; the first solo outing of the season.  Through a tangle of prickly ash in a nearby river bottom, I made my way southerly from where I had parked.  I hadn’t gone far when I happenchanced upon a blood trail on a weaving deer path.  I can only guess upon the cause, whether from a hunter on nearby private land, or a hit from a car on the nearby road.  I doubt that it came from falling through the sharp ice, as I found it in patterned splatterings, an obvious result of the racing pulse of a deer with wounded lungs.  I hoped it wasn’t from a poacher.  The wound had been true and most likely deadly, for the loss of blood was in great quantities.  Observations like these are what help me find stories in the out-of-doors that most people walk by without even noticing.
Unfortunately the mystery will stay in the woods, as the blood trail crossed a channel covered with thin, black ice with pockets of open water.  A mere 30 feet away I could see blotches of red on the ice of the opposite bank, but I dared not try to cross over to it.  I did attempt to work my way around the semi frozen oxbow, but it was not meant to be.  I have been hampered before from crossing into this area due to open water during warmer times of the year, but I was hoping to get over to it today.  Perhaps if we get a long period of cold weather I’ll be able to continue searching a few weeks from now on safer ice.  It’s been cold for a couple of days but we had rain and warmer weather before that, and more is on the way.  Due to this fact, the blood trail must have been within the last week or so.
And so I am sitting with the sun in my face writing in my journal with my leather mittens off.  My hands are getting cold, but it’s not terrible.  Kora circles by now and then as she sniffs, watches for movement, listens to birds, and eats dried grass.  She was on alert as a bald eagle called, landed in a tree 200 feet away, and then flew off.  Luckily she didn’t see the cotton-tailed rabbit race out from a thicket on our way in.  That would have been tempting to chase.  Although an opportunity like that would have been a great test as to whether Kora would listen to me as I called her off; a difficult decision over the hot scent of a wild animal.  I’ve been able to do just that numerous times with my other dog Kati, but Kora and I have yet to be in a predicament outside of our backyard.  Spending time together like this helps tremendously, however, and she is both intelligent and used to being free and having to listen to my commands.
Kora checks in while I am journaling
The sun is setting further in the west as the afternoon wanes.  The eagle called again, and I realize now that it’s still perched in the original tree.  It was a second eagle that flew by earlier that had caused it to call out.  It was an approaching eagle again now that caused it to call out again, only to reveal its favored roosting place.  It is time to cook a very late lunch and then head back.
A Sycamore on the Oxbow
Kora and I out on the ice of the oxbow
            Post-Script:  After eating my meal and hiking out, I came upon the same aforementioned blood trail in a different spot, back near the area where I had first entered the woods a few hours earlier.  Upon closer scrutiny I realized I had been following the trail in the wrong direction before; in my zest to make my way into that area of the forest I had failed to notice the details.  Now I saw the spray from the droplets splashing forward, as well as how it smeared on only certain sides of the grasses, sticks, and trees. 
Since it had come from deep in the woods, the wound must have come from a hunter and not a car.  I followed the blood for another quarter mile.  When I would lose the signs, I would backtrack to where I had last seen the trail and scout out in an array until I found signs of it again.  Although perhaps morbid in some sense, I relished the chance to try to solve the mystery, and kept hoping I would come upon the fallen deer at some point to give me the proof that I needed.  Death had been inevitable I was sure.  I couldn’t believe it could go so far, losing so much blood.  It was impressive, and I could only follow this story into the woods with deep, deep respect.  The deer’s drive to live, and keep pushing forth with an instinctual fortitude was almost beyond imagination.  All told, I believe it had traveled well over a half mile, depending on where it had first been shot.  I wanted to see, and touch something with that much determination and perseverance.  I never did see any other human tracks solidified in the occasional patches of snow and ice.  I wondered whether the deer had ever been found by its hunter.  I’ll admit that I secretly hoped that it had eventually swerved off the obscure trail, died on its own time, and that I would find it.  Its carcass would still be put to good use as it became nutrients for the eagles, coyotes, and other scavengers.  Unfortunately I soon began to run out of daylight, and also came to a property line for private land, and so I had to stop.  It is true I was slightly disappointed having to pull myself off of the trail, but I enjoyed playing the role of the tracker; reading the story, piecing together the clues, and walking in the footsteps of so great a competitor.
            See you along The Way…
“Bright, unsad failures they.  He seemed indeed to come back empty handed, but he really came home laden with the best spoils of the chase, and he knew it more and more, as time went on, till every day, at last, on the clear unending trail, was a glad triumphant march.”  
Ernest Seton-Thompson, The Trail of the Sandhill Stag-1899

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Three Week Album

            Three weeks have gone by since a decent snowstorm hit us the weekend before Christmas Break.  My son was home from college by then, but we had to finish out three more days of school before we could dive into family time and relax.  Unfortunately that only left us a couple of days to enjoy the snow before some warmer weather and rain melted much of it.  Still, we enjoyed our time together, and our adventures were captured in pictures and videos that I’ll share here.  I hope you had a Merry Christmas and have a Happy New Year.

