Saturday, September 20, 2008
Friday, September 12, 2008
Barf
So, Lance is coming back.
Barf, hack, wretch...
That is the sound of me losing my lunch.
Just when things were getting good. Now we get to hear a whole bunch about him and not enough about all the other great, up and coming riders. Now I will have to answer a million questions about Lanc's comeback at work. Yeah, Excitement.
I think I just saw Levi jump off the Golden Gate Bridge.
Barf, hack, wretch...
That is the sound of me losing my lunch.
Just when things were getting good. Now we get to hear a whole bunch about him and not enough about all the other great, up and coming riders. Now I will have to answer a million questions about Lanc's comeback at work. Yeah, Excitement.
I think I just saw Levi jump off the Golden Gate Bridge.
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Nice
Last Saturday I got out of bed at 4:30, and threw on my kit to meet Beers and a bunch of other dudes at his house to roll for 3 to 4 hours. I needed to drop a check off for the contractor so I decided to leave early and head over to his house and then turn east and make my way to Mike’s.
If I leave by 5:15 I would have plenty of time, but when I grabbed my bike….I had a flat. Now I was pushin it. Rolled out of the drive way at 5:25. Need to motor to make it. So much for a nice easy spinning warm up. Dark....Can’t really see, but blast forward.
I am rolling, cruzing the City streets. My shadow chasing and passing me, as I move under each streetlight. I remember when I was a kid when me and my partners in crime would head out at night on our bikes. I remember back then the same shadow, chasing me and then catching me. The shadow has changed over the years, but the same yellow streetlight illuminates the way. Baggy pants and ball cap, traded for spandex and Styrofoam lid. The feeling is still the same. So many great memories of warm summer nights, riding the bike. We were not necessarily looking for trouble, but occasionally we would find it.
Riding through the neighborhoods and residential streets, swapping leads with my shadow. I hit Bullard and Cedar and roll into the field north of State U. Lights are gone now and so is my shadow. Just me and the silhouette of the Sierra out in front. The turquoises blue of the early morning dawn the only light. Can’t really see the road, but I know its there. Nothing to get in the way. Rhythmic breathing and the turning of pedals. I love that feeling. Out on the bike before dawn, riding into a new day. Heading up into the hills, finally the sun hits you and the cold vanishes into a void of early day warmth. No cars……just breathing and the rhythm of the pedals turning. Black stretch of road just keeps on coming. Undulating, curving, rolling past the signs of other peoples lives. Lost in the midst of the moment. Oak trees and filtered sun are the only companions of the road. The road just keeps on going, until you make that turn into the driveway and you start dreaming of the next meeting with your shadow. The next time the wheels touch the road…..and it is nothing but breathing and turning.
If I leave by 5:15 I would have plenty of time, but when I grabbed my bike….I had a flat. Now I was pushin it. Rolled out of the drive way at 5:25. Need to motor to make it. So much for a nice easy spinning warm up. Dark....Can’t really see, but blast forward.
I am rolling, cruzing the City streets. My shadow chasing and passing me, as I move under each streetlight. I remember when I was a kid when me and my partners in crime would head out at night on our bikes. I remember back then the same shadow, chasing me and then catching me. The shadow has changed over the years, but the same yellow streetlight illuminates the way. Baggy pants and ball cap, traded for spandex and Styrofoam lid. The feeling is still the same. So many great memories of warm summer nights, riding the bike. We were not necessarily looking for trouble, but occasionally we would find it.
Riding through the neighborhoods and residential streets, swapping leads with my shadow. I hit Bullard and Cedar and roll into the field north of State U. Lights are gone now and so is my shadow. Just me and the silhouette of the Sierra out in front. The turquoises blue of the early morning dawn the only light. Can’t really see the road, but I know its there. Nothing to get in the way. Rhythmic breathing and the turning of pedals. I love that feeling. Out on the bike before dawn, riding into a new day. Heading up into the hills, finally the sun hits you and the cold vanishes into a void of early day warmth. No cars……just breathing and the rhythm of the pedals turning. Black stretch of road just keeps on coming. Undulating, curving, rolling past the signs of other peoples lives. Lost in the midst of the moment. Oak trees and filtered sun are the only companions of the road. The road just keeps on going, until you make that turn into the driveway and you start dreaming of the next meeting with your shadow. The next time the wheels touch the road…..and it is nothing but breathing and turning.
