Archive for the ‘Hiking’ Category

Hiking Big Bend

Tuesday, February 21st, 2006

Everything at Big Bend seemed to be destined to go wrong, then be put right. I broke a tent pole, but fixed it with duct tape. My camera started eating batteries, but I brought 28. I forgot to change the ISO from 320, but this gave my pictures a grainy, 50’s-National-Geographic-Park-Feature vibe. I didn’t have the password to Paul’s computer, but called him from the top of Emory Peak to get it.

My plan was to camp out in the basin in the center of the Chisos Mountains, in the center of the park, do some day hikes from the central basin to some of the sights, and also to check out the Rio Grande.

I got to the park about 5p on Friday, and after a discouraging hike where I learned my camera was only taking twenty pictures on a set of batteries, I broke a tent pole and slept in my car the first night there. I don’t want to talk any more about that day.

Friday night was clear and cold, but I stayed pretty warm in my bag. From the window of my car I could see more stars in the sky than I’d ever seen before. I was awakened early in the morning by a light on my face, and opened my eyes to see a moon so bright it was hard to look directly at. I tried to go back to sleep, but ended up playing Tokobot in my bag until it was time to get up. It wasn’t exactly a back-to-nature trip, at least not while it was dark.

The next morning I woke up early and learned you can buy a damned good buffet breakfast from the restaurant at the lodge for seven bucks. I decided to make for Emory peak, and take it easy the first day. It wasn’t as easy as it should have been, but I got there–the highest point in the park, and the second-highest in Texas, at 7825 feet. The lodge was at 5400 feet, so the trail, about four and half miles long, climbed about 2400 feet. The view from the top was peace-inducing. I stayed as long as I could, and then headed back for the bottom.

I hurt all over by the time I got back to the lodge, so I washed down a Big Bend Burger with a Dos Equis at the lodge. It cost four dollars, same as the other Mexican and Texan (Shiner and Lone Star) beers there, while “American” beers, mostly Anheuser-Busch crap plus Fat Tire, were three. I thought this was funny. Of course, most of the people there weren’t from Texas, so it made a certain kind of sense.

I pitched my tent, then spent the next few hours in my car watching Gantz. It seemed a little lame to sit around in the park watching DVDs on a lap top, but if I went to bed when it got dark (8p), then I’d just wake up at four with nothing to do for hours on end. It got cold that night. Really cold. I don’t know how cold, but cold enough I always took the smallest possible sip of water, because anything more would give me chills. My bag was still pretty comfy, as long as I bundled up inside it.

The next morning I hit up the buffet again (fuck backpacking stoves when there’s a restaurant right up the hill), then went down to the hot springs on the Rio Grande. This is a crazy, magical place. There’s a little sand trail that winds between a cliff and sea of river cane on the bank of the Rio Grande until it comes to a building foundation with about two feet of wall left on each side. A hole in the bottom of the foundation lets in 105F spring water, which fills up the foundation until it spills over the lowest corner into the Rio Grande, which runs agains the outside of the foundation and was, when I was there, a few inches below the top of the wall, 12 feet deep and about 67F. It felt like Barton Springs. I’d spent a day and a half sweating my ass off in the Chisos, and this was about my idea of paradise. I stayed there for hours, finally going for a short hike in the desert to the east, then heading out to Boquillas canyon at the southeast corner of the park, where Mexicans from Boquillas set their goods on the American shore, with cups to hold payment and price lists held down with rocks, then wade across at night to collect the money. They hang out in lean-tos on the Mexican bank, I guess so that anybody who’d be cheap enough to cheat them will have to look at the people they’re fucking over while they do it.

That night in mountains was a lot warmer than the one before. I watched Suicide Club before I went to sleep. I understood it less then than I understand it now, but it’s still a very strange movie. I got up the next morning and hiked out to the Window, a large canyon that drains most of the basin and ends in a high pour-off that looks into the Mexican desert. By the time I got back up to the lodge parking lot, I was ready to get out of there. On the way out I stopped by a gas station, and a Schwan’s truck pulled up. Those bastards deliver everywhere.

I really didn’t like the pictures too much when I first got them, and I’m still not real happy, but for the purposes of telling a story, rather than as art for its own sake, they’ll do. They’re all pretty heavily edited to make them less harsh on the eyes.

Big Bend

Thursday, February 2nd, 2006

I’m going to Big Bend, probably Feb 17-19. I would go ahead and make a reservation, but I didn’t get my new check card in yet. :( It’s okay, I think there may still be a few available.

Anyway, it’s probably going to be camping in tents at a camp site with amenities. Max two cars, 8 people. 2 tents. Sleeping bags. I’ve got one tent. I gotta get a sleeping bag.

