Sunday, April 11, 2010

10 April, 2010 -- Airplane & bikes & burgers


Airplanes, motorcycles, burgers & brats, strawberries and
of course, the meeting. Beautiful spring day in Willow Springs!


Been getting ready for a trip to Sun 'n Fun in Florida.
What do we do there, you ask? Well, walk & talk & look at
... what else?... Airplanes! For a whole week!

Friday, April 2, 2010

2 April, 2010 -- Missed April Fool's Day

Every day is like that for me. I've either been fooled, or I missed it.

Magnolia trees all over town! There are daffodils, dandelions and all sorts of pollen-producers all of a sudden.

Sometimes it snows on these blossoms... it's not too late!
Today it's just going to rain a little, and blow like mad.
and it did.

I'm a cardinal. (April fool's).

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

30 March, 2010 -- Unexpected visitors

Lloyd called me... get to the airport, there's somebody here you need to see!
So, I left WM and hustled to the airport. There, an unknown camper on a pickup. Hmm, Colorado plates... hmm,

Old friends David from Colorado, and Don from Arkansas (formerly Colorado). David's on his rambling way to Florida for Sun 'n Fun Fly-in, in April. If you could clone Lloyd, this would be the result, right down to the uniform. Don's another story, he just sighs and laughs and rolls his blue eyes.
At the moment, David was phoning my sister in Grand Junction, hoping she'd recognize his phone number but hearing my voice. She was speechless. And the earth stopped turning!

I started remembering my trip to Glenwood Springs in September, 2007 for a class reunion, and hunted up these photos of a flight up to the top of the world. David has a Super Cub with 200 hp engine, big balloon tires for landing off-runway. (He showed us photos of the Cub on skiis at this same location on the Flattops Range at 10,000 feet. If I catch up with him at Sun 'n Fun, I'll beg one of his pictures, as I forgot to do that today).

This was after landing at the top.


We landed uphill toward the left, ending up in that treeline at the top of the ridge.

The pictures below are taking off from the meadow at 10,000 feet.
That ridge just beyond the pines trees at the bottom of the valley is home, where the Colorado River cuts through the Rockies.


See that clearing in the photo below, in between the struts? That's David's old runway at Possum Creek. Yes, it's uphill all the way.


Below, that's David's current 3-Mile International runway. See that little white spot? That's a storage trailer, and his runway is beyond that white spot. That's Mount Sopris in the distance, landmark for the area, with Aspen just around the bend and beyond. It's called 3-Mile because it's 3 miles from the Colorado River to the point where it takes off uphill. There's a 4-Mile Road on farther, but it just keeps going and going until it reaches Sunlight Ski Area, about 12 miles later.

This is 3-Mile International Runway. We couldn't land because the cattle wouldn't move off their grazing patch. So we went on back to civilization and the pancake breakfast at Glenwood. (Yes, that's a runway).


Glenwood Springs Airport with the Roaring Fork River winding past both ends. The powers that be would like to have that land for development, but there are a few stubborn folks who won't let it be closed. The closest airports in the area are Aspen, which is in an even tighter mountain squeeze than this one 40 miles south, Rifle 30 miles west down the Colorado River canyon to the left, and Eagle 25 miles to the right up the canyon to the east toward Vail, Loveland Pass and Denver 180 miles away.

Cousins Jody and Mike from Las Vegas flew in to Glenwood and gave me my first small airplane ride out of Glenwood Airport. I was hooked! Fonda and Grant also had their first plane rides, that was back in late 70s.


When I moved to Missouri, they told me I was in the Ozark Mountains. So naturally I asked, "Mountains? Uh, where?"
This is Independence Pass, out of Aspen. "It doesn't look like that here", I said. "Well, these are the "old" mountains." Ok, yeah, well...

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

23 March, 2010 -- Big Dogs & a Pup

Five Cobras went by yesterday... they are the really big dogs!

They thum-thum-thummed by while Ron was out exercising big dog Black Bart.

After an afternoon chasing that hundred dollar hamburger,
Ron flew his new puppy on back to Douglas County.

Monday, March 22, 2010

19 March, 2010 -- Shakespeare on stage

Cam was one of the narrators in his fourth grade class' Shakespeare production in Jefferson City.


Yup, fourth graders doing Shakespeare.
Adjusting Cam's costume.
Signing the souvenir program.
Grant filmed from the balcony, Ralph and I sat in the front row, so we did manage to get a few pictures.