Later
Thursday, August 7, 2008
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
The Games We Play
Well, I finally have some time to write something down. Why? Cause I am waiting at the airport. Another one of those trips where I spent a 14 hour day for a one hour meeting. Well this time it was two meetings, actually one meeting with some pissed off developers and a presentation to the Big Gorilla.
Actually, the developers weren’t pissed until they heard what we had to say. It’s a long story, but I will try to tell the short version. You see, I am an infrastructure planner, developers love my stories, or they hate them. Good news, or bad, but never in-between. Yes or no, never maybe. Engineers like definite answers, no room for shades of grey. Yet, there is always grey. That’s what makes a good planner, being able to ferret out the important black and white and massage the grey to make it work. What are the hot buttons, who are the people involved, it’s a game, just like any. Deliver the message the right way so the right people like it, while still making sure the engineering is sound.
Anyway, we have this client, a Big Gorilla down in the jungle. They are in a tough spot as they need to make some improvements, and they have needed to do them for a while. Well, the projects only cost about 120 million bucks. They can’t bring in development unless they make the improvements, and they can’t construct the improvements unless they get some money from developers.
Anyway, these two guys, they got 50 acres, right, a mere speck in the Big Gorilla’s forest. Well, they want to build some houses. Can’t do that unless you got some place for the crap to go, right? Well, anyway, the Big Gorilla has been telling them, “sure you can connect, all you need to do is pay Joe Engineers to do this study, right.” Except the Gorilla already knows the answer, No capacity…….So they show up at the meeting where we tell them, “Sorry mates, no capacity”. The dude looks at us and calls the whole thing a set up, and starts spouting about litigation and lawyers and all that good finger pointing stuff. We say, hey man were just the messenger, but actually they weren’t pissed at us, just the fact that they have millions of dollars on the line and yet, they have to jump through another hoop.
We felt like some chumps…..you see….the Gig Gorilla needs money, and Joe developers got some (at least right now) and Joe developers, they really want this project to happen, right. So the Big Gorilla uses us to leverage Joe developer and squeeze some lunch money out of them. Except, these Joes are not going to back down, there like that scrawny kid who fights back, kickin and scratching, held up by his shirt collar as his feet swing two feet off the ground.
We got played as the middle man, and Joe was pissed, F-bombs dropping like its going out of style…….poor schmucks. You can tell they are under the gun. Looking at losing it all, the thing is, Big Gorilla needs them, or needs their money, but Big Gorilla needs them to sweat a little so they may agree to kickin down a little more than they would otherwise.
Playin with people like that ain’t right, but we had to keep our mouths shut, cause, you never know when that BIG contract could be right around the corner, and self preservation is the name of the game in Jungle. Big Gorilla dishing out bananas to those that scratch his back.
It’s a sick game.
Actually, the developers weren’t pissed until they heard what we had to say. It’s a long story, but I will try to tell the short version. You see, I am an infrastructure planner, developers love my stories, or they hate them. Good news, or bad, but never in-between. Yes or no, never maybe. Engineers like definite answers, no room for shades of grey. Yet, there is always grey. That’s what makes a good planner, being able to ferret out the important black and white and massage the grey to make it work. What are the hot buttons, who are the people involved, it’s a game, just like any. Deliver the message the right way so the right people like it, while still making sure the engineering is sound.
Anyway, we have this client, a Big Gorilla down in the jungle. They are in a tough spot as they need to make some improvements, and they have needed to do them for a while. Well, the projects only cost about 120 million bucks. They can’t bring in development unless they make the improvements, and they can’t construct the improvements unless they get some money from developers.
Anyway, these two guys, they got 50 acres, right, a mere speck in the Big Gorilla’s forest. Well, they want to build some houses. Can’t do that unless you got some place for the crap to go, right? Well, anyway, the Big Gorilla has been telling them, “sure you can connect, all you need to do is pay Joe Engineers to do this study, right.” Except the Gorilla already knows the answer, No capacity…….So they show up at the meeting where we tell them, “Sorry mates, no capacity”. The dude looks at us and calls the whole thing a set up, and starts spouting about litigation and lawyers and all that good finger pointing stuff. We say, hey man were just the messenger, but actually they weren’t pissed at us, just the fact that they have millions of dollars on the line and yet, they have to jump through another hoop.
