Winding Stairs

Along the Winding Stairs Trail (click image for slideshow)

I have a new favorite trail in Arkansas as of today – the Winding Stairs Trail at the Albert Pike Recreation Area 60 miles west of Hot Springs.  It is a lovely trail, although the nearby camping areas are shuttered after many tragic deaths there earlier this year.

Yesterday was our fall inservice day.  Afterwards I checked on a friend in Tulsa who had just been released from the hospital and then drove on to Ft. Smith, where I spent the night at the low-budget Baymont Inn, listening to the nearby roar of trucks down I-540.  This morning began with the typical waffles and cereal at the inn, and then I asked Trixie the GPS app to steer me to Albert Pike RA.

True to her name, Trixie decided we should not go the obvious route down I-540/US 71, but instead steered me eastward to the faster highways in Oklahoma.  Since I wanted to hit the trail as early as possible, I consented to travel yet again through Poteau and Heavener before turning back east in the Ouachita Mountains.

Then Trixie played another game, choosing to lead me on the north side of the forest, rather than looping around to the south.  I later discovered that meant that I had exchanged paved highways all the way to Albert Pike RA for highways followed by a 12-mile drive down a gravel one-lane forest road to my destination.  I truly did not mind, enjoying the backwoods and being somewhat startled when asphalt returned as I entered Albert Pike.

Much of it was roped off since the Forest Service has closed the campgrounds after the terrible flash flood of the early hours of June 11, 2010.  The flood rapidly submerged the campground under 23 feet of water and, although dozens of campers were rescued, about 20 lost their lives.  Understandably the area is now only a day use facility.

I crossed the Little Missouri River and drove on a rough gravel road up over a mountain to reach the trailhead, where I found two other vehicles and set out on the hike.

Soon I reached Blaylock Creek, where a wooden footbridge was swept away in a past flood, leaving only a timber piling out on a bar in the middle of the creek, next to an enormous boulder.  With the help of my trekking poles I balanced on rocks out to the bar, finding a shred of blue material stuck to it which served as a sad reminder of how workers found bodies and shredded clothing up in the trees above the Little Missouri after the recent flood.

I shook off the mood and enjoyed the pretty rippling water, settling down to eat a turkey sandwich I had bought back in Ft. Smith.  Soon a deer forded the creek upstream of me, and then a high school age couple forded the creek by me, saying they were enjoying a day off from school.  So was I, and I was glad to see some people, although I would not see another soul for the rest of the five-hour 8.5-mile trek.

It wasn’t hard to spot the recent flood damage, including some uprooted trees beside the trail.  But their surviving brethren, towering above me and around me, lifted my spirits.  No such luck for the autumn leaves, however, which cascaded down around me whenever a gust blew.  No flowers had made it this far into October, although I did spy some berries.

I passed by a towering triple-trunk tree which sported lovers’ initials.  Then the trail wound down to the Little Missouri River, offering a nice view of a nearby mountain with its rock ridges.  This area of the riverbed was peppered with boulders and colorful rock formations, and I posed for a self-portrait.

The trail rapidly ascended to a bluffline, along which I spotted two turtles out in the middle of the river far below, but my superzoom camera brought them closer.  Then the trail slowly descended back to the riverbed, where I saw leaves running the tiny rapids just upstream of where I would finally have to ford the Little Missouri.

Flood damage made it hard to follow the trail here, and on the first pass I missed the double blaze indicating the ford, traipsing on to where a side stream had chiseled out the rock.  But soon the trail faded away and I realized I had missed the ford, and backtracked.  I wandered along the shore, trying to find a spot where a series of rocks and much support from my trekking poles might allow me to avoid dunking my feet.  I finally picked a spot and managed to fully immerse my left foot, although on the return journey I improved and stayed completely dry.  Thankfully it was a warm sunny day and my boot and sock dried rapidly.

This portion of the river was particularly beautiful, with a large bluff on one side and small falls in the riverbed and a panoramic view upstream.  Further downstream it was still quite beautiful and panoramic.  Then a very pretty side creek called Raven Branch joined the river near some large formations.  On my return trip I ventured up this rocky creek, finding a wonderfully cool and scenic fall and pool where I lounged for a bit.  I was tempted to follow the example of a nearby tree and take a sip and join its leaves in the whirlpool.

The trail ascended to a deep moss-covered overhang and then joined the Viles Branch Equestrian Trail.  Part of this area was particularly flood-ravaged, requiring extensive clearing since last June.  Several armadillos were grubbing around the area.

