Return to Timber Ridge

February 22, 2014

I’ve now taken Wendy on several hikes to enjoy the trails at Elk City Lake, an hour’s drive north in Kansas. Together we have hiked both the north and south ends of the Table Mound Trail as well as the east and west ends of the Elk River Trail. So on a warm February afternoon we opted to hike the Timber Ridge Trail between Card Creek and the western shore of the lake.

Timber Ridge Trail (click image for slideshow)

I first hiked that trail four years ago, revisited it two years ago, and now the 2.5 mile route has become somewhat faded and overgrown. The fading blue tree blazes are crucial for locating the leaf-obscured path, so we were glad to hear from the Card Creek Recreation Area host that he will have some Boy Scouts working this spring to clear and re-blaze the trail.  All of the trails at Elk City have rugged areas, and this trail is gentle up top but rugged on its lower sections.

Tree Growing Out of Rock

Our first stop was a surveyor’s mark. Soon the trail dissolved into a shallow leaf-filled depression in the soil with only faded blazes to offer guidance. I enjoyed pointing out trees which had struggled to grow up out of cracks in the rocks, and from previous hikes here I recalled a section of bluff where a huge pie-wedged piece of rock has popped out.

Somewhere along here a crashing of brush made me whirl and cry out, and we laughed when we saw it was just another darn armadillo.

The lower trail eventually intersects and briefly follows part of an old road running diagonally up the ridge, and Wendy and I posed in silhouette form on the roadbed. We dawdled on a rock above Card Creek, enjoying the view west across flat fields.  After ascending to the top of the ridge, we paused again at a big rock providing an overlook.

A scattering of what at first looked like ice-covered stones led us to investigate, discovering the remnants of what I suppose was a glazed terra cotta basin that was completely coated in glass. Later the camp host speculated it might be a remnant from an old glass factory in the region; before World War I the natural gas supplies in the area led to a number of glass factories, which eventually folded due to a shortage of suitable sand.

Glassy remains

Our dawdling stretched out the hike enough so that Brothers Railroad Inn in downtown Independence would be open for a tasty Italian dinner. I enjoyed my baked meat ravioli, but Wendy’s chicken parmigiana was atypical and she’ll choose something different the next time we’re in town to hike more trails; there are still a few sections of trail at Elk City she has yet to experience.

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

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Oak Leaf Trail at Okmulgee Lake

February 22, 2014

Another Lakeside Hike (click image for slideshow)

Last weekend Wendy and I took advantage of warmer weather to escape for another lakeside hike, this time at Okmulgee Lake. Although she grew up mostly in her home state of Texas, she graduated from Okmulgee High and once taught elementary and high school students there, so she was familiar with the lake, although she did more swimming than hiking there. I had a more photogenic hike there back in the autumn of 2011, but Wendy and I enjoyed the chance to escape the pressures of our jobs on another day hike.

We stopped for some delicious Chatsworth boxty at Kilkenny’s in Tulsa, then drove on south to Okmulgee for a 3.5 mile hike. I like how the Oak Leaf Trail has distinct sections, beginning with the shoreline trail with its lichen-covered slabs, followed by a hillside with scattered picnic tables, and then a hill with a paved lower trail leading over to a shelter in a camping area with a parallel and more primitive trail higher up which passes by a slab of rock providing a nice overlook of the lake.

Okmulgee Lake Overlook

Wendy enjoyed examining the graffiti at the overlook, ranging from romance to comedy. At the pretty rock shelter we were ungrammatically commanded to visit the bathroom, but nothing much was going down there. 🙂

Lake Shelter

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

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Eagle View Trail at Kaw Lake (Finally)

February 21, 2014

I’ve been swamped for the past month with work on a corporate grant proposal and design work on the high school expansion, and the weather was quite wintry for much of that time. But Wendy and I did manage two lake hikes which I finally have time to document, the first at Kaw Lake in late January.

An Imposingly Impassable Trail, or Possibly Passable?

The seasons impact the Eagle View Trail (click image for slideshow)

The Eagle View Trail at Kaw Lake, a few miles east of Ponca City, is not maintained well by the Corps of Engineers. The trail is about 12 miles long, open to equestrians, and winds along the south shore of the lake from Osage Cove to Burbank Landing.

Over 3.5 years ago, in early June 2010, I discovered it was terribly overgrown at both ends, but tried to hike it from the Osage Cove trailhead. I struggled for ten minutes northwest toward the lake shore before giving up, having struggled my way through chest-high grass and other overgrowth.

My frustration at never making it to the lake along that trail festered for years. So when Wendy and I wanted to escape town on a late Sunday in January 2014, I proposed that we have lunch in Ponca City and then see if the trail was passable in the winter when the overgrowth would be minimized.

