Aug. 27th, 2009

furtech: (Default)
I'm getting ready for my Consolation Roadtrip* to Seattle and points north. Super low-budget trek to geek out in Seattle with [livejournal.com profile] calicougar, [livejournal.com profile] kvogel, [livejournal.com profile] okojosan and [livejournal.com profile] martes, plus various folks in the area.

House-sitter secured. It's good to have a shut-in friend who jumps at the chance to get out of his crowded house. All he needs is a high-speed connection and food. Since he's not a furry, I don't even have to hide the costumes! I just pack the 'fridge with cold-cuts and Diet Pepsi. Unfortunately, I do need to send my plants out to be watered (that's why he doesn't pet sit, either).

The dogs sleep nearby, blissfully unaware of the journey ahead. I'm looking forward to this: it isn't ComiCon or Eurofurence (-sigh-), but even on a budget there will be plenty of enrichment. This will also help to wash some unexpected and unpleasant personal-family business out of my head. Pike Place...forest hikes...wet dogs...food and friends. Best prescription in the world.

We're taking our time getting to Seattle: Calicougar wants to see friends in Portland and I don't want to travel the entire leg of that trip on Labor Day, so we're pushing out of the BArea on Sunday night instead. Stopping in Weed, CA. Yay.

I am borrowing a laptop from a friend in SJ, so hopefully I'll be able to post as I go, rather than do my usual photo-trip dump when I get back home.

Two adults, two border collies and all kinds of junk stuffed into a Prius for eleven-hundred miles. Woo! Adventure!




*Consolation for not making it to Eurofurence, SDCC, etc. I've started saving for next year, though!
furtech: (Default)
I'm getting ready for my Consolation Roadtrip* to Seattle and points north. Super low-budget trek to geek out in Seattle with [livejournal.com profile] calicougar, [livejournal.com profile] kvogel, [livejournal.com profile] okojosan and [livejournal.com profile] martes, plus various folks in the area.

House-sitter secured. It's good to have a shut-in friend who jumps at the chance to get out of his crowded house. All he needs is a high-speed connection and food. Since he's not a furry, I don't even have to hide the costumes! I just pack the 'fridge with cold-cuts and Diet Pepsi. Unfortunately, I do need to send my plants out to be watered (that's why he doesn't pet sit, either).

The dogs sleep nearby, blissfully unaware of the journey ahead. I'm looking forward to this: it isn't ComiCon or Eurofurence (-sigh-), but even on a budget there will be plenty of enrichment. This will also help to wash some unexpected and unpleasant personal-family business out of my head. Pike Place...forest hikes...wet dogs...food and friends. Best prescription in the world.

We're taking our time getting to Seattle: Calicougar wants to see friends in Portland and I don't want to travel the entire leg of that trip on Labor Day, so we're pushing out of the BArea on Sunday night instead. Stopping in Weed, CA. Yay.

I am borrowing a laptop from a friend in SJ, so hopefully I'll be able to post as I go, rather than do my usual photo-trip dump when I get back home.

Two adults, two border collies and all kinds of junk stuffed into a Prius for eleven-hundred miles. Woo! Adventure!




*Consolation for not making it to Eurofurence, SDCC, etc. I've started saving for next year, though!
furtech: (Default)
I'm getting ready for my Consolation Roadtrip* to Seattle and points north. Super low-budget trek to geek out in Seattle with [livejournal.com profile] calicougar, [livejournal.com profile] kvogel, [livejournal.com profile] okojosan and [livejournal.com profile] martes, plus various folks in the area.

House-sitter secured. It's good to have a shut-in friend who jumps at the chance to get out of his crowded house. All he needs is a high-speed connection and food. Since he's not a furry, I don't even have to hide the costumes! I just pack the 'fridge with cold-cuts and Diet Pepsi. Unfortunately, I do need to send my plants out to be watered (that's why he doesn't pet sit, either).

The dogs sleep nearby, blissfully unaware of the journey ahead. I'm looking forward to this: it isn't ComiCon or Eurofurence (-sigh-), but even on a budget there will be plenty of enrichment. This will also help to wash some unexpected and unpleasant personal-family business out of my head. Pike Place...forest hikes...wet dogs...food and friends. Best prescription in the world.

We're taking our time getting to Seattle: Calicougar wants to see friends in Portland and I don't want to travel the entire leg of that trip on Labor Day, so we're pushing out of the BArea on Sunday night instead. Stopping in Weed, CA. Yay.

I am borrowing a laptop from a friend in SJ, so hopefully I'll be able to post as I go, rather than do my usual photo-trip dump when I get back home.

Two adults, two border collies and all kinds of junk stuffed into a Prius for eleven-hundred miles. Woo! Adventure!