The trail wound onward, finally ending at Musgrove Hole, where I climbed to a rope tree swing.  Having never succeeded with the hanging rope in junior high gym class, I did not actually try to use it.  I wandered along the rocky south shore of Musgrove Hole and came across the first all-terrain-vehicle tracks of the hike.  Sure enough, an ATV road lead away south.

In my wanderings I’d stretched a 3.6 mile hike to five miles.  It was time to reverse course and, although I prefer loop trails, it was nice to review all of the sites along the Winding Stairs Trail.  When I reached my car it was alone at the trailhead, having the spent the time gathering a leaf collection.

After a quick torso wash and changing my shirt, socks, and shoes, I drove 1.5 hours east to Hot Springs and checked into my tiny room at the old Park Hotel across the street from the national park’s Grand Promenade.  I was beat, so I took advantage of their 20% entree discount at the Angels in the Park Italian restaurant off the lobby.  Still thirsty after dinner and finding the hotel’s vending machine out of service, I strolled downtown to buy a Sprite and then returned to my room for hours of photo editing, posting, and blogging.  I interrupted the effort with a trip to my room’s tiny shower, which was just as cramped and feature-free as the one in my parent’s one-bedroom vacation home off Table Rock Lake when I was growing up.  Some memories need not be revived.

Tomorrow I’ll probably start with a trip to a McDonald’s for breakfast and spend the day hiking at Lake Ouachita.

Click here for a photo slideshow from today’s hike.

See the video from today’s hike.

Next hike: Looping at Lake Ouachita ->


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A New HDTV

Time for another installment of my HDTV saga. At the start of 2008 I cancelled my cable TV subscription and purchased a Tivo DVR so that I could watch and record over-the-air HDTV broadcasts on my 2003 30” CRT HDTV. Augmented by my original Apple TV, that satisfied my video needs quite handily. In addition to watching live and recorded TV broadcasts on the Tivo, I have rented and purchased movies and some television shows using the Apple TV, watched YouTube videos on the Apple TV, rented TV shows via Amazon Video on Demand on the Tivo, and used the Tivo to watch streaming Netflix movies. For years I was on a 3, 4, or even 5 disc-at-a-time plan on Netflix. But having seen most of the classic movies I was interested in, I found myself going weeks without touching a Netflix disc. So I finally dropped down to the one-disc-at-a-time Netflix plan that still provides unlimited streaming.

My three-year service contract on the Tivo expires in January, and six weeks ago I was speculating about whether or not the Google TV might allow me to let that go too. What I’ve seen of Logitech’s Revue Google TV box has not impressed me, however. If I keep the Tivo going, I’ll either have to pay up front for a 1, 2, or 3-year service contract or incur a $13/month charge. My old HDTV lacked a digital tuner and HDMI digital inputs, so the Tivo has been crucial to watching the impressive over-the-air HDTV signals from Tulsa. But now I find myself almost exclusively watching podcasts and a few episodes of The Venture Bros. on my Apple TV, and hardly ever using the Tivo except for some Netflix streaming movies.

So when I saw a good deal on a Sony 40” LCD HDTV at Sam’s Warehouse a few weeks ago, I bought it. The new box has plenty of HDMI digital inputs, has VGA and mini-jack audio inputs for a computer, and a tuner for over-the-air digital broadcasts. I bought a WiFi add-on module for it, which allows me to access video from YouTube, Netflix, and Amazon and listen to Pandora internet radio. So the only thing left for the Tivo to do is record over-the-air digital broadcasts, which isn’t worth much to me since I watch so little broadcast TV.

So I’m planning to drop the Tivo service in January, saving $100-$155 annually. To give me some additional viewing options, I reinstalled the latest hack to my original Apple TV which allows it to browse the internet (not very worthwhile when I can just use my iPad on the couch) and adds the Boxee service. Boxee allows me to easily stream videos from my desktop PC to my television through the Universal Plug-and-Play feature with Windows 7’s Media Center. I can also use Boxee to watch TV shows from Hulu and other internet sources. It even duplicates some of my Sony TV’s functionality, providing an alternate way to access YouTube, Pandora, and Netflix. I control Boxee with its iPhone and iPad apps.

