I think I deserve a slacker award lately! The great thing about summer is that I can not post in a while and not feel a bit guilty about it.

A little over a week ago we went to Great Falls, MT and did the tourist thing. We stopped at Ulm Pishkun at the First Peoples Buffalo Jump State Park. Ulm is the town near the jump and Pishkun comes from the Blackfeet word for ‘deep blood kettle’. At a mile long, it’s believe to be the largest jump in North America and was used for 600 years — much longer than most jumps are used.

We also made it out to Ryan Dam to see why Great Falls is called Great Falls. I’ll admit it — I first thought they should have named it ‘Meh Falls’, but before the dam was built, it would have been a beautiful sight.

Since it was going on, and well, we were there, we went to the Montana State Fair, which was also kind of ‘meh’. We did spend the two bucks to see the freak show, though. It was somewhat entertaining.

Other than that we’ve been doing some more fishing, a little geocaching and other various things. I’ve been making ATCs and plans for altering a candy box I have. Now that Dan has been laid-off from his job we plan on a few more trips around Montana and some major geocaching hunts. The Northwest Montana fair should be going live in a few days, so we’ll attend that and the rodeo as well.

Dat’s all I got!

On Tuesday Dan and I went out to do a little Geocaching. Our second stop for the day was on the Bitterroot River, a little south of Hubbart Dam, near Marion, MT. I had forgotten to get camera batteries, so Dan remarked, “Since you don’t have your camera, we’re probably going to see a moose.” It’s almost a guarantee, if I don’t have my camera, we’re going to see wildlife. It always happens. After about a minute of walking up the trail we hear, “Sploosh, sploosh, sploosh, sploosh”. Moose. Yep, a huge moose bull is just dopety doh’ing down the creek (yes, I know it’s called the Bitterroot River, but seriously, it’s a bleedin’ creek). Figures.

We found the cache easily enough, we got to see the dam off in the distance, and we didn’t get eaten alive by mosquitoes (vicious little effers that they are!), and we made it back to the car and were ready to head to cache number three. Then Dan got us stuck in the dirt. Dan, of course, can get any car stuck, anytime, anywhere. It always happens. After I got us out, yes, I got us unstuck (OK, he pushed, but it was my genius that provided the proper traction) we headed down to the highway and on to the next cache. Figures.

Cache number three and four were located eight and a half miles up Haskill Mountain at a long-since-gone wildfire lookout. It was a bumpy, sometimes scary drive up, but the views were excellent, and we were excited to find the cache at the top of the mountain. When I opened the rear door to get my camera (we stopped and got batteries), I heard hissing. Punctured tire. It always happens. Dan’s key is new and never worked to open the trunk (where the spare was, of course); we were pretty much SOL, so we went and got the cache, anyway. We found the cache, took some pictures that I’ll post later, and booked it back to the car. The tire wasn’t flat yet, so we sailed down the mountain, constantly checking the tire, and finally made it. We weren’t driving on the rim until Kila School, but we could handle that. Just to give it a try, Dan tried his key in the trunk, and… it worked. We get more flat tires than anyone I have ever met. Figures.

What, did you think I was done? Oh no…

We found our four caches for the day, got our tire switched and headed home to get some chow and log our cache finds. Oddly enough, when I sat down at the computer, the power was off. So was the power to everything else. I checked the power strip, and sure enough, one of the cats must have stepped on the power button. “Alright then, I’ll just turn the power back on and reboot.” Here’s the problem: Sometimes when the power goes out, and a computer is shut down improperly, the processes open at the time of the improper shutdown become corrupted. And then little works. Figures.

After two days of running every diagnose and fix function I could think of, I finally gave up and prepared for a System Recovery which resets the computer back to its original factory settings. System Restore (which resets the computer back to a restore point) was corrupted, so I couldn’t think of anything else. Ah, but wait! The recovery discs I made when we got the computer can also perform a System Restore! D’oh! Why did I forget about that. I popped the disc in, ba-da-bing, two minutes later everything is as it should be. I wasted a whole lotta time backing up files, passwords, bookmarks, game saves, etc., when all it needed was a two minute fix. Figures.

Things aren’t all bad. I finally got a KVM Switch, so I have both computers up and running. One of the USB ports on the old computer doesn’t seem to be working, though. I’ll have to check that out. But it’s still up and running enough that I can do things-I-probably-shouldn’t-tell-you-about, that I can’t do on Vista. Stupid DRM. Arrrrgh!

