Seven Months of Day Hikes

Dayhikes Map

Click image for my Dayhikes Google Map

Since I began blogging about my series of day hikes, folks who follow my antics have started asking, “How many day hikes have you done?” and “How far have you gone?”

I’m far more interested in the former rather than the latter question, and I begin to wonder how many more decent new trails I can find within a day’s drive.  So I’ve created a Google Map of all of my day hikes since September 2009.  Each marker includes links to any blog posts or Flickr photos.

I went out for hikes on 28 of the 212 days from September 9, 2009 through April 4, 2010.  That means I was out on a day hike on 13% of the days, averaging out to almost one day hike per week.  Not bad for autumn and winter; January and February were my worst months with only two days of hiking each, while I racked up six days of hiking in October and seven in March.

Future targets include the Short Mountain Cove Trail at the Robert S. Kerr Reservoir near Sallisaw, the Ankle Express Trail at Greenleaf State Park near Muskogee, and spending a week or more of late May and June hiking various trails in Arkansas.  I dislike hot weather and don’t plan to fly out to the Pacific Northwest this summer, so I expect my hikes will trail off (ha!) noticeably in July and August.

Happy trails!

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Easter at Skull Hollow

Skull Hollow Nature Trail Slideshow

Click image for slideshow

I took a short hike on a sunny, warm, and windy Easter Sunday afternoon along the Skull Hollow Nature Trail at the Hawthorn Bluffs area off Oologah Lake.

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iPant for iPad

Here’s a new video of the iPad from PC Magazine, and they’ve posted a full review as well.

I haven’t pre-ordered a unit as of yet – I’ve been waiting for reviewers to get their hands on them.  But the more I see videos of this thing, the more excited I become.  I’ve been waiting for an instant-on large-scale web browser I can carry about the house and on the road, and while my netbook comes close, it lacks the simplicity and elegance of the iPad.  That touchscreen interface is so much better than my netbook’s scroll pad and cursor keys.  While the iPad’s lack of Adobe Flash support is irksome, it will support YouTube and now there is news that Netflix will likely offer its Watch Instantly service as an iPad app.

I’ll be waiting for the WiFi+3G version of the iPad that debuts in about a month.  I want to be able to take the unit out on the road, given my proclivity for day hikes.  I’ll either buy the 32 GB or 64 GB version…and that means about $800 or more to get the unit and accessories.  I’m glad I sold off a bunch a books to Powell’s last month and am on the verge of selling off my CD collection.  I’ll need every penny.

Apple never could get me to buy a Mac, as my workday is in the Windows world and Macs are so pricey compared to Windows PCs.  I’m quite happy with my Windows 7 netbook for blogging on the road and I use my Windows 7 desktop for much of my web browsing and productivity work.   But in addition to novels I read a bunch of long-form web articles these days, which I save via Instapaper.  I haven’t found the ideal hardware for that – each of my current options has its drawbacks:

Trade-Offs When Reading Long-Form Web Articles

  • Desktop – most capable hardware in this list, but it is too uncomfortable to sit at a desk for so long when I’m just reading and not typing, and a desktop is anything but portable
  • Netbook – portable and convenient with fairly quick startup from hibernation, but lousy navigation with its scrollpad and cursor keys, and limited screen real estate
  • iPhone – super-portable and a great touchscreen interface, but its screen is too small and you have to wear earbuds or plug in an awkward external speaker for sound
  • Kindle – simply superb for text,  but lousy for graphics, very slow to link up to the web and download articles, and horrid navigation

The iPad offers Apple’s elegant fit-and-finish and superior interface design at a price I can just barely afford, and I’m intrigued by its simplified instant-on nature.  It will be interesting to see how it overlaps with the functionality of my netbook, iPhone, and Kindle.  With a Kindle app on the iPad, it may render my Kindle obsolete unless the electronic ink on the Kindle is still much easier on my eyes than the iPad’s display.  And I don’t know how feasible it will be to use the iPad on my trips – can I easily upload my photos to it, edit them, and post them to Flickr and simultaneously compose a blog entry?  I doubt it, so I’ll probably still rely on my netbook for that sort of functionality.  And the iPad may feel too big to carry into restaurants and the like.  But I am certain it will revolutionize my around-the-house web surfing.