My mishmash of living room devices would drive me crazy were it not for my Logitech Harmony Remote, an older 880 model which I’ve programmed to make it easy to operate my TV, Blu-ray player, Apple TV, audio receiver, Tivo, and VCR. Yes, I still use an old analog tape VCR for a bunch of old workout videos. I never transferred them to DVD, since that is actually less convenient. My analog VCR tapes have about 10 workouts on each of them, and I can just stop the tape after a workout and start it up the next morning for the next installment, which beats remembering where I left off on a DVD’s menu. Some of the tapes are 17 years old but still going strong. It seems possible that the DVD+R discs I use for videos at school may stop working before my old VCR tapes wear out.

It will be interesting to see how much I’ll miss having a DVR. If I miss a good broadcast TV show, I can hopefully use Hulu, iTunes, Amazon, Netflix, or a network’s own website to view it later. Perhaps what I’ll miss most is fast-forwarding through commercials. If it gets too annoying, I’ll either reactivate the Tivo service or look into turning my computer into a DVR.

My next project is to boost networking speeds in the living room by running a long Ethernet cable from my office router to a switch in the living room. I’ll then hardwire the television, Blu-ray player, Apple TV, and Tivo box to my network. But I’ll still rely on my home WiFi for my iPhone, iPad, Kindle, and netbook computer. Can I guy have too many gadgets? I didn’t think so.

UPDATE: Here is a great article on the future of TV.

LATER UPDATE: I bought a cheap 75′ ethernet cable from monoprice.com and ran it from the office to a D-Link DGS-2205 switch in the living room.  The switch required no configuration at all and allowed me to use that cable with my Sony television, Sony Blu-ray player, the old Apple TV, and the Tivo.  I find myself using Pandora more on the television for background music, while I use the old Apple TV for viewing video podcasts and the Boxee hack to watch Twit Live.  And I like watching Netflix streaming on either the television or the Tivo.  As for broadcast TV, at first I couldn’t get the television’s built-in TV Guide listings to work, but I finally re-initialized the TV Guide application and got it going so that I don’t have to fire up the Tivo to see what is on.  And my new TV is able to play back audio and video from my desktop PC in the office via Windows Media Player.

12/1/2010 UPDATE: Today TiVo came through with an offer to upgrade my existing box to Lifetime Service for $99.  That meant I can keep using it until it has a physical failure for the same cost as about eight months on their month-to-month plan.  The offer was only available via phone, so I gave them a call and made the investment.  (Essentially I was getting Lifetime Service for the same cost I would have paid for it when I first bought the box three years ago.)  Given that the box is still working fine, I already invested in an external drive to boost its capacity, and the features on their new Premiere box are not compelling to me, it struck me as a good deal.

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350 Miles, 6.5 Miles at a Time

Lake Keystone Dam (click image for slideshow)

Today I squeezed in a five mile hike on the bike trails north of the dam of Lake Keystone to the west of Tulsa before an afternoon appointment drew me back to Bartlesville. Nothing very scenic, but it was satisfying to stroll about in the woods and listen to some podcasts on a trail that was new to me.

I’ve enjoyed day hikes in the Ozarks since childhood, and incorporated hikes into several of my summer trips to the beautiful Pacific Northwest.  But it wasn’t until July 2009 that I became obsessed with going on as many day hikes as feasible while snapping nature photos and then posting everything to my blog.

Now it is also standard procedure for me to track my day hike using the MotionX GPS application on my iPhone 4, which thankfully has better battery life and multitasking than my iPhone 3G ever did. At the end of a hike I email the track to myself for later viewing in Google Earth, and I edit a screenshot from it to include with the photo set.

Happily all of the exercise also helps me combat the slowing metabolism of middle age, although soon I’ll have to give up those delicious sugary soft drinks if I don’t want to become too thick for my clothes. Unfortunately for me, restaurants don’t carry the one diet drink I can stand: Coca-Cola Cherry Zero.

I’ve tracked my hikes over the past fifteen months in both a Google Map and a spreadsheet, linking them to both the relevant blog posts and Flickr photo sets.  It turns out that I’ve now hiked almost 350 miles over 54 days, averaging about 6.5 miles per hiking day.  And I’m looking forward to many more hikes this autumn.

My day hikes since 7/2009; click image for an interactive map

My day hikes interactive spreadsheet

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Osage Hills Meander

From my latest meander around Osage Hills (click image for slideshow)

The first Sunday in October was too cool and beautiful to spend indoors, so after grading papers and doing the laundry I drove out to Osage Hills State Park.  I’ve walked and mapped every trail in the park, along with almost every bushwhack, but today I did make one new discovery.  It was dry enough that I could clamber down into the little creek just north of the park office, where I discovered a bench hidden amongst the foliage.

