First Day at Petit Jean: Seven Hollows and Cedar Falls

Click image for slideshow

Although my allergies were giving me fits, I was determined to begin Spring Break with several days of great hiking.  So I decided to drive to Petit Jean State Park in Arkansas, which my father and I briefly visited years ago.  I mostly recalled it was a high plateau jutting above the surrounding countryside with a long deep canyon through it.

I’ve been contemplating cheaper ways to travel, so I considered yet discarded tent camping and then opted to rent a ‘KOA Kabin’ in nearby Morrilton, which was about $30/night with me in a sleeping bag and using a communal bath house.  But that plan would curl up its toes and die by the end of the long day.

The day began with a breakfast biscuit at a Bartlesville McDonalds and then an easy drive over to downtown Russellville, Arkansas for a delicious chicken alfredo and salad lunch at its Italian Gardens restaurant.  A short drive from there found me ascending Petit Jean Mountain and at the Seven Hollows trailhead by 1 pm.

Petit Jean was a French girl whose lover would not let her come with him to America, so she disguised herself as a cabin boy and came along anyway.  Her true identity was only discovered when she fell ill and died at this mountain above the Arkansas River.  Of course all of that is hogwash.  And although it is a splendid hiking trail, Seven Hollows is also a lie.  One actually tramps down, through, and around four hollows, not seven.  But no matter, as the 4.5 mile hike is quite beautiful even with the bare trees of a Spring Break that doesn’t actually occur in the spring.  (A theme is building here.)

As the trail descended into the first hollow, I was surrounded by craggy sandstone bluffs carved by millions of years of stream erosion.  There were frequent shallow ‘caves’ whose interiors showed the orange and yellow streaks of mineral deposits.  A natural bridge towered overhead to one side, and as I cut back and forth across a creek I encountered a pair of tiny waterfalls, one of which was stairstepped.  I shot a video clip of the two little falls.

Ascending to the top of a hollow, I encountered an area cleared by fire some years back and opened up to the overcast sky which loomed over the tiny cedar trees that were repopulating the area.  A frustration with my new camera is that it won’t let me shoot manually, but I pulled off one depth of field shot by backing away from my subject and going to a full 12x zoom on it.

Rock formations along here are said to resemble turtles, and one lump did look like a turtle if I took off my glasses.  A side trail led back into a box canyon called the Grotto, with a large pool at the end in a natural cistern.  It was so large that it was best captured with a video clip.  Then the hike ended with a trek through a wide and fairly flat hollow with impressive side walls, which also got the video treatment.

I drove over to the Palisades Overlook on the side of the road, where I shot another panorama despite the overcast.  The next stop was the short Bear Cave Trail, which winds amongst many rock formations that clamor to be climbed.  The Seven Hollows Trail was too strenuous for children, but they were scrambling all over the Bear Cave area.

My next stop was an overlook for what is perhaps the most photographed scenery in Arkansas: Cedar Falls.  It was beautiful even with the overcast, and the sky followed suit with a few punctures in the cloud cover allowing sunshine to beam down upon the countryside off in the distance.  I shot a video clip to capture the surroundings, and I’ll be returning to this area of the park on my second day when I hike the Cedar Creek and Cedar Falls Trails, which share the same National Recreation Trail designation that adorns the Seven Hollows Trail.  (Other National Recreation Trails I have hiked recently include the Table Mound and Elk River Trails much closer to home at Elk City Lake near Independence, Kansas.)

By then it was 5 pm and that prompted me to drove on east out of the park towards Morrilton and the KOA.  But I took the time to stop at the eastern edge of the mountain for its splendid view of the Arkansas River and photograph Petit Jean’s fake grave site.

I then sped down the mountain’s steep eastern flank and drove to the KOA.  But lo and behold the office was shut and the night deposit only let one pick out regular RV slots – the two ‘Kabins’ were locked up tight.  I took that as a sign that I was not meant to suffer and drove on east to Conway, where I secured a room at a Microtel.  A real bed, a private bath, and a continental breakfast are more my style.

Running low on steam, I drove to the closest restaurant, a Ruby Tuesdays where I had a mediocre steak.  But a dipped cone at the Dairy Queen fortified me for a few hours of photo editing and blogging.  As I close this post, I haven’t slept in over 48 hours, so it is quite rude of Daylight Savings Time to be starting up and robbing me of an hour of sleep!  On the morrow I’ll sleep in a bit and then drive back to Petit Jean for what should be a somewhat sunnier day of hiking.

Click here for a slideshow of today’s day hikes

[ Next Hike: Second Day at Petit Jean: Looping Cedar Creek ]

Posted in day hike, photos, travel | 2 Comments

Digital Age Downsizing

My office isn’t quite this bad

The digital age is here, with physical media dying a slow death.  I’m an avid reader, so my office was crammed with 33 bookshelves holding over 1,000 books.  But since I bought my first Kindle in June 2008 and replaced it with the Kindle 2 a year ago, I’ve only bought a few physical books.  The electronic ones are so much more convenient, especially since I can also read them on my iPhone in a pinch.  I look forward to experimenting with reading on an iPad in a few months.

