Remembering Mary Travers

Remembering Mary Travers

If you miss the train I’m on, you will know that I am gone
You can hear the whistle blow a hundred miles,
A hundred miles, a hundred miles, a hundred miles, a hundred miles,
You can hear the whistle blow a hundred miles.

Lord I’m one, lord I’m two, lord I’m three, lord I’m four,
Lord I’m 500 miles from my home.
500 miles, 500 miles, 500 miles, 500 miles
Lord I’m five hundred miles from my home.

Not a shirt on my back, not a penny to my name
Lord I can’t go a-home this a-way
This a-way, this a-way, this a-way, this a-way,
Lord I can’t go a-home this a-way.

If you miss the train I’m on you will know that I am gone
You can hear the whistle blow a hundred miles.

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Hiking in Little Dixie, Day 2

Something hangs over me... (click for slideshow)

Something hangs over me... (click for slideshow)

Woke up in the Idabel Microtel to find a depressingly bland continental breakfast which sent me off to McDonald’s for their largest breakfast platter, most of which was edible.  The large breakfast was to carry me through my morning hike at Cedar Lake up in the Ouachita National Forest.  I drove north out of Idabel and up through the Kiamichi Mountains, winding my way down them to re-enter the forest and then drive a couple of miles west to Cedar Lake.

I remembered camping here over twenty years ago.  Back then my friend Jeff Silver and I were visiting out of season and pretty much had the place to ourselves.  It seemed quite lonely and isolated.  Visiting over Labor Day weekend it had plenty of campers, swimmers, and fisherfolk both on the shore and puttering about in small fishing boats.  I paid my day use fee and parked around 11 am on this Sunday morning by a shelter which had a congregation of Mennonites.  As young ladies in long dresses strode by I changed into my hiking boots and annointed myself.  Having no oil handy, I made do with Deep Woods Off.

Heading south to follow the three-mile CCC trail clockwise around the lake, I rapidly encountered the Old Pine Trail (or Old Piney Trail, as one sign put it).  It meandered up around a feeder stream and featured interpretive signs I found quite boring and subsequently ignored.  A tiny toad and I bounded along the stream and then I was back on the main trail, headed up one of the several arms of the lake.  Each arm features a footbridge, and I enjoyed the picturesque views back toward the lake from the southern and northwestern arms.  The trail eventually crosses along the top of the dam on the north end of the lake, and I snapped a shot of a boy fishing from a nearby dock.

After a brief clean-up and fresh shirt, I drove on north to Poteau.  Today turned out to be a chain restaurant day, with me opting for the Mazzio’s, where the server was fascinated by my Kindle.  He said it was much smaller than the one a local veterinarian brings in, so I suppose the vet has a Kindle DX.

I then drove west to the Sans Bois Mountains and good old Robbers Cave.  I knew it would be hot work clambering around the rocks, but hoped to get some good shots.  The view from the ground was quite familiar, and I enjoyed scrambling into the lower “cave” with its double entrance and back exit.  Young folks were rock climbing at various spots, but I felt I did enough climbing taking on the old CCC trail which the signs said was now “nearly impassable.”  The fault was a slide that nearly blocked one section, but I was able to crawl my way through.  I revisited the “stone corral” where the outlaws kept their horses and found one strapping young fellow and his girlfriend rapelling down into the corral even though there were no horses to steal.

After visiting the real cave, which isn’t very large, I clambered on upward off the trail and couldn’t resist using the photo timer to get a shot of me with something big hanging over my headAtop the formation I found a striking graffito and enjoyed the view.  To gather all my shots, I actually clambered clear around the formation about three times so I could make sure I saw all the sights along the old CCC trail, the kinder and gentler rim trail, and off trail to boot.   At one point I was atop the “Devil’s Slide” – which is truly steep from above, and was startled to see a young boy slowly inching his way down the slide.  I kept waiting for him to tumble and crash, but he made it safely with nary a parent in sight.  So he is still convinced that he is indestructible.

After clambering around the steep rocks for a couple of hours in 87 degree weather, I was tuckered out and happily wiped off and put on a fresh shirt for the drive home.  I chose to cross Lake Eufala, which was the big flat boating zone I remembered it to be.  I pulled off in Muskogee for a Weight Watchers meal at their Applebee’s, where the waitress was also fascinated by my Kindle.  I’ve had servers across the country asking about my Kindle and saying they want to buy one.  If I were a better salesman I’d sell them one from the table and earn a commission on my Amazon Associate’s account!

