Oxley

June 12, 2013

Trumpetflower at Oxley (click image for slideshow)

My friends and fellow teachers Linda Shipley and Susan Staats joined me for a 4.35 mile walk at Tulsa’s Oxley Nature Center. We trod portions of a long list of short trails: Meadowlark Prairie, Red Fox, Woodpecker, Green Dragon, Bob’s, Coal Creek, Blackbird Marsh, Blue Heron, Bird Creek, Karen’s, Flowline, Whitetail, and Coyote. (The Coyote trail is not shown on the center’s online trail map, so I added it to my own version.)

Linda suggested and Susan encouraged most of the shots from this day hike, from the butterfly on the trumpetflower to the sequence of thistles; I got a shot of a deer watching our progress along the Flowline Trail.

We recovered from the hot and rather buggy hike with Irish Balloons at Kilkenny’s. 🙂

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

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Bugle Trail

June 8, 2013

Osage Hills Butterfly (click image for slideshow)

I’ve hiked at Osage Hills State Park over two dozen times in the past four years, but this weekend I had the opportunity to share it with Wendy for the first time as a couple. We hiked 5.4 miles on the Bugle Trail loop, starting at the park office and making our way south to the falls along Sand Creek. The rate of flow varies considerably over time, and recent rains had them flowing well.

Beautiful tiny bloom

Spiderwort and other wildflowers were blooming along the trail, attracting butterflies. Wendy and I noted how the spalling rock along the Bluff Trail resembled puzzle pieces. She had fixed us turkey sandwiches to enjoy at the bluffs overlooking Sand Creek. Tiny Eastern Tailed-Blue butterflies were fluttering around one spot on the bluff, and one particular tall wildflower attracted our attention with its beautiful tiny bloom, accented by bright white spots which glittered like jewels in the sunlight.

I laughed at the “Dinosaur” label on an older RV as we passed through the campground to climb the hill to the old CCC camp. Wendy posed by the chimney to give it scale and suggested an upward shot along one corner. Over at the Lake Lookout spillway I shot a panorama and a regular shot of her against the rockfall, and she shot me sitting near the spillway and then in my preferred position, stretched out on the slab to enjoy the sun.

We encountered horse riders as we passed the old pump house, and I included them in my video of this warm day hike.

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

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5x Faster Internet for $5

June 7, 2013

CableOnelogo_2Earlier this week my internet provider, Cable One, announced that as of June 10, 2013 it would be dropping the monthly data cap with overage fees on its 50 Mbps (megabits per second) internet service. They started offering that 50 Mbps service two years ago for $50/month, but internet-only users like myself, who chose not to bundle television and phone service with it, faced a 50 GB/month (gigabyte per month) cap with $0.50/GB overage fee, while those with the provider’s television/internet/phone bundle had a 100 GB/month cap with the same overage fee.

Since I’ve been using about 90 GB/month (CableOne subscribers can see their usage on their MyAccount website), moving to the old 50 Mbps plan from my uncapped Premium 10 Mbps plan would have increased my monthly bill from $53/month to approximately $70/month, plus the cost of renting or purchasing a DOCSIS 3.0 cable modem. That was too steep for me, so I stayed on the uncapped slower plan. Their change in policy, however, meant I could upgrade to the faster plan at minimal cost.

The faster plan is not necessarily unlimited; Cable One says they will still have a soft cap of 300 GB/month, urging subscribers who exceed that cap to move to new plans they will eventually offer: 60 Mbps with a 400 GB/month cap and 70 Mbps with a 500 GB/month cap.