12-17-16 Jodi, Kora & I after a snowy hike
Sunset on the Last Day of School for 2016
12--21-16 Game Night
12-22-16 Family at Millennium Park in Chicago
Family in the Bean
The Bean




Family at the Chicago River

Giordanos Pizza on Chicago's Rush Street

Cindy and Jodi on Christmas Day









Christmas at Cindy's Parent's House
Celebrating Christmas at Cindy's Parent's House















Christmas with the entire "Rhines Clan"
The Cousins














The Rhines Family Dogs
In the Bright Sun after Star Wars with Dad

Mom Preparing the Cornbread

Fish dinner at Mom & Dad's
















1-2-17 Exploring for a new lake with my friend Justin





Scouting from a tree
We found the lake!
Cooking out after the hike







1-7-17 Sunset while hiking three weeks after the snowfall
1-7-17 Todd & I hiking in single digit temps
We truly are blessed.
See you along The Way...

Friday, December 23, 2016

Jeep: Drive It Like You Mean It

 “…The spartan, cramped, and unstintingly functional Jeep became the ubiquitous World War II four-wheeled personification of Yankee ingenuity and cocky, can-do determination.” – Doug Smith Smithsonian
A Great Video And Song.
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             As the story goes, what began in 1941 as a Government Vehicle later morphed its name into the General Purpose Vehicle, before finally changing into the abbreviation of G.P. (Pronounced “Jeep” for short).  The story is more complicated than that as the word jeep after The Great War (WWI), also referred to any new vehicle or a new recruit.  That’s the gist of it, however, and somewhere in there is the truth.  Regardless, the Jeep has been serving ever since; for a total of 75 years now.
            I got my Jeep at the end of the summer in 2001.  It was used and six years old (a 1995 Grand Cherokee-Laredo).  My wife and I told the kindly dealer (Ron Corey of Corey’s Motorworks & Sport Utility) we could only pay the amount we offered; no more.  Between the money we could put down, and what we could afford as a monthly payment for the loan, we were locked into that amount and wouldn’t budge.  As our two little kids climbed around the small office area, the dealer’s son finally said, “Dad, just let them have the Jeep.”  That broke the negotiating, and gratefully we got a second vehicle.  We were set to pay $149.58 for the next four years until the fall of 2005.
            Not too long after that, I was driving to work and giving a teaching colleague (Keli) a ride.  I was returning the favor after she had been helping us out.  For the last couple of months, she had been giving me rides to school while we had been down a vehicle.  While traveling through Loves Park, I got hit by another car.  He had come off from a side street as we drove north to school.  For some reason he didn’t see us, and pulled out right in front of us.  Luckily nobody was seriously hurt, and the other driver felt terrible and wanted to make it right.  People stopped by, the police arrived, and our principal came down and gave us a ride back home.  After cleaning up from the shattered glass, and contacting my insurance company, Keli picked me up (in her car again) and we made it back up to school to finish the day out teaching.
            While I waited the next few weeks for the passenger-side of the Jeep to be fixed, the attack happened on the World Trade Towers in New York City (9-11).  Although a bit difficult due to the timing, I was able to get a small rental car to get me through, and even drove it to Michigan to help my parents pack up for their move down to southern Wisconsin.
            Since that initial year, the green Jeep Grand Cherokee and I have been through a lot of adventures together; sometimes solo, sometimes with family, and sometimes with friends.  It’s served me well to get from Point A to Point B; whether with the seats up taking people with me, or with the seats down masquerading as a truck.  I do have routine maintenance done on the Jeep, even if months go by between washings.  Omark’s Auto Service down on Broadway in Rockford has taken care of it since the beginning.  Although we no longer live in Rockford, I still bring it down every 3 or 4,000 miles for grease, oil, and filter changes, among the other things that occasionally need to be replaced on an older vehicle.  I’d say the guys there in the shop know it as well as anybody, and treat it as an old friend.  The only reason I probably don’t wash it as often as I should is simply because I hate to wash off the dust and dirt from my annual trips to camp in the backwoods of Northern Michigan.  As the dates for the next trip approach, however, I break down and have it beautified with a wash and wax.  It’s the least I can do.