It was then a speedy run from Muskogee back home.  Labor Day beckons.

There is a slideshow of the photos from this day hike.

Here is the route of this two-day trip.

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Hiking in Little Dixie, Day 1

Beavers Bend (click for slideshow)

Beavers Bend (click for slideshow)

Deciding to take advantage of somewhat cooler weather on this late Labor Day, I opted to travel to Oklahoma’s Little Dixie for some day hikes.  I’ve been in the Ouachitas many times, but had never made it all the way to the state’s southeastern corner to visit Beavers Bend.

I drove the Indian Nations Turnpike all the way to Hugo, which has been the winter quarters for various circuses over the years.  I visited Showmen’s Rest, the portion of the Mount Olivet cemetery set aside for circus performers and owners.  I especially liked the circus tent tombstone of Jack Moore, the photo of trapeze artist Grace McIntosh, and appreciated the poignancy of Ted Bowman’s epitaph:

There’s nothing left but empty popcorn sacks and wagon tracks – the circus is gone.

Hugo itself is obviously struggling economically, with many empty storefronts and a distressed look overall.  Things weren’t much better on east in Idabel.  The big businesses I could see from the highway were a paper plant, a chicken processing plant, and Choctaw casinos.  There are big divided highways with little traffic – no doubt politicians promised they’d bring jobs and economic development.  I suppose it helps speed the 60 million cubic feet of lumber that is harvested annually in McCurtain County to the processing plants.  But it also leaves them with big empty highways that bypass the abandoned downtowns.

Most of the restaurants in this poor area are fast food chains, which I was determined to avoid.  A parking lot full of cars led me to lunch at the Roma Italian restaurant, which appeared to be a family-run business in a fairly new building.  The food was tasty, plentiful, and cheap.

Then I drove up to Beavers Bend State Resort for my day hike.  Back in 1977 then-governor David Boren dedicated a series of hiking trails here.  I pulled into the only free spot at the Forest Heritage Center, which features a “totem pole” carved by Hungarian artist Peter Toth.  He spent nearly twenty years carving giant Indian busts – one for each of the fifty states.  Ours is The Trail of Tears – seems fitting for this perennially struggling area.

I didn’t have the patience to stride all the way through the seven-sided Heritage Center with its quirky exhibits and musty smell.  But I had to take a shot of a wooden sculpture of a woman.  I suppose she is meant to be a free spirit, but in the shot it looks to me like she’s running from that ax-toting guy in the background!

I booted up, immersed myself in Deep Woods Off, and headed down an old CCC trail.  A youngster at the trailhead took a look at my boots, hat, and pack, and asked me if I was an explorer.  I told him I was, and showed him my trail map with trails winding the many miles around the Mountain Fork River.  He gazed up at me with wide eyes and asked if I was coming back.  His grandfather chuckled and said, “If he isn’t eaten by a bear!”

The only animals I spotted along the trail, however, were spiders and beetles.  After traversing the easy Nature Trail I climbed the more challenging Lookout Mountain trail.  The lookout, however, was overgrown by trees and offered no real view.  Sigh.

I then strode onward along the Deer Crossing Trail, clearing many cobwebs.  I didn’t see much in the way of pretty plants, only snapping shots of one lonely flower and some berries.  At that trailhead a guy had lumbered out a big tripod and set off down the trail ahead of me.  Later he came back by me, looking rather disgusted.  I think he envied my tiny point-and-shoot.

Happily that trail eventually ran into the Cedar Bluff Trail, which led to an overlook of the Mountain Fork River, where I watched canoes and kayaks gliding by below.  One floating fellow yelled up at me, saying I must have a great view.  I silently waved back, thinking he should be grateful not to be up here since I was very sweaty and smelly after hoofing it over four miles up and down watersheds.  I had foolishly forgotten to bring a bathing suit, or I would have happily clambered down and joined the folks on the river.

I had hoped to hike onward for part of the Skyline Trail, but it had two footbridges washed out by flooding a few years ago and then private cabins were built requiring that it be rerouted.  So now it is closed and I couldn’t locate the trail blazes that would lead me along the first section which is supposedly still passable.

So I retraced the Deer Crossing Trail, encountering fellow hikers who did not know to thank me for sparing them from so many cobwebs.  Then I took a final section of the Lookout Mountain Trail back to the Forest Heritage Center.