[4/4/2010 UPDATE:  The reviews and another road trip where I used my iPhone and netbook without ever opening the cover of my Kindle convinced me to pre-order the 64 GB 3G version along with a camera adapter, case, and dock.  That will set me back almost $1,000.]

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Timber Ridge & Riverside Park

Timber Ridge Trail

Click image for a slideshow

Today I hiked my last new trail at Elk City Lake, the Timber Ridge trail west of the lake at the Card Creek area.  The 2.3 mile trail loops along a north-south ridge and offers views westward over Card Creek, which feeds into the Elk River.  You can see my previous route along the Elk River Trail in my Google Earth map of today’s hike.

The trees were still bare and this hike offered only a few short bluffs compared to the long chain of impressive bluffs along the Elk River Trail.  I did spot one unusual rock shaped like a scoop, and posed in group of trees where the blue trail blaze was evident.  Eventually the trail wound around to a high rocky observation point providing a panoramic view of Card Creek.  Turkey vultures flew by from time to time across a cloudy sky punctuated with the occasional sunburst.

The trail was too short to satisfy my hiking urge for the day, so I drove around to the east side of the lake, hoping to hike part of the Table Mound Trail, but the Scenic Overlook was gated off and I didn’t feel like paying a day use fee to hike for an hour or so at the open campground.  So I drove over to Independence, KS to revisit my childhood.

My family spent Thanksgiving in Independence most years and made regular visits to relatives there.  So in the late 1960s and early 1970s I often visited the Ralph Mitchell Zoo at Riverside Park in Independence.  My strongest memories were of the lion statues at the park entrances, how the adjoining cemetery had a stone fence that seemed to go on forever, and climbing up and down steep steps into a hollow where they had cages built into the sides of the hollow with big cats and other large mammals.

I’ve visited the zoo a couple of times since I moved to Bartlesville in 1989, and today I relocated most of the memorable childhood elements.  It was a bit depressing, however, since the Zoo is not the thriving establishment it was back in my youth.  Back in the day it had lions, leopards, pumas, and crocodiles when meat was a cheap food source and there few federal restrictions.  Today it has mainly small animals, many of which are grazers.  The park’s depression-era lion statues are still there and, like the buffalo statues around Bartlesville, have anatomically correct testicles if you view them from the wrong end.  I was discreet and shot the mane end instead and drove over to the zoo.

There I found good old Santa Fe Engine Number 1050 and Monkey Island.  The island was the birthplace in 1952 of Miss Able, a rhesus monkey who in 1959 was shot 300 miles into space on the nose of a Jupiter rocket at a speed of 10,000 miles per hour.  But in my youth the island had spider monkeys and these days capuchins roam the 1932 castle and lounge in its windows.  The moat featured a swan which eagerly swam after me hoping in vain for a treat.

A nearby pond had a fountain with swans and African geese.  There were a few other animals on display, including a sad little donkey.  But when I strode down the trail into the hollow I found its cages, heavily reworked years ago, sitting vacant.  And at the end of the hollow I found those steep stone steps leading up into Kiddy Land.  They were steep even for my adult legs – no wonder they stuck in my memory as a little boy.

Now that I’ve completed all of the hiking trails at Elk City I will be back on the prowl for new trails to traverse.  In a couple of months school will be out and I expect I’ll be spending a week in Arkansas on that quest, although before then I may try for a day hike at Greenleaf State Park near Muskogee, which is only a two hour drive from home and has an Ankle Express Trail that sounds promising.

Click here for a slideshow of today’s adventure

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Cell Phone Etiquette

Cell Phone Etiquette

Cell Phone Etiquette

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