We felt like some chumps…..you see….the Gig Gorilla needs money, and Joe developers got some (at least right now) and Joe developers, they really want this project to happen, right. So the Big Gorilla uses us to leverage Joe developer and squeeze some lunch money out of them. Except, these Joes are not going to back down, there like that scrawny kid who fights back, kickin and scratching, held up by his shirt collar as his feet swing two feet off the ground.
We got played as the middle man, and Joe was pissed, F-bombs dropping like its going out of style…….poor schmucks. You can tell they are under the gun. Looking at losing it all, the thing is, Big Gorilla needs them, or needs their money, but Big Gorilla needs them to sweat a little so they may agree to kickin down a little more than they would otherwise.
Playin with people like that ain’t right, but we had to keep our mouths shut, cause, you never know when that BIG contract could be right around the corner, and self preservation is the name of the game in Jungle. Big Gorilla dishing out bananas to those that scratch his back.
It’s a sick game.
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Demo, Dust and Respirators
Anyway...we filled a dumpster to the top and ordered another one. Hope we can fit everything in the second one.
All I can say is that the carpet in the hall.....Nasty.....!
It is amazing how much different a place can look once you rip half the stuff out.
I can see it......
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Carpets
Who ever heard of Carpet in a bathroom. Especially around the toilet. The whole place smells like pee. Yesterday a crowd of about 10 contractors descended upon the new place. Ideas were flowing like mad and all I could think about was, 'how in the hell am I going to pay for all of this".

Problems one never even think about come up, and must be fixed. I realized years ago that remodeling projects can go down two separate paths. The right way or the cheap and easy was. Sometimes the cheap and easy way works, but for big projects, they need to be done right.
That only means one thing.
$$
and lots of it..........

Check out the built in sound system
Problems one never even think about come up, and must be fixed. I realized years ago that remodeling projects can go down two separate paths. The right way or the cheap and easy was. Sometimes the cheap and easy way works, but for big projects, they need to be done right.
That only means one thing.
$$
and lots of it..........
Check out the built in sound system
Friday, June 27, 2008
Ping Pong Balls
I have so many ideas bouncing around in my head. I wish I could take some time to sit down and write them all out, explore where the thoughts take me and run with it. Ping Pong Balls bouncing around in the mind.
But, alas......time, I have found is more precious than gold these days. I sit on my bike, peddles turning and bang....Ideas. But moments are hard to come by.
I just bought a house. 1952, original owners. They are 96 and 92, and needless to say it needs some work. I have been consumed with appointments with contractors, real estate agents, and others. Here is a shot of one of the three completely outdated bathrooms. Complete with pink and black tile and carpet. Makes the skin crawl, but the house is big enough for us, has really good bones and we got it far a steal. I mean a steal......

Soon I will scribble out something interesting to me at least.
But, alas......time, I have found is more precious than gold these days. I sit on my bike, peddles turning and bang....Ideas. But moments are hard to come by.
I just bought a house. 1952, original owners. They are 96 and 92, and needless to say it needs some work. I have been consumed with appointments with contractors, real estate agents, and others. Here is a shot of one of the three completely outdated bathrooms. Complete with pink and black tile and carpet. Makes the skin crawl, but the house is big enough for us, has really good bones and we got it far a steal. I mean a steal......
Soon I will scribble out something interesting to me at least.
Friday, May 30, 2008
Cinco-De-Mayo

This trek began at seven p.m. with seven blokes, 35 minutes of walking led us to the snow where we donned our skins and began the march. Smiling faces, fresh legs and loads of food as we headed out from Lodgepole.
I was initially thinking a few hours. A few turned into six and we arrived at the open area below the west slope leading up to Silliman Lake after 1:15 am. It was not a minute to soon as backs ached and feet hurt. The last hour involved taking off the skis numerous times and hiking over pare patches, over rocks and up snow slopes to steep to skin. Each time taking off my skis involved the full effort of bending over and undoing the bindings, reaching back and flicking the cable off the back of my boot. Stand up breathing heavy. Why was I doing this to myself? Why did we embark on this death march?