Most exciting for me is that I finally got my hot, li’l hands on a Wii Fit. I did a half hour of exercise with it yesterday, and I’m um… Well, I’m a little out of shape. And I’m a little sore today. But I’m still motivated, and it is fun.

Anyway, that’s the dilly. I’m off to continue organizing computer discs and um… that stuff I-probably-shouldn’t-tell-you-about. :D

Update: I actually prepared this post on Wednesday night, and for some reason I forgot to hit ‘Publish’.

Instead of uploading a butt-load of photos that always seem to take forever to load anyway, I thought I would just make videos from now on. It’s actually a little less tedious than uploading every individual photo, and it should save you some loading time. Hopefully.

Tomorrow (actually, I guess it’s today, now) we’re heading down to Missoula so Dan can do a little comics shopping and we can do a little geocaching. Oh, and bird toys, Solomon’s stock is running low and there’s just no selection here in Kalispell. Maybe I’ll even bring back a pinkie or two for the Leopard Gecko.

The season for Geocaching is upon us, and today we hit a few.

These are from a cache on the Foys to Blacktail Trail, which begins (or ends, depending on how you look at it) at Herron Park.


If you click this one, you may be able to read some of the sign.


Herron Park is a horse park, full of horse jumps.


Another view of the park and part of Foys Canyon.


Click it, and click it again, and you can see the cute lil’ bird. Yeah, I know I need a new lens.

In my last Thursday Thirteen, I mentioned the B I got on my first English Comp. essay. On Friday, my second essay was handed back with an A. I am marginally less angry.

I thought I’d post the second essay. My first essay is a little more personal in nature, so I’m not up for posting it, but if you think you’d like to read it, I do have an email address… I won’t guarantee that I’ll send it to you, though!
;)
(Note: Before anyone gets excited, yes I refer to Dan as ‘my husband’. He technically is not. And, no, we’re not getting married, either.)

Geocaching And The Art Of Preparedness

Geocaching is the outdoor sport of using multi-million dollar satellites and a GPS receiver to find geographic coordinates. Tupperware, or more commonly, ammunition boxes, are hidden at these coordinates by other players. Geocachers fill these containers with all sorts of things, making the sport a high-tech treasure hunt. My husband and I enjoy geocaching because it gives us the opportunity to spend time together. We also get outside for exercise, and it’s always a surprise to see what items previous players have hidden in a cache. Like any outdoor activity it is important to be prepared for a variety of situations. These include possible injury, wildlife encounters, not having everything required for a pleasant excursion, equipment malfunctions, or failure to pack enough water.

One of our caching expeditions was ruined by our failure to pack enough water for the hike. Just what should you pack for a four mile hike with a 2300 foot elevation gain? Undoubtedly, you should carry more than a 32 ounce container of water. I’d feverishly checked online hiking guides for information about the Strawberry Lake Trail in the Jewel Basin. We expected the fridged, bubbling, mountain streams the guides had promised, but it was only the 25th of July, and the brooks had long since dried. All that remained were the shriveled detritus of once thriving mosses and the powdered dregs that were once soft mud. Normally we would have turned back, but the trailhead to Strawberry Lake is deceitful. It’s located in an old-growth, Hemlock forest. It is a chilly forest, free of mosquitoes, flies, and free of parchedness. The Hemlock forest belied the high summer waiting above us. Leaving the cool hideout of the Tsuga woodland, we chose to continue on the trail, which was now much steeper, to search for water in the more direct sunlight. It wasn’t long before heat exhaustion set in. Our muscles beseeched us to stop; our minds became obscured by confusion. Had we not reached the lake when we did we could have become extremely ill, suffered heat-stroke, or even died. At the lake we soaked our trail weary bodies in the water and rested. Later, we pulled out our reliable GPS and found the geocache that had brought us on this odyssey to begin with.