I also had fun clambering about the spillway area again, and sunned myself both on the big rock there as well as over on the bluffs of Sand Creek.  The park was very peaceful, with few people out and about.  I ended my stay with the highlight of the park, the little waterfalls on Sand Creek.

Enjoy the slideshow.

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A Piney Creek and Roaring River

In the Piney Creek Wilderness (click image for slideshow)

For my second day hike of autumn 2010, I decided to return to southeast Missouri.  A Silver Dollar Special at Eggbert’s launched me back down US 60, this time to the Piney Creek Wilderness a few miles north of Shell Knob.  I’d never been there before, although it was established in 1980 and is only fourteen miles as the crow flies from the vacation home my parents had on Table Rock throughout my childhood.

My trail books warned me that this 6.2 mile trail was also used by horses and was steep in places, required repeated fording of Piney Creek, and could be overgrown.  So I was careful to wear long pants and take along a good trail map and both of my trekking poles.  I pulled into the parking area at the Piney Creek fire tower at 10:30 a.m., joining a couple of empty horse trailers.

The Piney Creek tower is just like the Sugar Camp fire tower I’ve climbed many times and other towers dotting the Mark Twain National Forest.  The Forest Service has discouraged climbers of this tower by removing all of the wooden stairs from the first flight.  I wasn’t about to let that stop me, so I widened my stance and used the metal stair supports they’d left behind to ascend that flight.  All but one of the wooden steps were in place for the rest of the way up, and while the tower room had no windows left and a dodgy floor in one spot, I was able to get a sweeping panorama of the area I would soon be hiking through.  I could see my car down below next to the imposing shadow of my aerie.

I took the trail south along a narrow ridgeline through a forest of pine, oak, hickory, and cedar.  This first part of the trail had several steep sections which had been heavily churned by horses but thankfully the mud had almost fully dried out and I could tread lightly across the mess.  Eventually I descended some limestone outcrops and then the trail ran along the side of a steep hill on a limestone ledge above a side creek hidden in a deep valley to my right.  Finally I reached Piney Creek itself and began following it eastward towards Table Rock Lake.  I celebrated reaching the namesake creek by posing atop a tree which had toppled across it.  Gravel bars throughout the creekbed made it easy to ford and I was struck by the clarity of the water pooled along it – what a contrast to the brown mud of the Caney and Elk Rivers near my home.

Near a later ford of Piney Creek, two large black Labrador Retrievers came bounding along the trail towards me.  One wore a wire muzzle and both had radio tracking collars.  They did not challenge or bark, but pranced around, sniffing me for a bit, before heading back the way they had come.  They bounded across the creek and I did not see them again – either they took off amidst the brush or down one of the side equestrian trails.

Eventually I reached the first of two trails leading back up to the fire tower.  I glimpsed a couple of men on horseback disappearing up the trail that way – I guessed those horse trailers would be gone by the time I returned to the trail head, a prediction borne out a few hours later.

The trail grew more overgrown as I proceeded eastward along the creek bottom.  Eventually I found the junction to the trail I would later take northwest back to the fire tower.  But I was determined to follow Piney Creek on eastward until it spilled into Table Rock Lake.  This portion of the trail was far less used and heavily overgrown.  I used my trekking poles to swish back the overgrowth so I could make out the trail beneath, grateful for my long pants.  Normally I would not bother with such a trail, but I wanted to lunch beside the lake.

Finally I caught a glimpse of the Piney Creek embayment ahead.  The trail ended in a clearing with a fire ring and a convenient table rock (ha!) where I could set down my pack and poles and sit down for lunch at 12:45 p.m., enjoying the peaceful view.  After my meal, I tried following a faint trail leading off parallel to the lake shore, but it quickly disappeared amongst the growth.  I wheeled around and headed back up the creek.

After turning northwest on the return trail, I began a long ascent.  Along the way I spotted a walking stick which was about five inches long.  His camouflage was quite good – I only spotted him because of his movement across my path, and had to get very close and enhance the contrast in my photo to make him apparent.

I came across a family of backpackers during my ascent up the trail, which followed a nice dry creek bed.  Eventually the trail popped out onto the asphalt forest road and I followed it back to the gravel road leading to the fire tower.  It was about two o’clock and I had not had my fill of hiking for the day, so I drove over to Roaring River State Park, where I decided I would take the Devil’s Kitchen Trail.