             When I think of my Jeep’s personality as some people are apt to do, I don’t really think of it as a “he” or “she,” it’s simply the Green Jeep (especially since we purchased a silver colored one in 2015 as our family vehicle).  The Green Jeep’s personality is based more on its attributes and adventures.  As I explored the area’s preserves and wildlife areas, or sought out sacred trout waters, the ole Jeep was my means of transportation. 
I’ve hauled firewood, rocks, camping gear, kayaks and canoes.  I’ve slept in it, and I’ve blasted through snow drifts while driving in 4-wheel drive (with my kids cheering in the back seat).  Although it’s far from perfect, the Jeep does the job.  Those imperfections only add to its character.  Character traits such as:
·        * A missing passenger side mirror that I took off on a mailbox while waving to a neighbor.  That was a funny story, and both scared and embarrassed my daughter who was “riding shot-gun” at the time.
·        * A speedometer that only works intermittently.
·        * An odometer that’s only worked occasionally for the last five years or so.  The Jeep is roughly at 200,000 some miles, give or take a few thousand.
·        * A radio that hasn’t worked since I don’t know when.  It really isn’t an issue other than when I’m driving and I’m tired.  I guess that’s the only time noise would be nice.  My friend Joe once asked me about something he’d heard on a sports talk radio station, and then remembered my Jeep doesn’t have one that works; end of discussion.  That was funny too.
·        * A heater that only blows air off the dashboard and at your feet.
·        *The passenger side sun visor that is tied into place so it doesn’t flop down.
·        * The air conditioning which is non-existent, and has been for a long, long time.  On hot days you bring along extra water, take your shirt off, and roll the windows down.
·        * In 2014 when I got tired of the material slowly peeling off the interior ceiling of the Jeep, so I ripped it all out.  That was right before I took it camping with my cousins.  My cousin Sean (upon hearing what I did) said, “Another stripe on the tiger.”  Indeed, as these are the traits that give the Jeep nostalgia and character.
·        * The windshield that is newer, after I tried putting the wrong kayak inside of the Jeep (instead of up on top) and spider-webbed it.  It was apparent redemption after doing almost the same thing to my friend Louie a few years before that.
·        * The hatch.  Anyone who has ridden with me knows about the back hatch.  When open, it’s propped up with an old broom stick cut to the right size.  Failure to remember that the hydraulic lift supports don’t work, or accidentally knocking the stick out, transforms the hatch into a guillotine type apparatus you won’t soon forget.
·        * Tires, shocks, and major parts that have been fixed, changed, or replaced as needed.
·        * When my son and I hauled its last load using the trailer hitch.  The large trailer we were pulling was loaded down with a massive amount of rock, dirt, and wood chips that we were getting rid of.  It was touch and go when we hit the road’s expansion joints going up and over the nearby highway, but we made it.  Since very little of the hitch’s bracing remained, due to rust, Omark’s Auto Service suggested that I don’t ever do that again.  Literally, those are words to live by.
·        * I must travel long distances with jumper cables and a small tool box, especially after being stranded with a dead battery while trout fishing with my Dad (we flagged a lady down who actually stopped to help us).  Another time I had to stop at a farm house to ask for an old coat hanger.  After driving into a roadside ditch I was able to crawl underneath the Jeep to wire the exhaust system up enough to drive back home.
            These idiosyncrasies aren’t meant to complain about my Jeep any more than they aren’t meant to brag about my Jeep.  They simply make my Jeep what it is, and when I mention them, I do so with mild fondness.  When I’m driving, and get stuck in traffic, or I see someone driving a shiny SUV that has never seen a dirt road (let alone a speck of dust), I mutter to myself, “Drive it like you mean it.”  In a Jeep like mine, that’s been with you through the tests of time, it’s the least you can do.  The history of this brand of vehicle is pretty impressive when you look back over the 75 years since it first came off the assembly line heading into WWII.  I know it’s been pretty impressive to me when I see how our green Jeep Grand Cherokee has been there through the years for our family and me.
            See you along The Way…
Country Roads Take Me Home
Me and my cousin's Jeep in the Back-Country
Being a "Knucklehead" & parking at school...Because I can