Once CableOne pushed out a revision to their service agreement, confirming that the higher 300 GB/month cap would be going into effect, I went to my local CableOne office and upgraded to their 50 Mbps plan. I told them I had a DOCSIS 2.0 modem (a D-Link DCM-202), which I purchased years back to avoid rental charges. They said it would max out at between 20 and 30 Mbps, so I decided to rent from them a DOCSIS 3.0 modem, a Motorola SB6180. Switching to the 50 Mbps plan for $50/month, plus $8/month for the modem rental, increased my monthly cost for internet service from $53/month to $58/month. Paying $5 more per month for five times more bandwidth makes good sense. I could buy a used Motorola SB6180 for $40, but given the speed at which the internet is evolving (pun intended), I’ll probably just rent from them.

I went home and swapped out the cable modems. The internet came right up, but I didn’t have time until that evening to test the bandwidth. Aargh!  It was still running at 10 Mbps for downloads instead of the 50 Mbps I had purchased.

I was distracted by other business for a few days and then today I confirmed I was still only getting 10 Mbps. So I telephoned their local number and their automated system directed me to one of their internet support folks. He rebooted my modem, and voila! My download bandwidth quintupled. I should have thought of rebooting the modem myself, but their tech support was prompt and painless.

Below are the bandwidth results I’ve been getting with speedtest.net on my desktop computer and its iOS app on my iPad and iPhone 5, all via my Apple Airport Extreme A1354 router.

Device Connection Type Download Speed (Mbps) Upload Speed (Mbps)
Windows 7 Desktop Ethernet to Airport Extreme Router 47-48 2.2
iPad Airport Extreme Router
802.11n 5 GHz WiFi
20 2.4
Airport Extreme Router
802.11n 2.5 GHz WiFi
18 2.4
iPhone 5 Airport Extreme Router
802.11n 5 GHz WiFi
22 2.4
Airport Extreme Router
802.11n 2.5 GHz WiFi
21 2.4

Speedtest.net says my desktop’s internet download bandwidth is faster than 73% of the U.S., but the overhead on my WiFi network lowers my real-world WiFi speed to about 20 Mbps, which is faster than about 65% of the U.S.

Will this speed upgrade make a significant difference in my internet experience?  Yes, if it prevents some of the pauses and stuttering I encounter with YouTube clips and other streaming video. Streaming video, in the form of podcasts, Netflix, YouTube, iTunes, and Amazon Instant Video, has almost completely displaced broadcast television for me, and I cancelled my cable television service over five years ago.

I hope the upgrade makes downloading the morning newspaper a bit faster, although I get the Tulsa World on my iPad over WiFi, so it will only double, not quintuple, that speed — if the newspaper’s servers can push the bits fast enough in the first place.

My new 50 Mbps service is still 20 times slower than the 1 Gbps service Google Fiber offers in Kansas City for $70/month. But I once connected online using a 300 baud analog modem, so my new service is over 166,000 times faster than that, which makes me feel much better. 🙂

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Wichitas Day 3: Typical Tourists in Transit

June 3, 2013

Quartz Mountain range (click image for slideshow)

Wendy makes a hole-in-one

Wendy and I spent our final day in the Wichitas being typical tourists in transit. After a nice breakfast outside at the Sundance Café, rather than donning hiking boots, we grabbed putters at the nearby miniature golf course and put them to use on its 18 holes. Wendy made a hole-in-one on the “His and Hers” hole, something I could not replicate. Then we donned life jackets and took a paddle boat out below the Altus Dam’s spillway.

We then began the 300 mile drive home by heading north, past the western face of the Quartz Mountain range, to Granite to see its fake cemetery of funny tombstones. Along the way, large jet planes flew south toward Altus Air Force Base.

Along Interstate 40, we stopped in at the Cherokee Trading Post to pose by two different buffalo statues. We saw damage and debris from the recent F-5 tornado near El Reno. Dinner was in Tulsa with friends, and then it was back to Bartlesville.

Click here for a slideshow from this adventure

< Wichitas Day 2

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Wichitas Day 2: Quartz Mountain Trek

June 2, 2013

Quartz Mountain Resort (click image for slideshow)

The highlight of the second day in the Wichitas was hiking the trails around the lodge at Quartz Mountain Resort. Wendy and I enjoyed the breakfast buffet at the lodge’s Sundance Café and then set out on a 3.5 mile hike on a very sunny day up and over various hills around the lodge near the south end of Lake Altus.

