Sunday, December 7, 2014

Hunting the Elusive Christmas Tree

Today Ava and I, along with her roommates Kait and Jaime, went looking for a Christmas tree along the Mirror Lake Highway.  Before all you environmentalists get upset about our deforestation, I went through all the legal channels to obtain a permit from the forest service.  All it took was standing in a 1000 person line at 6am and $10.  

With the girls on snowshoes and me on skis, we went xmas tree huntin'.   


Mush! (We saw a dog sled team.)


Found the little bugger.
Good onya mate!
                                                                                                                                    
















                                                                                                          

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Southern Utah Packraft Pt. 2 Video

Finally! the video from the infamous San Juan packraft trip. 

Thank you Tad for bringing the "camcorder" and taking great footage. First video is Tyler's edit, and is far superior. Second video is my edit, and I suggest that you simply watch the first.



Sunday, October 26, 2014

Zion NP Pine Creek Canyon: Subterranean UT Transplants


The Utah Transplants are back! and Thanks to Mallory Smith! they are armed with a GoPro HD video recorder.



On one of the final great fall weekends Dani, Matt, Cal and Jamie went to Zion NP and did their first technical slot canyon (Pine Creek Canyon)

In a nutshell. It was cold. It got dark slightly after finishing the last rappel, and it was awesome.

On Day II, we did a short hike in the Kolob Canyon area of the park.



Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Pierre's Hole 100 (Better late than never)

Mileage: 84mi
Elevation Gain: 12,241’

My first big endurance race on the single speed was held at Grand Targhee, which sits on the western side of the Tetons.  With my parents in town trying to escape the oppressive Houston heat, we made the race into a little 4-day vacation.  We arrived Friday afternoon and were welcomed with a gnarly thunderstorm that produced around a .5in of marble-sized hail...this was surely to make for great riding conditions Saturday morning!


The 100mi started around 6:45am and took us on a cat-track climb for a couple of miles to break up riders before hitting the singletrack.  Overall, the stout climbs were rewarded with amazing views of the Tetons followed by super long descents into flowy forests and aspen groves.  My first split was in 2:34, nearly 5 minutes behind the single speed leader, which was a pace I couldn’t handle for another 60 miles or so.  Wanting to finish somewhat strong, I decided to sit back and try to enjoy the riding, ultimately finishing in 3rd at 9:04. 



Grand Targhee is a cool little resort, and the organizers did awesome job w/ the course…I’ll definitely be back next year (hopefully a bit faster!).  Oh yeah, we also went over to Jackson the next day!




         

Friday, September 5, 2014

Packraft Southern Utah Pt 2

Rolling 4 deep (Tyler, Tad, Brian and Matt) the crew departed SLC at 4 PM sharp on Friday afternoon heading for somewhere in So Utah for a desert adventure.


After a short stop in Moab to finalize the plan, we arrived at 1:00 AM @ the Collins Creek TH. Most of our drive after Moab was in the dark, and our first view of our surroundings was accompanied by a beautiful sunrise.


A quick breakfast in the morning courtesy of 4-star chef Tyler Gentry and we started packing up for our 3-Day trip through the desert. Tad rolling up his raft to stow in his pack.


The crew at the Moki Dugway, where the road descends from the Pollywop Mesa to the Valley of the Gods. It was about a 1h45m shuttle to get to the Goosenecks SP area of the San Juan river. From here we would float some ~20 river miles to the convergence of Grand Gulch and the San Juan River.


Looking Down into the Valley of The Gods from the top of the Moki Dugway.


Goosenecks SP of the San Juan River. Very close to where we would start our Journey sans automobile.


Somewhere on the canyon rim shortly after leaving the hybrid vehicle somewhere on a red dirt desert road as far as it could take us Now we need to get to that river! Our route to the river was the Honaker Trail, a route carved down the steep canyon wall in the 1890s by gold prospectors. It has stood the test of time and is still in great shape today. For more info on the Honaker Trail check out this link:

 http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/04/23/1200853/-Dkos-Tour-Series-Hiking-The-Honaker-Trail-Down-To-The-Goosenecks#


Somehow below the rim but above the river. Tyler walks out onto the precipice.


After the descent to the river, we unload the boats and switch to paddling. Brian taking it easy and letting the river do the work.


 After a bit things get more interesting. Tad attacking the rapid with perfect pack rafting form. He's a natural.


Tyler floating by some Big Horn sheep, which I can finally say that I have seen!





Check out Tyler walking on quicksand!