So far there’s two or maybe three people. If you wanna go let me know. I’m gonna hike and take pictures the whole time, prolly. I’ve never been to Big Bend.

-k. ~_~

Squirrels!

Monday, August 8th, 2005

There’s a bunch of really funny stories behind these pics of some squirrels and their nuts, but I’m not telling you any of ‘em. Stay tuned for some bad ass retouched photos coming up in the next coupla days. (As if it needed to be said, these photos are a little retouched as well, as are quite a few of the ones I post here).

Snake Attack!

Sunday, July 31st, 2005

I was attacked by a snake out at Scottish Woods today. ‘Attacked’ might be too strong a word. It was more sort of him trying to hide under a rock while I laid next to it waiting for him to come up for air so I could snap his picture. Some anonymous guy pointed him out to me (thanks anonymous guy!), but I was only able to get two pictures that were even halfway decent. They’re in the newest gallery, at the end. There’s also some pics from downtown, a picture of a soft shell turtle that was one of many that this guy with a facemask and snorkel caught by hand (I gotta try that next time I’m out there). Some stuff from downtown, too. I’m starting to wonder if my camera’s fucked up, as some shots that I know were in focus in the viewfinder didn’t end up that way, and there is some vignetting at the corners at full telephoto. I’ll have to have it looked at or something. :(

Flowers. Yep, more flowers. Also some geese, and a bunch of other stuff.

Sunday, July 3rd, 2005

Today I took the E-10 down the hike and bike trail around Town Lake, to Zilker and the Botanical Gardens. Man, that place is hard to take pictures of, at least the bits in the Japanese gardens. The problem is that you’ve got a really high dynamic range–white rocks sitting in the sun, right next to shady bits with hardly any light at all.Still, I got some pretty good pictures.

A lot of the pictures are of flowers. Flowers and bees. I feel kind of bad taking so many picture of flowers, because it’s kind of cheating–it’s hard to take an ugly picture of a flower, and pretty easy to take a good looking one. Still, my newer ones are better. And I like flowers a lot, so there.

There’s also some pictures of these hard core geese that tried to shake me down for my bread crumbs underneath a bridge. They honked and they hissed, but I held firm, and so my belly is full now, and they’re hungry.

I got a few pictures of the gardens itself, a dragonfly, and some random other stuff. More worth checking out than the last coupla sets, that’s for sure.

Man, this would have been a crap weekend if it wasn’t so much fun.

Monday, June 27th, 2005

Sunday I decided I was going to go hike the Greenbelt again, as I hadn’t done it in quite some time, and not at all since I got my E-10. I started out at Westgate again, and this time, having a better sense of location, discovered that there is in fact a trail that takes you all the way to the greenbelt proper in about 18 minutes.

I then hiked around a bit and after quite a bit of hemmng and hawing decided to head upstream to Scottish Woods trail and see if I could find any water. As you can tell from the pictures, it took a good long while to find any. Sculpture falls has, at long last, pretty much dried up. Even the most upstream of the falls at Scottish Woods wasn’t flowing, although the next one downstream was, and had a pool of incredibly refreshing water behind it. I had to get out as soon as I got in, though, to go meet various TAMU alumni for a trip out to lake Travis, and proceeded to make a hellacious uphill hike where I managed to give my camera a nasty knock that resulted in it acting a bit goofy ever since.

This made me very, very, very, very, very, very sad, especially as I was at the time under the impression that it had simply stopped working. I found out later that I can get it to work again by tilting it 30 degrees to the right and giving it a sharp whack on the right side of the case.

Despite my unhappiness over this, I had a helluva time out on the lake, but then was helping to load up my buddy Dave’s boat slipped and fell into the water with my brand new cell phone in my pocket, rendering it inoperable as well.

This also did not really improve my mood. It’s all seemed to work out in the end, though, as after a day of drying out, my cell phone is back in working order, and my camera was in working enough order that I was able to get some pretty nice pictures from the UT campus after work today.

And, to be fair, I did have a good time all around, so I guess it’s a wash.

More news: I can’t post all the pictures I want to this site that convey a story of the places I visited and things I saw, without diluting the quality of the pictures in terms of charting my progress in the act of taking them. So, I’m going to break out my best pics to another site, il.lusion.org, just about my photography. Height of arrogance, I know, but I’m an arrogant bastard, so there it is.

I’m working on some gallery-making software to make this possible and easy. It’s pretty early on, but I’m calling it, completely inappropriately, Galleria. I’ll give it a site when I get it at least semi-finished.