Dev and SammieJ and Kelly were in Jackson, Mississippi for the
Sweet Potato Queens festival. Sort of like Mardi Gras on hormones!

Sunday we went caching in the cold and wind and rain.
This is the planning stage of the puzzle... got to figure out
some code numbers first...

Aha, found it! Sort through it in the car, out of the wind!

After putting that cache back in its hidey hole, we go looking for another one.
Grant decided to take a shortcut through the ball park.
Nah, I don't think so.


Ralph & Cam with his geo-treasure, a geo-monkey!

Nah, I don't think so.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

17 March, 2010 -- Too much coffee?

Do you think I've been drinking too much coffee?

Trying to hook up stuff so's I can record from old
cassette tapes on to cds. AAaargh. I've done it before,
just can't remember HOW.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

16 March, 2010 -- Woof

I heard ferocious barking and protective growling as I walked past this ginormous semi-truck in the parking lot at WM this afternoon.

Guard dogs. Grr-oof.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

14 March, 2010 -- That's my story and I'm stickin' to it

A little background:
Geocaching is a worldwide treasure hunt, using an internet site to get position information, gps units to find those position locations, and using common sense and puzzlemania gray matter to find little hidden pots-o-gold (trinkets, mostly). In the heat of racking up impressive status for being the First To Find a cache when it goes public, geocachers will stop at nothing to get there and put their geocaching "name" at the top of the logbook. It's one of the most friendly competitive games in the world, open to anyone, especially kids, (and folks with nothing else to do).

Well, late last night, a cache that I had hidden got the blessing of the online reviewer, and Bingo, it's on the geocaching.com site and the wolves start to hunt!

This is the site of the cache in this story; off the 4-lane between towns, just out in the boonies. The container is camouflaged with duct tape and hidden in the ground clutter beneath one of these trees.


The name of the cache is "Treeck... Trock... Which is it?", and that's a "muggle" or in this case a "moo-gle". Muggles are "those other ones, those who don't KNOW". They come up to you and ask "What're ya DOING?". Sometimes you just can't explain it.

And here's the great prize! The treasures are mostly for the kids, but the logbook is the prize for the older hunters. Cache finders can take an item and replace it with another item, or not; or trade a numbered Travel Bug Dog Tag item or souvenir coin that moves from cache to cache and is trackable online.
This is a large cache; some of them are just a little bullet shaped containers that have a rolled-up paper for signing, and you have to bring your own pen. They are usually really difficult to find. I found one at a major retailer in West Plains attached to a tree limb with a twist tie. There's one in Mtn. Grove that I haven't found yet after 6 months of searching.
This cache is an easy big one.


Like I said, at about 11:30 p.m. last night, the great cache reviewer in the sky published my cache and it became public. One of these guys is from Mtn. Grove, and one is from Houston. I've never met them, but they have both found other caches in Mtn. Grove that I've put out.

I'll let them tell the rest of this story. This posting was on the geocache site this morning (daylight savings time rolled in at 2 a.m.):

xring found Treeck... Trock... Which is it? (Traditional Cache)

This one started off with a BIG BIG LAUGH, I was all most to GZ at 2:30 in the morning (new time) and this car passed me and I noticed the license plates said SESKDS and I new who that was, who would have ever guessed that two geocachers would get to a cache in the middle of the night at the same time. So we found the cache in the cold and rain and shared the FTF. That was about the most fun cache I had been on in awhile. Thanks guys for making this find so much fun!!! We must be nuts for getting out at this time of the night in the cold and rain and driving 35 plus miles one way, just to get that FTF. That's what makes this GeoCaching game so much fun, stories just like this one.
TFTC TNLN SL xring

____________________________________

This morning, another posting popped up on the site:

seskds found Treeck... Trock... Which is it? (Traditional Cache)

WOW what a night to pull up to GZ the same time as my bud XRING . We had a good laugh talked some 2:30am cold and raining and we went for the FTF together.This was also my most expensive trip so far on a cache. When i got home i could not find my Garmin 60 CSX
i guess l left it on the trunk of the car. Well back to GZ and yup there it was in the middle of the road smashed so i took a picture of it and put in on the cache page. Thanks XRING for helping with this one.

So, is the game worth all that expense? You betcha!

FTF = first to find

TFTC = Thanks for the cache

GZ = ground zero

TNLN = took nothing, left nothing

SL = signed log

http://www.geocaching.com/seek/cache_details.aspx?guid=f48afe9a-7d1e-4d9f-90cd-f76eec8b5e43