Where have I been?
It is suddenly winter. Christmas is
done. The last day of the 2014 is upon us.
My son says this is our last chance to
do things this year.
Last chance to dance in the street
(this year).
Last chance to adventure (this year).
Last chance to eat a Christmas Cookie
(this year).
For the Active Adventure Team, last
chance for ADVENTURE THIS YEAR !!.
THERE WOULD NORMALLY BE A NICE MAP OF THE AREA HERE BUT THE NEW GOOGLE MAPS JUST SUCKS TOO MUCH TO USE. SORRY ABOUT THAT.
THERE WOULD NORMALLY BE A NICE MAP OF THE AREA HERE BUT THE NEW GOOGLE MAPS JUST SUCKS TOO MUCH TO USE. SORRY ABOUT THAT.
So we are off to Mount Hood for the 5th
annual Fire and Ice New Year's Extravaganza. Later tonight, my Partner
(Action Adventure Girl) and I are going to meet with the rest of the
AAT at White River Snow Park and hope that there is enough snow to do
some snow shoeing off into the wilderness where we will have a little
bonfire and ring in the new year. If we are lucky, we will see
fireworks out over the mountain. Each of the different ski resorts
evidently have them.
For now, a few families have rented a
very nice ski cabin in Government Camp and we have the heat cranked
up and are expecting a very cold night. We will cook dinner and eat
and then start the bundling up process for tonight's frigid adventure.
We are expecting temperatures around 16 degrees.
Now, for those of you who are internet
anthropologists and are reading through this 200 years in the future, as you search through the terabytes of useless blog data that was
generated by useless bloggers I will tell you a few things. At this
time, we are still at the start of global warming and so there is
still snow (pretty much all year) on the tops of the tallest volcano
mountains in the Pacific Northwest. The city of Portland is still 60
miles away from the ocean and the metropolitan area of Seattle is
still above sea level. The population of the planet had decided to
stop using fossil fuels and switch to solar and solve the whole
environment crisis problem but some idiot in the midwest inventing
Fraking (the other kind) which led to gas prices dropping by 50% and
now we would rather buy Ford F250 trucks and put off saving the planet
for the next generation. Sorry about that.
Government Camp.
Called this from the …. well.....
federal government camp that was established here during the
depression to do various construction projects, notably Timberline
Lodge. Now, though this is a really nice and fancy rental cabin we
are staying at, it doesn't have internet, which means that I can't
actually check the veracity of any of the facts I just typed. But I
am sure they are true.
There is also a Government Camp in
California. Copy Cats.
Hey, it turns out I was wrong, though I like my answer better. It was evidently called that because a bunch of wagons were abandoned there by the Army when they tried to move a bunch of supplies through to Oregon City a little too late in the season and their Oxen died.
I like my version better.
Cold out tonight. In my partner's words
“So Freaking Cold”. She took the first picture of the night as we
drove out to the launch point at White River (West) Snow Park. 10
degrees. Brrr. But crystal clear glorious evening with a big bright
moon (evidently obscuring a comet). We met at 9:30 in the very large
snow park parking lot. There were 2 other groups of explorers but we
looked to be the only ones with any intention of leaving the lot. One
of the other groups had a camp fire going with their cars parked
across it, smokey fumes of Washington wafting festively across the
packed snow to us. Chip has been doing this Fire and Ice hike for 6
years now and he has his gear load well defined. He makes a sort of
clam shell gear carrier out of a snow sled saucer and a portable fire
ring. In the center goes wood and champagne and then he tows it up
the hill. What a guy.
Trudging up the hill in the moonlight
and snow is one of those rare transcendental moments. No crowds, no
cars, no noise. Well, no noise when you hold still. When you hold
still you can hear the river running in the gully and the wind
blowing softly through the trees. When you don't hold still all you
can hear is the rather loud scrunching of the snow under your snow
shoes. Scrunch Scrunch. Up the hill we went. Usually I worry about
getting too hot when going up hill, but not tonight. Weather bug is
telling us it is -3, apparently with the slight breeze. We really need to
find a place to get out of the wind before we stop. We will be too
cold to stop otherwise.