This is the last day…

Monday, June 13th, 2005

…of my three day weekend. I’ve had one hell of a time so far. Yesterday morning I ate breakfast at lunch at Juan in a Million on Ceasar Chavez a few blocks east of I-35. I’d never been there before, but I had three damned good bacon, potato, egg, and cheese breakfast tacos for $2.70, and you can bet I’ll be going there again.

After I ate I had Mark drop me off at the MoPac access, where I intended to hike as far upstream as I could. Twin falls has turned into a mud puddle, just completely gone. Sculpture is drier than I’ve seen it before, but still there and still flowing, as is the spring-fed pool just downstream.

I managed to splash my camera with water or something while at Sculpture, putting it out of commission for the rest of the day, so I didn’t get any pictures of the kamikaze sunfish that attacked my legs to protect its younguns, or the pair of baby armadillos I found way further west, or the big grass snake I almost stepped on at the end of the day. Doesn’t matter–I saw them.

About half an hour upstream of Sculpture I ran into a small natural falls with a long, deep pool on the upstream side, and a lot of rocks bathed in shallow running water on the downstream side. It was a really nice place, although it doesn’t support nearly as much of a “people load” as the two big falls downstream.

About 5 minutes upstream of that I found a semi-synthetic fall, big rocks with concrete poured into the gaps to make a big, straight, two-tiered fall with a fairly deep pool at the bottom. Both of these are pretty much straight across from Scottish Woods Trail.

I kept going upstream until a fair bit after the trail on the north side ran out, and I was basically just fighting my way cross-country. At some point this became untenable and I just started walking in the creek, which was by this point knee-deep and flat-bottomed anyway. A bit later on it started to get deep again, so I made my way to the south bank and discovered that there was trail on that side, too. I followed that trail all the way up to Lost Creek Blvd, and then followed it, uphill all the way, to 360. I later got a look at a map and found out that this was, to put it charitably, the long way ’round.

That was about it, but it was hella fun.

My second trip to Pine Mountain

Saturday, June 11th, 2005

I chose the goodish shots from my second trip up Pine Mountain at Big Basin, and am putting them in a gallery, along with a few others from the same trip in October of 2001, mostly airport and aerial photography from the trip home.

These shots, while far from perfect, are orders of magnitude better than the first shots, reflecting my emerging interest in composition, somewhat, but mostly just getting more used to the camera, and getting better at getting halfway decent exposures in an inherently difficult lighting environment.

More pics from Big Basin

Friday, June 10th, 2005

I went to see Mr. and Mrs. Smith earlier tonight. It was a hoot. I highly recommend it. I’ve often not been a huge fan of Mr. Liman’s fast-cutting action-shooting style, but it works well in this sort of comedy context. The script is simple, but funny, and the movie, by way of being a comedy, manages to parody action flicks without ever falling out of love with them.

As an exercise, I also edited pics of another trip to Big Basin, this time to Pine Mountain, a 2.5-mile trek up some 800 or 900 feet.

Editing these pictures is like taking a step into the wayback machine. On the one hand, I remember these pictures looking a lot better, and I’m not sure whether Picasa is making them look like crap, or I just have a more discerning eye. Time will tell.

Addendum: I went back and checked the original pictures in the original software, and they just kind of sucked. My later pictures aren’t always great, but I do a lot of stuff instinctively now that I didn’t used to do at all, and generally have less problems with wrong exposures, as well.

My luck, it continues.

Thursday, June 9th, 2005

Yeah, so as soon as I bought that camera my phone stopped charging. This means that if I’m lucky my phone will be out of commission for a few days while I mail-order a new charger (nobody in town appears to have a charger for my phone), and worst case scenario I’ll blow money on the charger and then the phone still won’t charge. In that case it’ll be at least a week before I can get a new phone, having spent all of my money on a camera. *sigh*.

I used up about the last of my sick leave today, as I have, inexplicably, a cold or something like it. !#$%!^.

Well, anyway, I took the opportunity to select a few of the better pics from my hike to Berry Creek Falls out in Big Basin back in 2001, so if you like pictures, like these.

I figure that from now on, whenever I go hiking, I should take these things in my pack:

  • First aid kit containing – Ibuprofen, Band-aids, bandage pads, Neosporin, hydrocortisone, gauze, cloth tape, and a razor blade
  • Sunblock
  • Camera with all my memory cards and extra batteries
  • Cell phone
  • 10-liter dry bag to put electronics and clothes in
  • 2 quarts of water
  • At least one extra pair of shoes, amphibious ones if the ones I’m wearing aren’t
  • A non-perishable snack
  • A towel

I only mention this because I forgot to take half this stuff the other day and suffered greatly for it. If anybody can think of anything I should add to this list, let me know.