Sunday, December 4, 2016

The First Snow Of 2016

            Saturday began when I went outside and worked on the yard all morning.  The temperature hovered in the 30’s, but it was great weather to work in.  I was able to rake the remaining piles of leaves from the various garden areas, as well as from the other nooks and crannies in and around the house.  Afterwards I mowed the front and backyards.  It was the beginning of December, and yet I was fortunate enough to have the time to get the yard ready one last time before the snow came.
            By 2:30 I had cleaned up, packed, and together with my wife, daughter, and dogs, headed up to my parents house a half hour away.  They would be watching our pups overnight.  
After we visited, and got the dogs settled, we continued on to Waukesha, Wisconsin.  My daughter Jodi drove to get some practice time in while traveling on the highway.  We headed northeast, since Jodi and I were going to run the “Last Call Half Marathon” the following day.  After picking up our race packets; complete with cool T-shirts and our race numbers, we proceeded to the nearby Marriott hotel.
We checked in, and then drove to Albanese’s Roadhouse for some pasta/carbohydrates.  I had a plate full of spaghetti with “award winning” meatballs.  It tasted absolutely awesome; and provided me with the fuel I would need for the 13.1 mile race.  We returned to our hotel, and hunkered down for the night. 
Jodi commented that we were, “Living the life of luxury!”  My wife Cindy and I laughed.  I wasn’t sure if it was luxurious, but it was a very nice hotel and room, and one we had stayed in before.  We were full and comfortable, and we settled in to watch the first half of the Big Ten Championship game between Wisconsin and Penn State.  Since it had been a long day, we went to bed before we knew the outcome; knowing the race would come early.
            After a good night’s sleep we arose.  Both Jodi and I ate a little bit of a Cliff Bar and part of bagel, got dressed, and then we all headed downtown to the EB Shurts Environmental Center along the Fox River for the start of the race.  
Before the race and snow
As we warmed up by jogging a few blocks, a few snowflakes began to fall.  Cindy took our picture and watched us begin with over 300 other people.  The snow steadily increased as we ran.  The course quickly made its way onto the Glacial Drumlin Trail.  My son Todd and I had run this race together last year.  It had been a special day to share.  Today would be another special day, this time with my daughter.  Last year had been cold too, following a night of heavy rain.  This year we were being blessed with snow.  The changing of the seasons in what living in the Midwest is all about, and I love it.
Todd and I in 2015
            Jodi and I made our way through the groups of runners for the first few miles, and then it thinned out enough to give us ample room.  We ran, talked, and enjoyed the experience.  Jodi was the picture of consistency.  Together we settled into about a nine and a half minute per mile average.  We were probably a bit slower than that in the beginning, and then a bit faster at the end; known as a negative split.  The snow was easily sticking on the ground before we were too many miles into the run, although the black-topped pathway simply remained wet and clear; making for easy running.  Within a mile or two of the turn-a-round, other runners began to pass us going the other way.  It was fun to see the top runners, and crowds of others, but we talked through the fact that we didn’t want to get caught up in the sudden adrenaline rush, and knew we simply wanted to continue doing the same thing that had gotten us to that point.  After we ran past the ten mile marker, it was the farthest that Jodi had ever run before.  She commented that she only had a cross country race left to run.  Around mile eleven she felt a bit achy, but over all still felt great.  After the last water stop, we only had a mile left, and so we locked in and finished strong together.  Cindy met us at the end and was able to capture some pictures of us.  






















We were not bound by the watch Jodi wore, but we did check it from time to time; simply to determine how we were doing.  She accidentally stopped it at one of the first mile markers, so she started it again at the next one, and then we just added ten minutes from there on out to give us an estimated time.  It turned out to be within seconds of the actual time we finished (2:05).  I grabbed two of the finisher medals, and put one of them around Jodi’s neck.  It was a culminating gesture after a lot of running; both today and throughout her jr. high and high school career.
            After taking the pictures, the three of us went into the environmental center.  Jodi and I got some fruit and hot cocoa they had available for runners.  By then we were starting to get chilled, so we went back to the hotel to get cleaned up and packed up.  The snow continued coming down, the roads were slushy, and so the driving had to be cautious.  We stopped in Mukwonago for some lunch, and then headed to my parents to pick up our dogs while listening to the Green Bay Packers vs. Houston Texans football game on the radio.  After visiting, we loaded everyone up, and headed home. 
Home - 4 or 5 inches of snow
I rested for about an hour or so, and then headed out to clear the driveway.  In the heavy, wet snow I used my recently fixed snow blower.  I haven’t used it since we moved to this house, as it needed to be overhauled.  A neighbor, who is a parent of two former students, fixed it for me about a week ago.  It took care of the snow well enough, although I had to clear out the auger and chute a few times due to the slush getting clogged in it.  Using a shovel, I cleared off the snow nearest to the road that was extra heavy.  









To top off the night, I took our youngest dog Kora for a walk in the snow.  The storm had all but ended by that time.  The walk gave me a chance to stretch out my leg muscles, while reflecting on the blessings and events from the last couple of days.  It’s been a flurry of activities during the first snowfall of the year.
            See you along The Way…