She was game for the 90 minute drive 75 miles eastward along US 60, but I needed to find an alternate for my usual restaurant choice in Ponca City, Enrique’s Mexican restaurant at the airport, as they are closed on Sundays. TripAdvisor led us to have lunch at Zino’s Italian restaurant, which turned out to be a great choice. I thoroughly enjoyed my meal and plan to return to dine there if we ever make use of our reciprocity option for concerts at the nearby Poncan Theatre via our season membership in the Bartlesville Community Concert Association.

A Successful Day Hike

A 4.7 mile in-and-out hike

Trying the trail in mid-winter turned out to be a good choice; the trailhead was much clearer than what I’d found in late spring years earlier. We’d manage a 4.7-mile in-and-out hike this day until the trail faded noticeably.

Wendy’s shot of the field

A pickup with a horse trailer at the trailhead warned that we would have to be wary of droppings along the trail, and it wasn’t long before we starting dodging them. Soon we reached the edge of the large field where I’d abandoned my quest years ago. I think looking across the rising expanse of grass was one of Wendy’s favorite parts of the day. The trail hugged the fence line here, soon turning due west to make a straight shot to campsite 73 at Osage Cove, which is a preferable trailhead to use when accessible.

There was a play area, where I slid down the slide. The adjacent amphitheater had been tagged by the dreaded Ice Cream Cone Gang, but that did not deter us from proceeding north along the trail toward the curving lake shore. The trail eventually diverted from the fence line path, something we would likely have not noticed, given the poor trail maintenance, were it not for a large marker.

We finally reached the rocky south shore of the lake, where we found sheets of ice and snow still shrouding the more sheltered faces of the rock near the cool lake waters. This was my favorite part of the hike, other than the trail living up to its name when we spotted one eagle along the trail, which was so fast I could only grab a fuzzy shot of it in flight.

A Jutting Prow

Trees along the shore framed lake views as we walked northeast. At one inlet, a slab of rock jutting out from the water made me think of the prow of a sunken vessel. Rim rocks showed previous lake levels and one trailside stump was striking. Invasive cedars lined one section of shore, and we passed some unwelcome trailside beer cans as well; some people just don’t get it.

We found a fire ring at the most significant promontory along this section of shore and then the trail began to fade noticeably. There had been occasional yellow blazes on rocks here and there, and some plastic markers, but after the next inlet the trail became quite hard to trace. I think most people hiking from the campground turn around here, and we decided that we would follow suit.

While retracing our route we encountered a young couple on horseback, with one horse slipping and sliding around on the wet rocks. I was glad Wendy and I had followed trail etiquette and stood far back from the trail to give them passage.

A Welcome Glare

The sun glared across the water as we returned, a welcome sight in January. A lone boat zoomed past us as we left the lake behind, happy that we had escaped town for a Sunday stroll.

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

Posted in day hike, photos, travel | 3 Comments

Mr. Fix-It Helps Make a Portable Dishwasher Permanent

February 2, 2014

I’ve written before of my attempts at home and car improvement, and in January I had two opportunities for such projects. I did one for the most part by myself, but the other was mostly done by John Henderson, the husband of Betty Henderson, who has been a teaching colleague of mine for the past 25 years. Betty and John are both generous folks, and when they purchased a new home with its own permanent dishwasher, they no longer needed their portable unit. Betty offered the unit to me, knowing that the old HotPoint unit in the galley kitchen at Meador Manor still worked but had odor problems. I am truly thankful she also offered John’s services in installing the new unit; this Mr. Fix-It needed the help.

That Stinking Dishwasher

I did a very minor repair to the old HotPoint dishwasher when I bought my home twenty years ago; the racks were bulging with rust and I was able to purchase new ones. Some years ago I began having odor problems with the kitchen sink and slowly realized it was not just the garbage disposal but water caught in the drain line from the dishwasher. That line had been strung up into an inverted U where it connected to the garbage disposal, but it had been hung from flexible wire which had finally given way. I strung the hose back up by tying it to a water line. This made the odor less horrible, but I still had to run the dishwasher half empty sometimes because it just stunk up the place.

So I was hopeful the new unit would have better drainage, but also trepidatious about what it might take to get a portable unit to install under my kitchen counter. That concern was justified; the installation took many hours as we puzzled through it, and wasn’t finalized until I received a few parts some days later.

