At the top we climbed up a fire tower to eat our lunch and rest. Two mule deer frolicked about. Then we started hiking down. Hiking down is easier on the heart and lungs but not so easy on the knees. |
Wednesday, September 30, 2020
Apgar Lookout
Tuesday, September 29, 2020
Logan Pass in Glacier
I would guess we walked two or three miles along the path before heading back. The rain and the wind made for achy joints. |
Besides the Grizzly bear we also saw a black bear with 3 cubs. |
I was on the wrong side of the van to get a picture of the black bears. |
Monday, September 28, 2020
Fly Fishing
Friday, September 25, 2020
Grizzley
Friday, September 18, 2020
City In A Forest
I read Ginger Pinholster's novel City In A Forest. The story is set in Atlanta, Georgia which has the nickname city in a forest. In this story two women, Arden and Parker, struggle to save Silver Park. Their story tells some history of Atlanta where the forested parks in black neighborhoods were taken over by white developers. I thought the author was great because by giving details she told a larger story without spelling it out. The details of Arden's cluttered house or Parker's hectic schedule gave me a good picture of what their lives were like. The story was good but the ending could have been better.
Thursday, September 17, 2020
Stream Monitoring
This is the Us Kab Wan Ka River in the spring. The week before I took this shot the river was flowing rapidly over the road. Now I see why they don't plow that road in the winter. |
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
Lincoln In The Bardo
I listened to Lincoln In the Bardo audiobook by George Saunders because I was impressed by the many readers of various parts. People like Susan Sarandon, Nick Offerman, David Sedaris, Ben Stiller, Don Cheadle, Julianne Moore and Rainn Wilson. In this very strange story Willie Lincoln, the President's son is dying while the White House is having a party. The Marine Band plays downstairs while Willie suffers from typhoid upstairs. Some of the book is based on fact. Various people are quoted for their opinions about the party and about the fullness of the moon that night. Willie dies the next day and is taken to a cemetery in Georgetown. Abraham Lincoln goes to the cemetery several times. The President removes Willie's body from the coffin and holds him before putting him back. The part of the story that isn't based on fact is the bardo which is a limbo state between life and death; sort of like Purgatory. Normally children don't stay in the bardo long but Willie thinks his father is coming back to see him again. The other characters in the bardo feel sorry for Willie and encourage him to move on. The other people in the bardo don't realize they are dead. They call their coffins "sick boxes." They wander around the cemetery at night and rest in their sick boxes during the day. The bardo is a bizarre world full of exceptionally strange people. This book was a best seller and won many awards. I liked the depiction of the President's grief and uncertain feelings about the civil war. I could have done without the fantasy about the bardo.
Tuesday, September 15, 2020
Yard Work
I have been helping Offspring #2 with a few outdoor projects. This involved digging out sod, moving sod, removing 5 inches of soil, leveling the ground, pouring paver base gravel, leveling the gravel, adding sand, leveling sand, installing pavers and sweeping paver locking sand between the pavers. The new patio looks great and is very level. We also installed a gutter hose across the long length of her house to a rain garden. And we installed a fire pit. All this lifting and shoveling and moving and bending is good for me. The pavers were heavy but I brought along my trusty two wheel dolly. That handy dolly got more use in these couple weeks than it did in the dozen or so years that I have owned it. Today we went back to the hardware store to buy $300 worth of cedar to make raised garden beds. Do you ever look at people leaving a hardware store with armloads of supplies and feel bad for all the work they have ahead of them?
Sunday, September 13, 2020
The Couple Next Door
In this story Anne and Marco seem like the perfect couple. They live in an expensive row house and have a six month old baby with blond hair and blue eyes named Cora. They are invited to a party with the couple next door with whom they share a common wall. The babysitter cancels at the last minute. Anne wants to stay home but Marco persuades her to go. They bring the baby monitor and check on the child every half hour. At the 1 a.m. check the baby is missing. Cora is no where to be found. The police investigate and Detective Raubach suspects the parents had something to do with the crime. This story had an unbelievable amount of double crossing, criminal type people in the same social circle. The story was riveting but the characters in the tale are not likable. If most people were like the people in The Couple Next Door by Shari Lapena, I would not want to make their acquaintance.
Friday, September 11, 2020
Gooseberry
We went camping for a couple nights and three days at Gooseberry Falls. The campground was completely full. We hiked the lower, middle, upper and the fifth falls. |
This is the view of the fifth falls from the bridge above the falls. |
We had great weather with sunny skies and starry nights. Mornings were cold but a campfire and a hot cup of coffee really hit the spot. |
Monday, September 7, 2020
Fruit Of The Drunken Tree
This story is set in Bogota, Columbia during the 1990's. At that time Pablo Escobar was a drug lord who kidnapped people and held them for ransom. In this story, two sisters named Chula and Cassandra, live with their parents. The mother hires a girl from a poor area of town. Her name is Petrona. In their yard is a tree that bears flowers and fruit. The girls are warned not to handle the flowers nor the fruit as they are poisonous. As the family adjusts to the escalating violence in the streets of Bogota they have to make a choice between sacrifice and betrayal. Some chapters of the book are violent. The author, Ingrid Rojas Contreras, was a child in Columbia in the 1990's. She says Fruit Of The Drunken Tree is based on the events of her life. The story is captivating and told in alternating chapters by Chula and Petrona.