We are farmers in the field, seeking the perfect crop.
Cinco-de-mayo weekend has come to be known as a time for reaping the harvest. The Sierra Nevada Mountain range produces a special crop of delicious fruit. Succulent nectar of the Gods waiting to be harvested by those willing to work to attain the place where the seeds take hold. The bounty finds refuge high up in the north facing bowls of the high Sierra where it grows all winter condensing and firming in the warm late winter and early spring sun.
The fruit we seek is shinny white alpine corn. So good it makes the heart leap with the anticipation of every bite into its carve-able meat. You can't eat this wonderful goodness, but Man and Woman have been know to feast on its pleasure until their leg muscles ache and their hearts burst with joy.
You see, the Sierra produces a special type of snow. Corn Snow, that is so tasty and carvable it is literally impossible to make bad turns. Winter snows condense to a firm base that freezes to a hard pack at night. The top layers are melted during the day by the warm spring sun and then refreeze at night. The freeze thaw action produces hard little pellets of ice that are held together by a layer of water. Surface tension provides the magic glue.
When harvested at just the right time this corn yields two to five inches of pure shread-able bliss. But you have to hit it right in the mid to late morning because if you wait to long or pick to early you either get a thick slushy mess or hard pack ice that will chatter the teeth. Mid to late morning is the best pickins depending on slope exposure and cloud cover.
But reaping this harvest is not easy and one must grunt and slog endless hours to reach the corn camp. The north bowl of Mount Silliman awaited us. Visions of smooth corn snow, and arching turns filter through the mind. Lead with the pole plant and transition to the next edge. The mechanics go through the mind and I envision the perfect fall line.
We reached camp at 1:30 am Saturday morning. Tired, dig out a flat spot, lay down the sleeping pad and float off into space. Wake up at dawn with a fresh layer of frost coating my bivy and gear. 22 degrees, not too cold. The others lounge in bed until 8 when the sun hits our camp, but I was to interested in where we were as we crawled in here in complete darkness.
Silliman creek cascades down snow covered granite slabs. The water slides down the face onto a ledge and then disappears, only to reappear 50 feet to left. The water flows down more exposed rock and then vanishes under the snow and meanders invisible to the eye through the snow covered meadow.
Shear granite monolithic faces of rock shoot up above us as the ridge line on both sides of our camp extend to the sky. These are only minor ridge lines climbing up to Silliman proper. These smaller formations elude to the majesty that climbs two thousand feet above us and around the corner.
It get itchy waiting around for the others to rise and get ready, thinking of what lay ahead in today's adventure. Couple of cups of French Roast and some breakfast and before you know it I am ready to roll.
The objective is the north bowl just west of Mt. Silliman. We climb over a small ridge and onto northwest facing slopes and climb up towards the tree line. As we travel the views open to panoramic vistas and huge open bowls of hard packed spring snow. After one and a half hours of climbing we crest a ridge and look across to the shear west face of Silliman. Orange patina cover exposed granite as Silliman rises before us. The peak sloping off gently to the south as the ridge gives way to a small shoot on the ridge line a few hundred feet down from the summit.
That looks like a good place to ski! We take a short break and wait for the others to reach our vantage point. Once together we traverse a steep slope and climb up to the bottom of the little notch. We take off our skis and begin to kick steps into the hard pack and ascend into the cleft. The snow is firm, but in no time will give way to fantastic corn skiing. We reach the steeper upper shoot and finding solid footing is becoming difficult. Beers and Hog traverse under a band of small rocks. I am thinking this is getting a little dicy, but to fall here would just mean a long slide with the work to gain this height wasted.
Hog looks a little sketched and says, "man this is getting a little sketchy."
Beers shrugs him off and says, "Come on, its cool."
Just then Beers slips and loses a ski. He grabs onto the melt edge just below the rock and rolls onto his back to catch his other one before it too starts heading down the mountain. Luckily Hern Dog is traversing just below and grabs the ski just as it starts to pick up speed. I hold back my laughter as Beers rolls back over onto his feet, down climbs the 15 feet and begins back up again. A few minutes later we reach the top of the notch.
