Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Mt. Rainier Part Two

On Saturday, August 22, Nicole and I made our first serious hike on Mt. Rainier, in preparation for our hopeful assent to Camp Muir next July. We hiked up to Panorama Point.

The hike was a lot longer and more difficult then we had been expecting. "Hey, it's only a couple of miles", we told ourselves, not knowing enough to take the elevation change into account. So up we went, with our one bottle of water and some maps. As we began to assent past the treeline, we kept looking back to admire the view and congratulate ourselves on how far we had come. But then we started spotting hikers way up above us, like stratospherically higher then we were. "That's not where we're going to go, is it?", we asked ourselves. "No, I think those are the really hard-core people who are going all the way to Camp Muir. We'll be up there someday, but we're not going up nearly that high today."

Later on, as we looked down from those stratospherically high trails, we wondered how much further we really did have to go.

At one point, a nice older couple saw us refilling our water bottle in a stream, and warned us against the bacteria found in all mountain streams, and they gave us some of their water. We didn't tell them we had already downed one bottle's worth of stream water. Fortunately, we never got sick. We'll prepare better next time.

The trail up split in two; you could take the longer route, which we did, or you could take the shorter route which went over a snowfield. We did see several people hiking on the snowfield; they had ice axes and other equipment necessary for climbing on snow, and we saw them practicing self-arrest. We are looking forward to getting some of that equipment and practicing next year.

Finally, during one of our umteenth rest breaks, a woman coming back down the trail gave us encouragement: "Just a few more minutes and it'll all be over, I promise!" she told us. We were way up on what I called the moonscape by this point: no vegetation or animal life whatsoever, just flat, dead-looking rocks. The lady's encouragement gave us the boost to keep going, and sure enough, a few more minutes brought us to the peak, where the trail turns back down the mountain, or you can take an adjoining trail up to the snowfield and on up to Camp Muir.

We sat and ate our lunch, amongst many other hearty hikers. It had been a beautiful, clear day all morning; now, as we were the closest we'd ever been to Mt. Rainier, banks of fog were rolling in. It was actually pretty cool; the fog covered the peak, but banks of it would cover and uncover different areas of the mountain, giving us thrilling glimpses of the face and glaciers.

The ascent had taken us four hours; it took us one hour to get back down to Paradise. On our way down we passed more and more people hiking up, and we could tell by how they dressed that many were not prepared to go even as high as we did. We congratulated ourselves more on how much of the mountain we had conquered.

Until we got to the visitor's center, and looked at the big 3-d solid map of the mountain: we had travelled perhaps one quarter of the way from Paradise to Camp Muir. I have to admit, that was a little discouraging. However, even if we don't make our goal next summer, we are both adamant that it won't be from lack of trying. We will take every opportunity we can to hike the Skyline Trail again, maybe next time hiking on snow, and getting the gear we need. We will hike to Camp Muir.

And one day, we will hike to the summit.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Precision

Precision

I've come to think of myself as being cut from the same cloth as guys
like George Lucas, Steve Jobs, etc. A friend and fellow Star Wars fan
once observed to me that George Lucas is the kind of man who likes
things to be just so; he's very particular about the kinds of movies
he makes, what goes into his movies, and all the details. In part,
that's what makes him so successful, but it's also earned him a pot of
criticism. This, my friend went on to observe, is because the people
who are fans of his movies have similar drives for precision in what
they want, so that while Mr. Lucas wants the next installment of Star
Wars or Indiana Jones to be thus, the fans want it to be thus. And so
you get a bit of a power struggle between the creator and the consumers.

I think it's the same way with Steve Jobs: very detail-oriented, very
particular about what goes into his products and who he does business
with; while his "fans" want their Macs and iPhones to be the best
possible product they can get their hands on, and they want it right
now, and they want every feature in the book. And you have the same
power struggle as with Star Wars.

I think I am much the same way. I have very certain ideas about how i
want to live my life, and where I want to lead my family. Thus. I want
to build a geodesic dome for our home, seated at the center of it's
own mini-farm; I want our lives to be assisted by Apple computers and
phones, etc., etc. The music I listen to, the sports I enjoy, are all
part of Dan Bothwell, and that's the way I like it.

If you don't like Jar- Jar Binks, you can suck it up, or you can not
watch the movie; George Lucas isn't going to make the Jar-Jar Free
Edition just to satisfy some fickle fans.

Sent from my iPhone