*Consolation for not making it to Eurofurence, SDCC, etc. I've started saving for next year, though!
furtech: (rainforeststump)
Crater Lake National Park is a place of spectacular vistas and crazy geological formations. The most famous is "Wizard Island"-- that pointy caldera in the middle of the lake. One thing I'd -really- like to see (but probably not on this trip) is The Old Man of Crater Lake.

The Old Man

oldman


"The Old Man" cannot compete with Wizard Island visually-- it's just a floating log. However, this log's history is colorful and intriguing in terms of "oddness". First, The Old Man floats vertically (probably because of rocks lodged in the root ball in its early days). Second, this log has been, well, "logged" for over a hundred years! Joseph S. Diller noted (and sketched) this log in the first published geology of Crater Lake. He noted that this was the same log he discovered floating in the lake on his first visit back in 1896. In 1938, movements of this log were documented by rangers (daily) for two years. This survey showed that the log travelled all over the lake during the course of a year.

In the 1938 issue of " Crater Lake Notes" (vol.XI no.3, Sept. 1938) ranger Wayne E. Kartchner and naturalist John E. Doerr wrote:

Time will tell how long The Old Man of the Lake can withstand wind and wave, and the battering to which its base is subjected when it approaches shore. Until it does succumb to the elements it will remain as evidence of the changing winds that stir Crater Lake. On the evening of September 30, when the last recorded observation was made, "The Old Man" was riding the waves about a half mile from the south shore, directly below Sinnott Memorial.

That was over 70 years ago. The Old Man still floats-- and is boyant enough for an adult to stand on. I would LOVE to see photos of what the base of the stump looks like-- but I haven't found anything online. You would think that after all these years someone would have snorkeled down and taken one.
furtech: (rainforeststump)
Crater Lake National Park is a place of spectacular vistas and crazy geological formations. The most famous is "Wizard Island"-- that pointy caldera in the middle of the lake. One thing I'd -really- like to see (but probably not on this trip) is The Old Man of Crater Lake.

The Old Man

oldman


"The Old Man" cannot compete with Wizard Island visually-- it's just a floating log. However, this log's history is colorful and intriguing in terms of "oddness". First, The Old Man floats vertically (probably because of rocks lodged in the root ball in its early days). Second, this log has been, well, "logged" for over a hundred years! Joseph S. Diller noted (and sketched) this log in the first published geology of Crater Lake. He noted that this was the same log he discovered floating in the lake on his first visit back in 1896. In 1938, movements of this log were documented by rangers (daily) for two years. This survey showed that the log travelled all over the lake during the course of a year.

In the 1938 issue of " Crater Lake Notes" (vol.XI no.3, Sept. 1938) ranger Wayne E. Kartchner and naturalist John E. Doerr wrote:

Time will tell how long The Old Man of the Lake can withstand wind and wave, and the battering to which its base is subjected when it approaches shore. Until it does succumb to the elements it will remain as evidence of the changing winds that stir Crater Lake. On the evening of September 30, when the last recorded observation was made, "The Old Man" was riding the waves about a half mile from the south shore, directly below Sinnott Memorial.

That was over 70 years ago. The Old Man still floats-- and is boyant enough for an adult to stand on. I would LOVE to see photos of what the base of the stump looks like-- but I haven't found anything online. You would think that after all these years someone would have snorkeled down and taken one.
furtech: (rainforeststump)
Crater Lake National Park is a place of spectacular vistas and crazy geological formations. The most famous is "Wizard Island"-- that pointy caldera in the middle of the lake. One thing I'd -really- like to see (but probably not on this trip) is The Old Man of Crater Lake.

The Old Man

oldman


"The Old Man" cannot compete with Wizard Island visually-- it's just a floating log. However, this log's history is colorful and intriguing in terms of "oddness". First, The Old Man floats vertically (probably because of rocks lodged in the root ball in its early days). Second, this log has been, well, "logged" for over a hundred years! Joseph S. Diller noted (and sketched) this log in the first published geology of Crater Lake. He noted that this was the same log he discovered floating in the lake on his first visit back in 1896. In 1938, movements of this log were documented by rangers (daily) for two years. This survey showed that the log travelled all over the lake during the course of a year.

In the 1938 issue of " Crater Lake Notes" (vol.XI no.3, Sept. 1938) ranger Wayne E. Kartchner and naturalist John E. Doerr wrote:

Time will tell how long The Old Man of the Lake can withstand wind and wave, and the battering to which its base is subjected when it approaches shore. Until it does succumb to the elements it will remain as evidence of the changing winds that stir Crater Lake. On the evening of September 30, when the last recorded observation was made, "The Old Man" was riding the waves about a half mile from the south shore, directly below Sinnott Memorial.

That was over 70 years ago. The Old Man still floats-- and is boyant enough for an adult to stand on. I would LOVE to see photos of what the base of the stump looks like-- but I haven't found anything online. You would think that after all these years someone would have snorkeled down and taken one.

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