We put on our packs and Tilley hats and began with the short hike up to the cave northwest of the lodge. From its mouth there is a nice view of the hills to the north. We then clambered down and proceeded west on a faded trail over to the wide Rock Creek Canyon. A sign mentioned a Sunrise Point Trail, but the trails around the lodge are neither blazed nor well-maintained. So rather than wander around the overgrown canyon looking for a trail not shown on the resort’s trail maps, we backtracked to the Sunset Loop and headed up the slope west of the lodge.

Our nemesis on this hike

The hillsides had many prickly pear cacti with yellow blooms, their long spines waiting to prick our shins. A closer look showed tiny insects in the bloom and highlighted the spines which we would soon be unwillingly collecting. Ascending to the ridge of the hill provided a panorama of the lodge and Lake Altus below.

I was interested to find that the panorama my iPhone 5 allowed me to take in a few seconds, ready to post, was superior to the one I took with my Canon Powershot SX260 HS superzoom’s Stitch Assist mode. The Canon requires that you try to align each shot in the viewfinder and later stitch the images together with software, such as Adobe Photoshop Elements. So in the future I’m going to use the iPhone for panoramas instead of the Canon. The iPhone 5 takes great shots in bright daylight so long as you don’t need to zoom.

But the cacti are pretty from a distance

I posed on a boulder and we admired the parade of cactus blooms on the ridge. Then we tried to follow the Sunrise Trail, but it quickly faded out. Without any blazes, we couldn’t tell if the trail had become overgrown with cacti and plant life or if it was simply a fainter trail heading downslope. We followed the faint trail down, and then it faded into an animal trail heading down to Rock Creek Canyon. We bushwhacked downslope until trees and brush blocked our way. Then we bushwhacked back up to the Sunset Trail. The journey was arduous, and we could not dodge all of the cactus spines. An insect stung Wendy on her upper arm, so I broke out the first aid kit for some antibiotic ointment and a band-aid.

We retraced our steps and this time bushwhacked toward a visible marker, which turned out to be a private property sign. We could not find the Sunrise Trail (which is often closed due to hunting, so that may be why it has faded out). So we bushwhacked downslope to the bunkhouse, where I knew we could cross the long footbridge over to the Twin Peaks Performance Hall for the Twin Peaks and Mountain Pass trails.

After the double dose of somewhat painful bushwhacking, with some trepidation I asked Wendy for her impression of the experience. She responded, “If you didn’t HAVE to do it, why would you?” But, along with the cuts and scrapes on her legs, she still had a smile on her face as we exited the footbridge and headed out along the Twin Peaks Trail. It is paved and wide with fairly gentle slopes, a stark contrast to the mountainside scrambling we had endured thus far. We relaxed on a bench overlooking Lake Altus.

Refreshed and unable to find the Eagle Trail, which is supposed to head up one of the peaks, we took the narrow Mountain Pass Trail over the ridge south of Twin Peaks to a cove of the lake. The ongoing drought has taken its toll. The waterline has receded greatly, and the sandy shore was littered with the remains of dead fish after toxic golden algae killed off the entire fish population in the lake. So don’t zoom in too much on the panorama I shot, or you’ll spoil the mood. 🙂

Lake Altus Cove

We returned to the lodge, tired and dirty and ready to clean up and rest before a scrumptious dinner at the Sundance Café. That was followed with a return outdoors on the long paved trail and footbridge to circumnavigate the basin south of the lodge. We returned to the bench on the Twin Peaks Trail to enjoy the clouds at sunset. Then we raced back to the lodge, arms flapping to repel the clouds of mosquitoes looking for an evening snack.

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

Wichitas, Day 3 >

< Wichitas, Day 1

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