Saturday, September 5, 2020
Southern Terminus
We made pretty good time. Much of the hike was easy but not all. |
This is the southern terminus. A person could continue hiking into Wisconsin. |
Friday, September 4, 2020
The Motion Of A Body Through Space
After I finished reading The Motion Of A Body Through Space I noticed the author's name was Lionel Shiver. I thought for sure the author was a woman. I looked Lionel Shriver up on google and it turns out she is a woman named Margaret who changed her name to Lionel because she didn't like Margaret. In this story a married couple are going through a transition. Remington, age 62, is fired from his job at the Department of Transportation. He decides to take up running a marathon to give a focus and take up his time. Serenada, Remington's wife, is still working as a voice over artist and reader of audio books, is giving up her casual habit of running ten miles a day because her knees have no cartilage left. Her doctor says she needs two knee replacements because of overuse. While Serenada is adjusting to less exercising, Remington is adjusting to any exercising. This leads to marital conflict. Serenada and Remington do love each other but once Remington completes his marathon and decides to do a triathalon, Serenada reaches her limit. She does not want to be the one on the sidelines cheering while her husband gets the glory. Their verbal sparring is intense. Remington and Seranada keep repeating the same complaints about each other which, I guess, is what married people tend to do. I liked the book but I think the marital discord went on far too long. I did enjoy the through explanation of our society's views about exercise. Some sections were very entertaining.
Thursday, September 3, 2020
What Can A Body Do?
Sara Hendren published What Can A Body Do? How We Meet The Built World in August of 2020. She is an artist, design researcher, writer, and a professor of engineering at Olin College of Engineering. Each chapter explores a different ability. In the first chapter her engineering class is challenged by the needs of an Australian professor and world renowned speaker of short statue. The speaker asked the class to build a lectern for her height that would be sturdy enough to hold her computer yet lightweight and portable enough to take on a plane. She was tired of standing on chairs and being made to fit into lecterns built for normal sized people. She wanted one to fit her body. The students were able to meet her needs. The whole idea of this book is to look at people of differing ability and design adaptations built for them instead of building adaptations that bring them closer to a person without disabilities. In another chapter she looks at building design at Gallaudet College. Doors to the building open automatically so conversations don't have to stop as one enters or leaves the building. Sight lines are increased so a person on the second floor can see a friend coming and reach out to them. She travels back to 1972 when some students at Berkeley insisted on curb cuts so they could access buildings at school. The idea of making curb cuts was questioned by one official as necessary because few people in wheelchairs were seen on campus. In 1990 The Americans with Disabilities Act was signed and curb cuts are mandatory and they are used. In another chapter she visited a facility in the Netherlands for people with memory issues. The facility is built like a small city with restaurants and stores and theaters. People from the nearby town also come to use the theater and restaurants and stores. I enjoyed this book because it helped me to view differing abilities in a different and more positive light.
Garden Scenes
I also have a pumpkin in my space. In total I think I have three pumpkins this year. |
Wednesday, September 2, 2020
Leskinen Creek Campsite
Today I hiked from the community center in Finland, MN southbound to the bog where I left off yesterday because of a broken board walk. |
After a .3 miles spur from the parking lot and a short distance I crossed the east branch of the Baptism River. |
After 3 miles I came to Park Hill road which was my destination yesterday but I didn't make it. |
I kept walking down hill. The weather was partly cloudy with a temperature in the 70's and low humidity. Perfect weather for a walk in the woods. |
Wow. Just imagine how huge and thick the glacier was that left this glacial erratic in this particular spot. That rock is the size of a two story cabin! |
This boardwalk section looks brand new. |
I am back on the boardwalk at Sawmill Bog. I don't see any moose around. Today I added 4.6 miles making my new total on the Superior Hiking Trail 151.4. I have 180.7 left to go. |
Tuesday, September 1, 2020
Section 13
Today I hiked north bound from the trail head on Little Marais road. I planned to walk 4.4 miles to Park Hill road so that when I did the rest of the section from the north I would have less to do. |
Across the wide valley of the Saw Mill Creek I can see the bald knob of rock known as Saw Mill Dome. |
Here is the beginning of the bog. After this I will hike only 1.4 miles more and then turn around. |
I don't see any moose yet. |
Um, this boardwalk is broken. |
Galena
My host here in Dubuque told me to check out Galena, Illinois. So this morning I drove 30 minutes and parked at the Ulysses Grant house. A t...
-
My class was on television. I am pretty good at hiding from the cameras! http://kstp.com/news/anoka-county-residents-citizens-academy-poli...
-
A yellow rail, one of THE MOST ELUSIVE birds around, sound like a manual typewriter. And if you're too young to know what a manual ty...
-
Jacqueline Windspear is the author of her memoir This Time Next Year We Will Be Laughing. She starts out with her parent's stories. H...