Freaking Cold (in the car) |
These guys are showing me where a comet is. But you can see the sled back yonder; |
The Intrepid explorer before he got out into the wind and put on two more layers. (Editor's note: And the fireworks in the background) |
About 30 minutes up the hill we get to a little sled bowl. During the day time this entire area will be
full of little kids on little plastic sleds. Each tearing down the
hill at questionable rates. That Hill over there will have 10
individual sled paths, each with a parent at the bottom of the glide
to stop their kids from careening out into the main walking area. But
tonight all is quiet, and we find a place on the other side of a
ridge to duck out of the wind. The place we chose had been a little
smashed down by some previous group, but we stomped around some more
and then dug a little ditch for our foot rest and sat right down and
got the fire going.
Out of the wind, with the fire lit, the
cold wasn't too unbearable. Not sure I could ever warm up to the idea
of bringing a tent out to someplace like this and spending the night.
I would certainly need a better sleeping bag and a thicker mattress.
One of the things I have learned about on coming to Oregon (and the
mountains) is this idea of needing insulation from the ground in
order to be able to keep yourself warm in the winter. There is an
insulation rating system for these things (or course). I was very
surprised to find out that a normal air mattress, even one of those
great big nice areo-bed things, is only an insulation quotient of 1.
This is essentially the same as sleeping on the ground. Since the
weight of your body crushes the down in you bag to nothing, if you
only have a 1 insulation between you and the ground (or the snow)
then you will not be able to generate enough heat during the night to
keep yourself warm. You need a trapped air mattress. There are a lot
of them on the market these days that range around greatly in
portability and cost. One of those egg shell foam mattresses that you
see boy scouts carrying strapped to the outside of their packs is one
of the cheapest (and perhaps most comfortable). Those ring in at
around 2-3. The self inflating but compressible foam mattresses are
little better (and much easier to pack) at 3-4. They also have the
ultra expensive super hiking models, I see them in the 5-6 range. If
you want things much warmer than that, you get into the big heavy
can't really carry on your back sort of thing. But hey, the R ratings
are additive, so you can bring along two mattresses, perhaps a closed
cell and a self-inflating. Give you a R of around 6, and you could
use the foam as a sled in a pinch.
It is very beautiful and serene to sit
around in the freezing cold in front of a roaring fire, that is until
the wind shifts and you get hot ash blowing sparks on your expensive Gortex
jacket and plastic pants. The last thing I want is little holes
burned in my tech stuff. But when you jump up to put yourself out and
move to a safe place on the other side of the fire, you remember why
you were wearning snow shoes and why Chip advised you not to take
them off because you post hole down do your thighs in the snow.
So we had a little champagne and some
s'mores and then put out the fire and packed it all back down the
snowy river embankment to the parking lot.
Editor's note: The female adventurers were cold once we stopped. Not just a little cold, but oh my god, get out the emergency hand warmers and wait frantically until they started working cold. And if your knee hurts, and you decide that laying in the snow is a good idea, so you can elevate it (the PT always says elevate and ice after exercise, but my god, it's 10 degrees out in the snow, so we'll skip the ice), then don't think you can just walk over there and lay down. 'Cause Jon is right, you'll sink right up to your hip in the snow. Which will make your already sore knee very mad at you, and might make you a little grouchy with the rest of the AAT. Just sayin.
Editor's note: The female adventurers were cold once we stopped. Not just a little cold, but oh my god, get out the emergency hand warmers and wait frantically until they started working cold. And if your knee hurts, and you decide that laying in the snow is a good idea, so you can elevate it (the PT always says elevate and ice after exercise, but my god, it's 10 degrees out in the snow, so we'll skip the ice), then don't think you can just walk over there and lay down. 'Cause Jon is right, you'll sink right up to your hip in the snow. Which will make your already sore knee very mad at you, and might make you a little grouchy with the rest of the AAT. Just sayin.
Just as a foot note: The next afternoon
my partner and I returned with various parts of our families for a
warmer sunny day outing. We had some snow shoes and some sleds and
some cross country skiis and everyone just did stuff with the snow
for a few hours. White River is definitely a great place for this
kind of outing. Lots of parking. Lots of people. Some good sledding
hills for kids, but also it is pretty easy to get off into the trees
for a little snow shoe or some cross country skiing. Check it out.
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