Before we left for our hike to Strawberry Lake, I made sure to put fresh batteries in our GPS; our painful trip was not a wasted effort. That doesn’t mean I hadn’t forgotten to make sure our equipment would work before. A few weeks prior to our poorly executed hike, we drove to a wilderness area west of Kalispell in pursuit of several caches we had not yet visited. There was no need to hike long distance to their locations or lumber up severe elevations. We did, however, spend several hours driving the maze of mountainous, forest-service roads. Our driving directions were complicated and the word ‘road’ was a generous descriptor for what we were driving on. The drive was slow-going, jarring and dusty. With every crater and hollow in the ‘so-called’ road that we hit, I worried that our filthy, old-beast of a car would rattle to the ground and fall apart. When we found the campground we were looking for, I nearly kissed the ground. After my sigh of relief, I focused on the task at hand. A GPS has a map function that will point an arrow towards a selected waypoint or coordinate. My husband and I checked the direction of the electronic arrow, gathered our bag of items to trade at the cache, and happily marched in our intended direction. After walking only 30 to 40 feet, and with only 100 or so more to go, the ‘Low Battery’ indicator began to flash. I habitually stowed extra batteries in the side pocket of my camera bag, but I didn’t that day. By the time I had looked through all of our bags, the minute amount of life left in our GPS’s batteries had gone. With a dead GPS we would not be able to find the cache we had come so far to find. My failure to anticipate the simplest of problems had turned this quest into a wasted effort.

While it may be true that the journey is no less important than the destination, the destination is why we ultimately make the journey. To us, an insignificant aspect of geocaching is the trade of items at a cache. This trading has never been the focus of why we participate in geocaching, and therefore, it is not the reason we make the journey. But it is fun. After opening the tight, weather-proof seal of an ammo can, there may still be the slight stink of gun powder and oil. The stench is forgotten as we begin to explore the collection of articles inside. One might feel like a crow, carrying off a set of dropped, shiny keys to a nest. Many times the items are utter junk. McDonalds Happy Meal toys are coldly referred to as ‘McSwag’ and quickly set aside. A cache is almost a miniature curiosity or junk shop, and every now and then a player will put a much desired item into it, like a rare, old, coin or a beautiful, beaded, bracelet. The rules to geocaching are simple: “If you take an item, you must replace it with an item of equal of greater value.” There are many times we have encountered items within a cache that we would enjoy or be able to put to good use. There are also many times that we have forgotten to take along our bag of trade items. Not being able to trade doesn’t ruin the experience for us, but it does sometimes leave us with a slight pang of disappointment.

Sometimes the failure to prepare may include necessities that could endanger our lives. After our Strawberry Lake hike, I never forget to pack an ample supply of water. Other times, my forgetfulness simply meant that we made a long trip for nothing or we weren’t able to participate fully in a sport we enjoy. With every mistake made along the way I’ve learned to pack one more thing, or now remember to double check one more bag. The lessons learned may have been dangerous or painful, but they were learned. As we said in Girl Scouts, “Be prepared.”

(I hate the last line, but everyone said I should keep it in!)

June 3rd, 2007My Name is Mud

On our way back from a cache location we passed some wetlands. What looked like shallow mud turned out to be deep mud. I was quite impressed with my cleaning job on my boots.

I never expected to get them this clean again!

May 10th, 2007In Like a Lion

Yet another Geocaching expedition, this one near Lion Lake located on the road up to Hungry Horse Dam.

Bone Graveyard.

Dan at the cache site.

Lion Lake

May 9th, 2007Silver Stairs

These were from another Geocache location between East and West Glacier. The Geocache was titled ‘Silver Stairs’. By the way, that’s Will.

May 8th, 2007Cold and Rainy

These were taken at a Geocache location about half way between East and West Glacier, MT, near Glacier National Park.


From Left to Right: Dan, Glenn, Lou, Sonja and Will

April 16th, 2007Two Geocachers are Born

We found our first cache!!! I’ve been itching to go Geocaching for a long while. Today, we decided to seek out a simple one before Dan had to head off to work. I was quite surprised when my little Garmin etrex Legend led us right to our chosen cache by the Flathead River, and Dan was quick to spot it. Even though this was an easy cache, we both had a lot of fun.


This is me pulling the well hidden cache from it’s hiding spot. Yes, I’m looong overdue for a hair appointment — it’s next Saturday at noon, so shaddup!


Ooooh, what goodies are we going to find?


A Geocoin!


Many, if not most, Geocoins like this one have a goal and are owned by someone, usually the person who purchases it and enters the tracking number. The goal of this coin (set by the owner) is to be photographed at a post office or national park, all the better if it’s photographed at a post office in a national park. Now that I’ve retrieved this coin from the cache, I’ll take it up to Glacier National Park and photograph it. Then I’ll set it free into a new cache for someone else to find.

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