November’s hike: Mt. Mitchell

Monthly hike: Mt Mitchell

November’s hike was Mt. Mitchell, near Mt. St. Helens in Washington. Pics are here. The pictures make it look pretty gnarly. It didn’t feel as gnarly as it looks.

I compiled a Google Earth file, but something is amiss with the track and/or geotags. The photos are all on the trail, but they’re in weird spots. Not sure what the problem is, but next hike I’ll run two tracks: one going in and one coming out. That way I should be able to better narrow down any problems.

Anyway, the hike was fun, even though there was significant snow at the summit (around 3 feet in the drifts). We anticipated a wet hike, but the night before we left I checked the weather and it was calling for snow. So I just figured we’d get some flakes at the higher elevations. Apparently it’d been snowing up there for quite some time. The mountain was shrouded in fog at the top, so we couldn’t see the summit from the road to know that there was snow up top. I brought gaiters, but left them in the car–a choice I later regretted, but only marginally. My pant legs were pretty wet near my feet, but my feet stayed warm and dry the whole time. Ron’s feet were soaked by the end–his pants were a little shorter, leaving his socks exposed to the snow.

Saw a TON of elk hunters in the area. Ran into one old dude as we were coming back down the trail, near the bottom. He asked whether we’d seen any elk sign. We hadn’t. We wondered to ourselves, once we were out of earshot, what this 70-year old dude would do if he actually shot an elk. There’s no way he could’ve hauled it out alone. Back down at the trailhead we ran into his hunting partner, who wasn’t actually hunting. I think this partner guy was the muscle if the old guy shot something.

Overall, it was a fun walk in the woods and we snagged three geocaches in the area post-hike. Looking forward to December’s hike!

New camera

New camera came today. It’s tiny–the size of a deck of cards! That’s not what I’m most geeked about, though. It’s waterproof to 10′–I can’t wait to get some cool underwater pictures of the kids swimming!

It’s also going to be nice on the monthly hikes. I was a little worried about taking Amy’s camera out in the woods. I’d be so busted if something happened to that thing. This new camera, in addition to being waterproof, is shockproof for drops up to 5′. That came in handy when it fell off the counter when I unpacked it. 🙂

The Dyson phenomenon

We got a Dyson vacuum about a month ago. Got it off Craigslist, brand new, for about $100 off of retail. I love it. Amy’s okay with it, though I think she’s more convinced about it than she was when I was jonesing for it.

Matt just visited Brandon and says they’ve got a Dyson, too. And it sounds like a similar situation. Husband has gadget lust and wife is skeptical. I wonder how much of Dyson’s sales are generated from husband gadget lust?

More mapping fun

UPDATE: I found my Mac solution! Here’s the resultant Google Earth file of the hike (kmz). It has everything embedded in one file: images with titles and comments, GPS track and topo overlay. Very cool. I think this is the final tech piece I needed for the blog post. Tomorrow I’ll make a track around town, or on campus, and take pictures, then do this again and post it to Slacker Manager.

I ran into loc.alize.us a while ago, but didn’t really understand it. Now that I’ve been messing around with geotagging photos, it makes a lot more sense. Here’s the recent King’s Mountain hike.

I’m trying to find the easiest way, with both a Mac and a Windows machine, to geotag photos and embed them into Google Earth KMZ files. There’s a PC app called Robogeo that does exactly what I’m looking for. But it’s a PC app. I’ll be trying it out, but I also want to find a similar app for a Mac. No luck so far.

I’m trying to find this stuff out because I think there’s a really good Slacker Manager post in there. Imagine you were traveling and you wanted to let your colleagues know about the good restaurant/pub/hotel/museum/whatever that you found in a given city. You’ve got your GPS recording your track and you take pictures of the places you like. You combine the lat/long from the GPS track with your images and you throw it all into a Google Earth file that you’re able to email around or stick on a webserver somewhere. That’s pretty cool, and pretty useful.