I drove over to a nearby campground, hoping to see the little train that chugs around that area – I heard its whistle a couple of times along the trail.  But by then it was past the depot’s closing time and I couldn’t catch even a glimpse of the train, only the rails.  So I drove over to the Broken Bow Lake Dam.  There was a pullout with lots of rock walls for what turned out to be the power inlet, but the area was neglected and overgrown, with only a sad memorial plaque and forlorn gate.

I drove over the dam and on to the separate spillway section, where I again pulled off and walked down to the shore.  There were a few power boats zooming around, but that was it.  I decided I’d had enough of Beavers Bend, so I drove back south to my Microtel in Idabel.  It wasn’t in the database for my GPS and Google Maps said its address didn’t exist, but I did eventually find it just north of a bypass on the northwest side of town.  There is little traffic here and there were only a couple of cars in the parking lot – business is very bad, but that did save me some money.  A room here is less than $60 with tax – if only Oregon hotels had those rates!

Along the drive back through Idabel I’d spotted a Mexican restaurant, Papa Poblano’s, that had a full parking lot.  So after a much-needed shower I drove back across to the east side and had another cheap but very tasty ethnic meal, again served by a waitress of appropriate extraction.  Then it was back to the Microtel to post photos and compose the blog.

Tomorrow I plan to drive north along highway 259, which John Kennedy dedicated back in 1961 as a north-south road that would finally link the Ouachitas with the rest of Oklahoma.  I won’t revisit the nearby Heavener Runestone, but will drive west to Cedar Lake deep in the forest.  Back in high school my friend Jeff Silver and I camped there, and I’d like to again take the trail circumnavigating the small lake.

There is a slideshow of photos from this day’s travels.

Here’s the route of this two-day trip.

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Take One Tablet to Feel Better?

A vision of an Apple Table

Gizmodo's vision of an Apple Tablet

Since the summer of 2008 my mobile computing experience has improved tremendously thanks to my netbook, iPhone, and Kindles.  My netbook was a tiny lightweight marvel on my recent trip to Oregon, and I used it to daily process and post photographs, blog entries, and short video clips.  But I don’t like to use it for reading or web browsing at a restaurant or even at home, preferring something more the size of my Kindle.

My Kindle seems ideal for reading novels and long internet articles I’ve saved with Instapaper.  Its larger non-backlit screen is far easier on my aging eyes than the iPhone.  But as a web browser the Kindle is an abomination.  Throughout my long trip to Oregon, I never used the Kindle, instead using the iPhone when out on the town or trail and switching to the netbook in the hotel rooms.  But I would have enjoyed having something the size of the Kindle with the iPhone’s browsing prowess and computing power when out on the town and also here back at home around the house.

I’ve hacked my Apple TV to attempt to get decent couch surfing, but that flopped.  The hacks make the Apple TV hesitate and stutter and I have not found a nicely-sized radio frequency keyboard with trackpad or trackball.  I have a Gyration unit, but grabbing its gyroscopic mouse to navigate and also trying to balance its accompanying keyboard is a pain.  Since the only real use I’ve made of the Apple TV hack has been to watch Leo Laporte’s streaming video webcasts on the Apple TV, and Apple has improved its Remote application on the iPhone to provide improved control of the Apple TV, I’m tempted to dump the hack to improve the unit’s performance.

So I’m excited by the prospect of an Apple Tablet, which is probably coming in 2010.  If it is the size of the Kindle but has the multi-touch interface of the iPhone and can run iPhone applications, I’m sold.  Obviously it will have WiFi, but the unknown is the cellular connection.  Will it have a WiFi-only version, like an iPod Touch, and also a subsidized 3G version like the iPhone?  If so, I might opt for the WiFi-only option.  I envision using it most around the house for couch surfing and sometimes at a WiFi-enabled restaurant.  It would be far more convenient to have a 3G cellular connection for it, but I’m not willing to fork over another $70/month to AT&T or some other carrier for that.

I’ve written before of the similar CrunchPad unit, but as its rumored cost rises to that of a netbook and with its singular focus on web browsing at the expense of the power of iPhone-style computing applications, I’m leaning toward paying what will no doubt be a high premium for an Apple Tablet’s greater power and flexibility.

UPDATE:  3.5 months later the CrunchPad project went belly-up and then became the JooJoo. I decided to wait for the Apple tablet, in the meantime using my netbook for occasional couch surfing.
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Oregon Trails 2009 Post Summary

Oregon Trip 2009

Oregon Trip 2009

My blog entries and daily slideshows for my Oregon trip in the summer of 2009 generated much interest. For the convenience of those who heard about this late, here’s the table of contents:

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