So I decided to use Digital Age Downsizing to help pay for that expensive new toy.  I culled 190 books for disposal.  I mainly wanted to get rid of them with minimal effort on my part and make a little money at the same time.  So eBay or its half.com or selling books on Amazon was out – I didn’t want to trouble with listing each book, tracking sales, and finding oodles of boxes and tape to ship them out piecemeal.

Instead I tried out a few online services and settled on Powell’s Books.  I loved visiting their enormous bookstore in Portland, Oregon a few years back, and they made getting rid of my books very easy.  I just had to type in the ISBN numbers above the barcode on the back of each book and Powell’s told me which ones they would take and how much they would pay.  I split my selling up into three shipments so that I could pack about 25 books in each box, print out the free Media Mail shipping label Powell’s provided for it, and haul the boxes to the post office.

Powell’s will pay me $180 for 66 of the 190 books I offered to them.  As for the remaining 124, I put a few into other online buyers and got few offers, so I plan to pack them up and donate them to my local public library.  They will route them to book selectors for review and the accepted ones go on the shelves and the others go to the local Friends of the Library for sale in their bookstore.

So I’m partway to paying for that iPad.  What next?  I went through my closets and gathered up a bunch of old electronics: a bunch of old telephones, two answering machines, a clock radio, and a cheap MP3 player.  I tried using Gazelle.com to sell them, but the service wouldn’t complete my registration.  So I tried some other services.  Unfortunately, old electronics are not worth much, if anything.  I did manage to sell an old GPS unit to MyBoneYard.com and sent that off, but I took the rest of the stuff to Goodwill.

The next big prospect is the collection of 450 CDs in my living room.  I haven’t touched them since I ripped them into MP3 format years back.  Looks like SecondSpin.com will take them off my hands for anywhere from 10 cents to $10 each depending on demand, with an average of perhaps a dollar or two a disc.  I’ll first want to re-rip a bunch of them in a higher-quality bitrate.  Back when I ripped my collection the software I was using could only do 128 kbps, but now I can have iTunes re-import them into the 256 kbps variable-bit-rate MP3 format I now prefer.  Then I can price them out, put about 25 in each box so that the shipping cost is properly covered, and sell ’em off.  And soon I may have much of that iPad paid for and far less clutter around the house.  I love the Digital Age.

Posted in books, music, technology | 1 Comment

The Big Zoom

While it lacks the instructive power of the classic Powers of Ten, which I show each year at the start of my courses, this much newer video provides a more accurate and up-to-date zoom outward to the edge of what we can see.

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Embrace Life

Every year I have my students calculate why everyone should do this

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The Gen X Timebomb

The Timebomb Awaiting Gen

As a member of Generation X – Americans born between 1961 and 1981 – I’ve grown up with warnings that Medicare and Social Security won’t be there for us.  Sadly those warnings appear to be all too true as I enter middle age.  Take a look at the bar chart from the General Accounting Office.

It shows how the cost of entitlements will exceed revenues sometime between 2030 and 2040, which is precisely when I will be retiring.  Traditionally we think of 65 as retirement age – that’s 2031 for me.  But under current law I won’t qualify for full social security benefits until I’m 67 years old in 2033.  And I’ll bet they’ll jack that up even more over the next two decades.

Compounding the worry is that my Oklahoma Teacher Retirement is also fiscally unsound.  The state’s pension system is woefully underfunded – its assets won’t even cover half of its liabilities.  And the trends are poor – in the past decade the ratio of active members to annuitants has fallen from 2.5 to 1.9.  And as of 2009 the number of years before the system would become fully funded rose from over 50 years to…wait for it…infinity. That’s from the 2009 Actuarial Report on the system’s website, directly acknowledging that under existing legislation the system will never have enough funds to cover its liabilities.

We know these projections are unreliable – legislation will change things over the coming decades.  But it is inevitable that those changes will be to my generation’s detriment.  The nation will have no choice but to cut our benefits to avoid bankruptcy.  It appears likely that while for years I’ve witnessed older generations receiving far more in Social Security benefits than they ever paid into the system, Gen Xers like me could receive less than we put in over our careers.

And given the disturbing political climate in Oklahoma, I wouldn’t be surprised to see the Teacher Retirement System eventually changed from defined benefits to defined contributions.  That means while generations of teachers before me retired with guaranteed levels of income, I might be ending my career with only a state-managed investment fund – one which could be catastrophically reduced by a market downturn.  And given the fiscal crises we’ll face in the 2030s I reckon the market will be down…if not in freefall.

I can’t control the Ponzi schemes our federal and state governments have set up.  And as a bachelor I have no offspring to care for me in my old age if I don’t plan for the worst.  So I’d better pay close attention to the received wisdom that one should put aside ten to twenty percent of salary for retirement.  For some time, via automatic paycheck deductions and generous parents, I’ve been able to keep my IRA and 403(b) contributions (the latter is the public-sector version of a 401(k) but of course the school doesn’t provide any sort of employer match!) up at the high end of that range.

But, given the ticking timebombs in the federal and state retirement systems, perhaps I need to set aside even more.  Doing that and still saving enough money for the car and home will be a challenge given how I dislike cooking yet love consumer electronics.  Looks like my summer vacations need to involve driving to a campsite or budget motel, not flying out to the coast.  Thankfully my favorite leisure activity of day hikes can be done on the cheap!

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