Removing the Old Unit

Removing the old dishwasher (click image for slideshow)

I used a YouTube video to guide me in removing the old HotPoint unit. It was right on point, reminding me to unplug the unit from the electrical outlet under the sink. Then I disconnected the drain line from the garbage disposal, removed the low panel below the dishwasher door, and disconnected the copper hot water line and the rubber drain line underneath the dishwasher.

Next I removed the hangers connecting the dishwasher to the underside of the kitchen counter, and lowered the leveling legs on the front of the dishwasher to provide clearance. I put a big piece of cardboard down on the floor and pulled the old unit out from the cabinetry. Once I could reach them, I lowered the leveling legs on the back of the unit, and pulled it all of the way out. I drug it out into the garage to await a spring clean-up day when the city will hopefully haul off old appliances.

It was fun to make a couple of discoveries in the slot where the dishwasher had been. The installer had left a screwdriver under it years ago, and there was also some of the old original sheet vinyl kitchen flooring under there. Wow – my house was built in 1981 and that original floor had a definite 1970s vibe.  It had been replaced with newer sheet vinyl by 1994, and a few years ago I pulled that out and put in self-stick tiles. They gap a bit these days, but they still look a lot better than the sheet vinyl did.

Stripping the Portable Unit of its Cover and Base Frame

The new portable dishwasher, stripped of its coverings

John and Betty arrived and we unloaded the new portable unit, made by Whirlpool. I helped John remove the wood top and outer cabinet, and he cut the drain and feeder hoses off the connector which fitted them to a sink for portable use.  He said his father had installed a portable dishwasher into a house before, so he knew it could be done.

I was glad to see a nice tall inverted U for the dishwasher drain hose, built right into the side of the unit, which would keep water from backflowing. A permanent dishwasher does not use a base frame and counterweight, instead resting on leveling legs and using hangers to secure it to the countertop.

We took the unit off the base frame, but found there were only leveling legs on the front of the portable unit; the back end had slots where some sort of legs or supports might attach, but they were absent. When shoved under the counter, there was now a big gap between the top of the unit and the countertop.

John called his father to see what he had done with the other portable dishwasher back in the day, and he said he had left it in its case with the counterweight. So we reattached the base frame and counterweight. I pulled off the casters and John snipped large holes in the metal cover to allow the drain and feeder hoses to pass through the right side so they could go through into the kitchen sink cabinet on the right side.

But, alas, the portable dishwasher on its frame and in its cabinet would not fit under the counter anymore, even with the top removed.  We were truly chagrined when we found that even when sitting on its base frame without the cover, it was still too tall to fit into the slot beneath the counter.  Now what?

Looking for Help

Whirlpool’s attachment for the top front of their dishwashers

I tried finding information on the Whirlpool website about converting a portable dishwasher for permanent installation, but only found an expensive conversion kit which I was uncertain would work on our unit.  So we decamped to Lowe’s to see if they could help. Their Whirlpool catalog showed an undercounter mounting kit, but again we couldn’t tell if it would truly work with our unit.

Then we went to Teco appliances, where the Hendersons bought the unit a few years ago. They couldn’t help regarding the lack of back legs, but I noticed their regular Whirlpool dishwashers on display, of similar design to the portable unit, had some front hangers that looked like they would work with our unit. It had no hangers, but did have two slots in the metal where hangers might fit.

So Teco ordered two of the hangers, apologizing that because the part was not a commonly needed item, they could only order it for $7 each as part of an assembly, which is of course a huge markup. I did not care about that, wanting to get the unit bolted to the countertop without devising a hanger of my own making.

Building A New Base

Homemade base for the dishwasher

So we now would have a way to connect the dishwasher to the countertop, but needed to lift it without using its own frame. John measured the cabinet and the dishwasher and decided we could buy a piece of plywood of appropriate thickness, cut it to fit, and screw the dishwasher and counterweight to that wood so the unit would slide into the slot and be at the right height.

So we returned to Lowe’s, had the wood cut, and bought screws. We also bought some new connectors to allow us to extend the dishwasher drain hose to reach the garbage disposal and also connect its water line to the copper line in the cabinet. Back at the Manor, John drilled holes in the metal and plastic edges of the dishwasher’s bottom edge so we could screw it into the wood, struggling because I only had very old drill bits at home and some were too dull to cut through the metal. But he found a decent bit and John was able to connect the dishwasher and the counterweight to the new plywood base.

We got the unit inserted and it was just about right, with the top resting close to the bottom of the countertop. The counterweight meant the unit would not start walking when used, so we hooked up the hoses and set it running. Success!

Final Touches

Hooking the drain line to the garbage disposal

John and Betty were finally able to leave, having invested much more time in getting rid of that portable dishwasher than they had to. I was still concerned about the drain line, given the long history of odors. Even though there was a tall inverted U for it in the side of the dishwasher, we had not elevated the drain hose above the inlet into the garbage disposal.