The last time I’d been at the park was the previous October, when I took the Deer Leap, Fire Tower, Eagle’s Nest, Spring House, and River trails.  I had also taken the park’s Pibern Trail with my friend Carrie the previous July.  But one great trail I had not been on in some time was the Devil’s Kitchen Trail, which loops about 1.5 miles about the park’s northwest corner, although I took a spur which lengthened the hike to over two miles.

I parked at the trailhead across from the lodge and headed uphill.  My first stop was a ledge upslope from the trail which has eroded out into a tiny cave.  When the trail reached its northern tip I saw the largest cave on this trail, which is spacious enough to afford some shelter if you are willing to crouch.  The trail then looped back southward until it reached a large clearing I remember being confused by in my youth, since it had an unmarked side trail.

Now they’ve marked that trail with a number, which is of little use without an interpretive trail guide, but at least you can figure out which trail is the main one.  I took that side spur, faintly recalling that it led northwest to the park boundary.  Sure enough, it ran along a wide ridge until I popped out on Highway 112 by the water slide north of the park.  I retraced my steps to the Devil’s Kitchen Trail, following it as it curved down the steep hillside.  The trail through here has always been very wide and steep, with wooden poles placed crosswise across the trail to control erosion.  Whenever I take this path, I think about the nearby steep hill on Highway 112.  My grandfather used to drive his car up that hill in reverse in the early twentieth century, since the old cars had far more torque in that gear.  Sounds scary, but the only alternative to reaching Roaring River from the north is the old Forest Road 1135 over from Hilltop and then southwest down a creek bed into the Roaring River Spring area.  A friend and I took that old road a few years back.  It was heavily washed out and at times I was afraid I’d ground my Camry on it.  But it was quite scenic and a few brave souls have built homes along it, although I noticed they all had four-wheel drive sports utility vehicles and high-clearance pickup trucks!

As the trail leveled out I came across the old spring which has flowed out from the hillside throughout my lifetime and knew Devil’s Kitchen was close by.  It is a room of sorts, created by slabs of rock which slid over a gap in the eroding bluff.  The story goes that it was used as a hideout by Civil War guerrillas.  Through the 1990s the room was intact and easily accessible through a gap in the rocks.  My friends the Falkners posed inside the room for my camera back in 1993, and my friend Wendy posed atop its roof in 1997.  But sometime after that half of the roof finally slid down, blocking the old entrance and reducing the kitchen to a fraction of its former size.

Now you have to scramble up the back side of the kitchen, up onto the remains of the old roof to access what’s left of the kitchen.  Daredevil that I am, I posed while sitting directly under what remains of the roof.  Knowing that similar big slabs of rock finally broke free in the past 13 years, I did not tarry.  Passing by the beautifully eroded bluffs, I trotted on down the trail.

Returning to the trailhead, I walked across the river, which was lined with fishermen and fisherboys and visited the old lodge, still saddened that the park store has decamped to a soulless new home.  But this trip was not to end on stories of collapse and abandonment.  I drove to Cassville, where I happily found The Rib restaurant open for Saturday evening under new ownership.  They were kind enough to serve me, even though I’d shown up almost 30 minutes before they officially opened.  My French Dip was delicious, although I made the mistake of ordering sweet fries, foolishly not realizing that meant they’d be made from sweet potatoes, which are not my favorite.  I compensated with some chocolate cake afterward.

The last few times I’d been in town I was disappointed to find this restaurant closed, as I have always liked its food since it became The Rib in the late 1980s.  And in the 1970s it was Crows restaurant, known for its great homemade bread.  And whenever I sit in the main dining room with its sloped ceiling I recall how the place looked decades ago when, as a small child, I took the opportunity to lecture a bemused patron of the restaurant about how he shouldn’t be smoking.  Now, years later, that particular room is, appropriately enough, the non-smoking section.

It was an uneventful drive back to Bartlesville, with me arriving early enough for a hot shower and a few hours of photo editing and blogging.  Next weekend I’ll be attending a performance of Chris and Dave Brubeck’s Ansel Adams: America by the Bartlesville Symphony on Saturday night, with four of my own landscape photos on display in the Community Center’s Lyon Art Gallery.  So there won’t be a long day trip to Missouri or Arkansas, although perhaps I can squeeze in a hike nearby in Oklahoma.

Click here for a slideshow of today’s day hikes

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