New look

Should be pretty self-evident, but I migrated the blog from WordPress 1.2 to version 2.0.4. Messing around with themes tonight, and I like this one. Think I’ll leave it for a while.

King’s Mountain hike

UPDATE: Forgot to mention the pictures I took. Look for the “map” link to see exactly where on the mountain the picture was taken.

Took the day off of work today (legitimate vacation day, not the sneaky “personal day” with sick leave) and hiked King’s Mountain with Frodo. I’d been up once before and I remember it being painful. This time was the same. It’s about 2.19 miles from trailhead to summit. The trailhead starts at like 600 feet and the summit is at 3200 feet. Very steep. The last half mile is the absolute worst.

Frodo did really well. This was kind of a test for him to see if he could do something this steep. Now I think I can take him on almost anything I’d go on. He has a nice mellow pace. Or maybe he was just humoring me.

I took my GPSr and camera and figured I’d try geotagging pictures. Still working out the kinks with that, though the eight pics I took are up on Flickr now and they’re geotagged and mapped. I used the “tracks” feature on the GPSr and that’s really cool. It’s basically digital breadcrumbs. If you’ve got Google Earth, you can grab this file and it’ll show you the climb we did. There’s an option in there for a USGS altitude map overlay, which you can turn off. Pretty cool. If you don’t have Google Earth, well…why not? You might notice that at the top of the mountain it looks like I’m stumbling around in a couple of places. There was a geocache (members only cache, I think) near the summit that I grabbed–that’s the reason for the tracks over on the right side.

I did all this because I rolled 39 earlier this month, and I’m pretty much in the worst shape I’ve ever been in. So I’ve resolved to, at least, be in better shape when I roll 40 than when I rolled 39. This hiking thing is just one part of my strategy. I’m going to do at least one hike a month–that is, I’ll plan one serious hike but may end up doing other easier ones if the family is into it. The other part of my strategy hasn’t been working out so well, but I’m figuring out how to make it work. I’m going to run sprints, do plyometrics and hit the gym. I’ve got a whole workout planned, based on a book I read. Now I just gotta find the right time–I want to set up a routine, so I don’t get distracted. Mornings are best, but the gym isn’t open early enough. So it looks like evenings are where it’s at. We’ll see. Definitely doing the hikes, though. 🙂

On the Amish

I’ve got to say that since I’ve become a dad, my heart has gotten a whole lot softer. Especially towards parents and their love for their children. The recent news of the murders of Amish schoolgirls in Pennsylvania has made my eyes well up on more than one occasion. I am utterly humbled by the Amish response toward the family of their attacker. As a group, they sure seem to come about as close to living as Jesus would have us live as might be possible.

Ben Witherington has a good post that reflects on the nature of forgiveness.

Since the Amish carry no insurance, the expenses for the surviving injured girls will be steep. You can help by contributing here.

Geocaching with Tru

Man, it’s been a while, huh? I’ve been kinda focused on writing on Slacker Manager. I’ve had lots of posts rolling through my head for the bren : blog, but just haven’t done ’em. Until now.

I bought a GPS unit with some blog proceeds. Figured geocaching might be fun, plus it’d be cool just to learn about the whole mapping and GPS scene. I’ve really been digging using the unit to check out stats while I’m driving (16 miles to work; average speed is 32 mph; etc…).

Anyway, today Truman and I tried our hand at geocaching. Actually, I tried earlier today since there is a cache on the Newberg campus. Couldn’t find it though, even though it seemed like I was standing right on it. I’ll try again later. Tru and I did this one which is down by a Willamettte River boatramp in town. Just a couple of minutes away from our house. It was a microcache, which means it was just in a 35mm film canister, rather than something larger like an ammo box, or rubbermaid container. We had no trouble finding it. We took a nickle and left a Korean coin. Tru was pretty stoked (okay, we both were). We’ll go again tomorrow after work.