Lugs, Chains, and Paddle Blades

With these three modes we explore the natural world around us. The lugs of our shoes, the chains of our bikes, and the blades of our paddlecraft.

This is our archive of amateur exploration.

Enjoy!

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

The MooShoo Canoe Crew

Deep in the remote woods of Maryland's Green Ridge State Forest, a campfire conversation got out of hand last weekend. It went something like this.

   "Jeremy's turning 37. That's prime. And, I'm prime, too."

   "Really? Does that happen often? Will you ever both be prime at the same time again?"
Sunset on the Po

   "Well, there are an infinite number of twin primes, or prime numbers that are two apart. But we're eight years apart; I don't know how many primes are eight apart."

   "Let's see. The primes are 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 37. So, Beth is the 11th prime and Jeremy is the 13th."

   "OH MY GOD 11 and 13 are twin primes!"

Miles from civilization on a finger-shaped landmass created by a sharp bend in the Potomac River, our group, affectionately dubbed the MooShoo Canoe Crew (hereafter, the Crew), chatted over a crackling fire. The conversations weren't always as riveting as the one above, but this one took place early on Friday evening; we were just getting warmed up.
A Happy Moment

The Crew graciously agreed to spend both nights of their canoe camping trip at the midpoint of their river route, which added a layer of logistics but in the end was a good thing for everybody. Also because of this, Molly and I were able to camp for two nights with the Crew, and our first attempt of 2011 at camping with Indie (2.5 years old) and Otis (turned 1 last Wednesday) was a successful one. Looking back on it, we agree that the highs outnumbered the lows, and so it averaged out to a good trip.

I never could have imagined the amount of stuff that a couple of minimalists would pack to drive 3 hours from home to stay two nights in a tent. We were in charge of exactly one-half of one meal for the group of 12 adults, 2 kids, and 2 dogs, so we didn't have to pack a lot of food. Still, we somehow looked like the caterers and outfitters all in one vehicle. Two pak n play portable cribs, sleeping mats, a handful of blankets, a tent large enough to hold those pak n plays and Molly and me, a cooler, bikes, a kid trailer, a portable DVD player, a stroller, a baby chair, a weekend's worth of clothes and diaper changing gear,  snacks and dry food, camp chairs, and a 7 gallon jug of Wilkinsburg-Penn Joint's finest somehow fit inside, on top, and behind the car (on my redneck trailer-hitch cargo rack, uh-huh). The Griswald's would have been proud. I even was able to see out the back window, though most of the time I had the rear view mirror tilted to I could see the kids in the back seat.
One-handed campsite cooking

Camping with kids is hard and arguably not worth it. To pull it off, we had to have lots of options for activities. At any given time we needed to be able to choose from one of several viable, simple options. We went on a bike ride (1/2 hour of it spent crying) and swam in the Potomac at the boat ramp (no crying). We jogged on a nearby trail (separately, alone). We looked for turtles. We collected sticks. We collected rocks. We cooked and we ate.We followed an owl. We changed a ton of diapers. We spent every moment in a state of prevention. We prevented falls, drowning, sunburn, exposure, and choking. Then, we prevented kids from getting hit by a truck, eye pokes, and dehydration. We prevented milk from spoiling and tried to prevent the kids from being spoiled.
The MooShoo Men

At the end of the day, our friends arrived after spending six hours slowly floating down the Potomac. They complained that they were exhausted. We laughed with jealousy. Then, our exhausted friends volunteered to hang out with our kids while Molly and I swam at dusk. The sky mellowed to a pale pink, the still water reflected it and the forest around it, and Molly uttered more than one time, "This is Heaven."

The next morning, in a valiant attempt to keep our average in the positive zone, we ate, packed and hit the road.

Git r dun

* Note: For one thing, 31 was neglected in our list of primes. But also, I found out later that Beth is 29, not 31. Either way, the conversation doesn't change much (does it?)

Monday, July 4, 2011

via Ferrata

Gripping
I know the 1-inch diameter rung of stainless steel I grip is bolted 6 inches deep, and that combined with the safety cable the system in place could hold more than 20 times my body weight, but I'm still paralyzed with fear. In fact, I'm shaking from it, even though I've been here at least 3 times before, gripping the same rung bolted to the same rock, hooked into the same cable. Looking around, I can see that nothing has changed about this place since the last time I was here. So, why in the world am I so scared that I must consciously focus on slowing my breathing in order to just go on?

 (breeeeeeathe in). . . (breeeeeeath out) . . .

After taking some time to get my wits about me, I force myself to marvel at what's around me. I'm lashed to a rock fin 20 feet wide and hundreds of vertical feet into the West Virginia sky. It's breathtaking (indeed; it's taken mine). Just then, a small bird floats along, takes a little rest on a narrow rock ledge, toddles around a bit, and then swoops away. "Little bastard," I think, because that bird has wings and can just hop off this rock and soar away. No fear whatsoever; the little sonofabitch has no idea what I'm going through!

Molly and Me
It's because we don't have wings that the via Ferrata, a non-climbing way to experience rock climbing, (and the sport of rock climbing itself) exists in the first place, and has attracted me, Molly, and four of our friends on a whirlwind mountain tour.

The idea started in our living room after a group dinner we hosted (steak, if I remember correctly). Molly and I were talking about the "old times," which were oddly only a few years ago, before kids came along, and all the adventures we used to take. Boating, backpacking, camping, and skiing took us to beautiful places on a weekly basis. It was then that we came up with the idea: let's see what we can squeeze into 36 hours while the kiddos do a slumber party with their grandparents. We'd rise to the challenge and the kids won't even have the time to miss us!

Months later, we sat at the the Front Porch restaurant in Seneca Rocks, WV, relaxing with the satisfaction of pulling it off. All we had left was the drive home. Our climbing guide for the day, Beau (dacious), pointed out climbing routes on the famous crag, stealing some of our pizza while we gazed across the North Fork valley.

The Front Porch is this way
It wasn't all relaxation. Nelson Rock's via Ferrata scared two members of our party into temporarily calling it quits. In both cases, however, a Hulk Hogan-esque resurgence from near submission to a successful climb of the entire course followed their breakdowns. The 4-hour trip through the course dished out emotional anguish equally as exhausting as the physical demand. The sun beat down on us, quickly draining us as we scampered up the rock, one rung at a time. We emerged at the top dehydrated, famished, sunburned, and grinning.

Our reward for the climb: a West Virginia Bath in the creek at the base of Nelson Rocks. In roughly 36 hours we packed it all into a 350 mile round trip.
Git r dun!