Riverside camp - Day 1


Packraft tip #1: Fill your boat with chocolate milk water and let it sit overnight. All of the sediment will settle out and you can filter clear water for drinking.


Tyler dropping into the largest rapid on our trip "Government Rapid". We actually scouted this one. It had a mandatory R to L move in the middle with a nasty consequence if you could not make it across.




Shortly after Government Rapid the Type II fun began with 2+ miles of flat water paddling through sandbars into a strong headwind. Needless to say our undeveloped paddling muscles were spent by the time we finally made it to Grand Gulch late on the afternoon of Day II.


After a short break/rest at the convergence of the San Juan and Grand Gulch in the clear running water pools flowing from the gulch, it was back to hiking. The gulch offered many obstacles in the first several miles that made for fun navigation but slow travel.


Hiking through the gulch late in the afternoon of Day II.



Flash floods from who knows when have left the remains of massive cottonwood trees, like the one above that is trapped by two massive choke stones in the stream. The miles don't pass easily when you are always skirting obstacles like this.


Late on Day II we finally set up camp in Grand Gulch about 4 miles up from the river with 13 more miles in store.


The Shaw Arch in lower Grand Gulch early morning of Day III.


Team morale begins to drop during the second water pumping session of the day (another mud hole). With 1 pump, 4 people, and 100 degree desert heat, it was hard to keep enough water filtered. Especially when the filter needed cleaning after every half liter filtered due to the sediment. Lesson learned: bring more filters.


From thumb to index finger. It looked so easy over beers at the Brewery. No worries, its nothing a quick meal of rice-a-roni cooked in a sun baked nalgene with a packet of tuna split between 4 people can't fix (Lunch Day III).


Back at the Collins Creek TH @ 5:30 PM Day III. If it was not for the fortunate meeting with two hikers in the gulch, we would have missed the side canyon to exit to Collins Creek and would probably still be wandering around in the lower canyon country right now.


Shout out to Patio restaurant in Blanding, UT for their incredibly good drive-in style sandwiches and shakes. We were too late to make Milt's in Moab and we have no regrets. Milt's has nothing on Patio.

Back in SLC 2:30 AM for a sleepy Tuesday of work.


Sunday, July 20, 2014

King's Peak and Atwine Lake

 July 4th, 2014 Henry's Fork on the way to King's Peak (Utah's high point 13,528 ft.) From left to right Ava, Cole, Tyler, Katie, Dani, and Matt.


Views from our cozy camp site on Day 1, after hiking in to the base of the peak. Thunderstorms looming in the distance.


Beautiful skies for our peak ascent on Day 2.




Summit crew.




Tyler, Katie, Cole and Ava hiked the entire 13 miles back to the car on Day 2, while Dani and I stayed for some much needed hammock time (Thanks Karen! your gift is well  used)


Pictures from the previous weekend spent backpacking with Dirk and Steph on the southern slope of the Uintas at Atwine Lake.


Thanks to the guys at Western Fly Fishing for teaching us how to tie tippets to leaders and giving us some good fly tips. All that advice was good for a 6 fish dinner.


Dirk lounging and reading at our cozy camp-site on the edge of Atwine Lake. Aside from the hike in on the main trail we saw 0 people for an entire day.

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Packraft Southern Utah Pt. 1

We went packrafting with Kirsten and Zac over Memorial Day weekend.


Early into our hike.



If you have a second, check out the video that Zac put together.




We started high on this desert plateau.

Packrafts are new to us. They are awesome little inflatable rafts that pack down to the size of a rolled up sleeping bag and weigh less than 5 lbs. They are stable and easy to paddle and draw very little water, so they are good for running smaller rivers and creeks. We first heard of them this spring, and tried to rent them to use on the Green and Colorado Rivers while in Canyonlands NP back in April.



We descended an unknown canyon to the river that provided great route finding and some technical obstacles.


Zac set up the rappel and taught me how to make an ascender.


Dani and Kirsten, who along with Lindsey went mushroom hunting the previous weekend in Idaho, and found 100's of Morel mushrooms that we have been eating for the past week. Kirst even made our own dehydrated Morel mushroom dinners for our backpack.


Party rock.


Desert Flora



On our second night of the trip a massive thunderstorm rolled through while we were on the river. One rumble rolled through the river valley for at least 30 seconds, while the rain poured. After the lightening passed, we sought shelter under these cottonwoods, where we set up camp and got a small fire going for a soggy night of camping.



The view from camp in the morning with the sun back out. This dry creek bed started to run during the thunderstorm the night before, marking the first time I've seen a flash flood, where a dry river bed becomes a river in a matter of seconds.