Beers is the first to drop in, cuts two turns then disappears over the edge. All I hear is hooping and hollering from the boys below as he carves one turn after another. Finally he appears again on the lower slopes below. After waiting patiently for Hog, it is Slater's turn. He is relatively new to tele skiing coming from a snowboard background.
Slater realizes he needs to switch his binding into a stiffer position. Those hammerhead bindings have all sorts of doohickeys and bells and whistles. I remember when bindings were a metal plate with a wire around the back and a couple of springs, with small little pieces of steel holding the toe in place. Remember those Black Diamond bindings. Before that we had three pins. Remember those? It always amazes me that these big plastic boots still have the pinholes in the toe. Leather boots and skinny skis, remember those? EC 90’s baby….ripping. Well, Slater had to get out his tool to move the adjustment, and I couldn’t wait for that so I dropped in.
One of the moments I like the most about skiing, but backcountry skiing more so, is those few seconds before gravity takes hold and friction is minimized. Standing on the top, poles strapped to your wrist, cast your eyes to the horizon and look at all the surrounding peaks. Standing in harmony with the place. Breathe deep, focus on the movements and hope that muscle memory takes hold and the subconscious mind controls all motion. Confidence must take control, any doubt and you blow the first turn. Flow, rhythm, speed, pattern, and power.
Drop in and I gain the fall line, plant the pole and bust into the first turn. One after another the subconscious motion takes control. Steep at first, bang…. bang…. bang…. and as the slope mellows the skis gain speed and then your railing it down the fall line. The body is a pure harmony of technology, nature, and dynamics. The complex algorithms of muscle movement and physics come to a crescendo and time slows as potential energy is used at a rapid pace. Silence as complete focus takes over, then the world comes back to you and you’re at the bottom and sound is again apparent. Look up and see where you came from, what took so long to get up once again is above you in a few moments of harmonic bliss.
We regroup and look down at the Little Lakes basin below. A natural half pipe of snow drains the upper bowl and looks like a playground for the off piste enthusiast. Time for big arcs and high speed turns up the side of the gully. The roller coaster ride takes us down to the lake. One snow-less large rock is our lunch spot. The sun reflects from all sides and the solar radiation warm us to the core.
Resting is great, but I can’t wait to begin ascending again as the upper ridge awaits us. A triangular shaped snowfield extending up to an unnamed 10,900-foot peak. After skiing as far as we could go we begin kicking steps just east of the exposed ridge line. Footing is fairly easy and we plod up to lofty heights. Higher and higher we ascend, Hog Man in tow with Hern Dog behind him. Beers decides to climb the ridge proper.
I get within 50 feet of the summit and begin busting through to my lower thigh. I have visions of busting through and sliding with a huge slab of snow 800 feet to the bottom of the bowl. I know those fears were unfounded, but I promised Tracy I wasn’t going to do anything stupid so I listened to my intuition and stopped here. Beers pressed on and made it to the top. From this angle I should be able to get some good shots.
A patch cloud cover had moved in and the sun peeked through illuminating the orange west face of Silliman. Beers traversed into the fall line and dropped in. This late in the day the snow was thick and it made skiing this steep face seem like eight inches of heavy sierra powder. Beers threw up globs of snow as he powered down the face.
It was about an eight hundred foot shot to the bottom and before you knew it he was down. Hog dropped in next a few yards below me. Then I was the only one left. I traversed out and stopped for a second. After working so hard to get here I wanted to make the best of this run. A confident first turn let to several more and I was in the flow. The muscles remember the motion and with each little pole plant and hop I was closer to the bottom. I carved the last turn arched over to the others and stopped. Now one said anything, just smiled.
We traversed over the ridge and began to make our way back down to camp. It was about two seventeen hundred vertical feet back down and we ripped high speed turns and shot through little gaps in rocky out crops. Wide open snow fields dropped us back under the tree line and we carved turns through the trees back to camp.
I was tired when we got back. Changed out of sweaty socks and shell pants and into my camp clothes. We were luck enough to have a bare patch of dirt next to our cooking rock and we built a fire. What a pleasure that was to have the fire while we sat and relived the day. I soon found out why the others packs were so heavy on the way in as the crew produced beer after beer from the hidden spaces of their Cordura. Since it was Cinco-De-Mayo weekend we made some fat burritos and T-Brown whipped up a killer avocado salsa with jalepenos. After I put three big daddies away the night grew dark and the fire cast a red glow on our faces. Caser began telling the worst possible jokes anyone could have ever heard and I knew it was time to hit it, and nestle into the 550 fill. I looked at my watch, 8:55 p.m.