I figured disposal waste could backflow into the drain hose and get to stinking, so I bought some more hose and connectors and a pipe bracket and put a tall inverted U in the drain hose as it exited the garbage disposal, using the pipe bracket to hold it up high against the cabinet wall just under the sink. The double traps should keep the stink to a minimum.

A few days later the front hangers arrived at Teco. I picked them up and pulled out my dishwasher, inserted the hangers in the slots and bent a metal tab to hold them in place. Then I shoved the dishwasher back in as far as possible and used spare unused floor tiles to shim up the front of the unit until it was flush against the bottom of the counter. I screwed the hangers into the underside of the counter and then used a reciprocating saw to remove the part of the hangers sticking out beyond the edge of the counter.

Putting It to the Test

I’ve been steadily filling the unit with dirty dishes, but it has taken me awhile to fill it since the racks are so much better designed than the old HotPoint unit. They hold far more glasses up top and plates and bowls down below than the old unit did. They save room by putting the silverware in a door rack, which you can remove to empty it, although I find that harder to empty than the old unit’s silverware bucket.

When I finally had a full load, I popped in some detergent, and set it to work. The new unit says it reduces typical energy consumption by 40% but in doing so extends the time for a cycle to several hours. They recommend using the Rinse Aid to help compensate for less energy use in drying the dishes, although I ran the unit without it and it did fine. So far there has been zero odor from the unit or the sink, so this project was a definite win.

Completed project

Click here for a slideshow from this project

Posted in home repair | 1 Comment

A New Power Supply for Vector

February 1, 2014

I keep my desktop computers for extended periods, typically four to eight years.  So I buy high-end models that will last for a long time. But that means I must deal with typical fatigue failures. That is what I dealt with this week, when the power supply in my 2009 Velocity Micro Z35, which I call Vector, crapped out.

My low teacher salary means I keep cars for even longer periods – Princess the Toyota Camry is over 12 years old with over 225,000 miles on her.  I know water pumps wear out and timing belts must not be allowed to break, so I have them periodically replaced.  For a computer, the spinning hard drives have a limited lifespan, so I use a mirrored second hard drive in a RAID 1 setup so that I can recover quickly from a drive crash. But the next most common problem with an older computer is a burned-out power supply. That is too infrequent to keep a spare on hand, so when my desktop computer showed absolutely no sign of life last weekend, I knew it would stay out of commission for a few days.

My Velocity Micro system has lots of fans, both in the case and on internal components. That helps it stay cool, but also introduces a lot of dust into the unit, as does it placement on the floor next to my computer desk. My system had overheated and shut itself off a few times, which I temporarily fixed by cleaning it out and keeping an air gap on all sides. But I don’t have a regular cleaning schedule for the unit, and when the power supply went down and I opened up the unit, I discovered the fans and internals were covered in dust. That probably shortened the life of the supply.

The dead power supply taken out of Vector

I blew out all of the dust and began examining the many power cords from the 550 watt supply. It is a real monster to allow one to outfit the computer with lots of drives and powerful graphic cards, etc. My system didn’t use half of the supply cords, which were tucked away, and had some separate power line splices to hook multiple fans and drives up to a single power supply cord. But that still left several connections to pull apart:

  • 20-pin motherboard connector
  • 8-pin +12V workstation connector
  • 4-pin Molex connector for DVD/CD drive and fans
  • SATA connector for hard drives

Power supply connectors

I pulled all of those out and removed the old supply. I could buy a nice Antec supply of the same power with the various connectors on Amazon for $65 with 2nd-day Prime shipping, but my girlfriend, Wendy, knows how to save a dime and urged me to get a cheaper supply from TigerDirect. I opted for the Ultra LSP550 supply, which cost $35 with a $10 2nd-day-air shipping charge.

The new power supply

I ordered the supply over the weekend and the new unit arrived on Wednesday. There was actually a nice user’s manual with step-by-step illustrated directions for making the various connections. I plugged everything in, put the system back together, and thankfully it booted up like a champ.

I have no immediate plans to retire my system. The Intel i7-920 microprocessor with four 2.66 GHz cores running Windows 7 still meets my needs, although the slow hard drives are a real bottleneck when comparing performance to my old MacBook Air, which is speedy thanks to its solid state drive. I hate Windows 8, so I’ll probably wait for Windows 9 and cheaper large-scale solid state drives before I buy a new desktop system. Hopefully the new power supply will keep Vector running until then.

Vector back up and running

Posted in home repair, technology | 4 Comments