The body was tired the next morning. I woke at dawn and looked to see that it was 22 degrees. Not too cold, but a heavy layer of frost coated my gear and bivy sack. We woke up and brewed some strong coffee, and made breakfast. We were going to try and access the top of Silliman from the west side, but after we made the long 2,000 foot climb up past Silliman lake we saw that the south slope leading up to the peak was dry. It didn’t really matter since there was plenty of good snow in the upper bowls to ski and from above Silliman Lake the run back to camp would be really good.
Above Silliman Lake the terrain was amazing. Orange granite with black water streaks circle the bottom of the alpine bowl. Tiny emerald blue, snow feed lakes sit calmly at the bottom constantly being fed by the relentless trickle of melting snow. Blue ice cascaded down the north bowl and flowed into Silliman Lake.
Near the summit ridge of Silliman a stand of wind blown Lodgepoles stood like sentinels guarding access to the top. At eleven thousand feet high on a Sierra peak half of the pines were completely without branches, their white bark standing in contrast to the dark green foliage of their neighbors.
Beers, Hog and I began climbing up the west bowl to gain access to the tallest shot with the best sun exposure. We climbed up and around a large rock outcrop to traverse above a 60 foot wide gap that connected the large snow field with the even larger one below. We reached a high point with a nice flat spot that was perfect for taking off skins and preparing to descend. It looked good to me, however Beers wanted to go higher to reach the tallest point on the face, a big point of snow that touched the hundred food shear face of orange granite above the west bowl.
He reached the highest point and we proceeded to watch him drop his ski down in the melt hole between the rock face and the snow field. That was almost a disaster, depending on the size of the hole, the ski could have slid down and been gone for good. Leaving Beers a long walk out with one ski strapped to his back. He climbed into the hole head first and squeezed his body twelve feet down and just grabbed the tail of his ski with his finger tips and pulled it out. Hog and I thought it was quite hilarious. He popped up again and with torn legs on his mid-weight underpants, a little token to remind him how lucky he was.
Well, we busted some turns down the shot, which was fairly good although a little sun cupped, the flat light making it more challenging than it needed to be.
We regrouped at the lunch rock, and began what was one of the best ski runs I have probably ever taken. It started out with some navigating through rock outcrops and small snow fields, down steep little pitches that shoot you up and over a snowy ridge until we reached the drop that contains Silliman Lake. We stood and looked at 1,700 vertical feet of perfect corn, rollers through rock outcrops to sweet intermediate wide open blue runs to a steep pitch about as long as the Face at Sierra Summit. It was awesome. The corn was perfect. Two inches of the little balls on top a soft packed base. This stuff is really hard to make bad turns on.
We all ripped down to the top of the steep pitch that dropped us into camp. I watched as the other carved down the face, then began my run. Made 10 to 15 turns and headed for a drop over a rock band, pointed the skis and flew off a 20 foot rock drop and landed perfectly on the other side (actually I saw the drop coming tried to stop and slid on my side over the two foot drop and crashed on the other side, but you can dream can’t you). Got up, skied the final hundred feet and slid into camp high on the amazing rush. It was the perfect ski run.
Sat for a few minutes, packed up the bags and started the two hour Gorilla ski run through the trees and back to the trail for the short hike back to the car. Once back at the car, we said our goodbyes and began the two hour drive home. I was ready to see Tracy and the Boys, but as we drove farther down the hill my heart still yearned to be up there. The call of the Sierra is an amazing thing, it never leaves you. The high alpine places and special little hideaways under the open sky. Where the wind blows cold in the summer and small patches of green grass line little mountain lakes. Cold granite on the palms of your hand the sound of wind pushing its way through pine needles.
Tall granite calls you to find serenity in its heights. It draws you in and pushes you to go higher. Many have discovered what they are made of up on high craggy ridges. The Lord speaks to you in such places, fills you with life, and shows you his glory. It will always have a place in my heart.
Thanks for Reading
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