All Your Love (I Miss Loving)

My September 2012 Song of the Month

All Your Love (I Miss Loving) from Bingo!

I only rarely attend music concerts by pop artists. I’ll drive hours to attend Pink Martini concert, who often perform with local symphonic groups, but the only time I went to concerts by pop artists was when I worked the concession stands at Oklahoma City venues to earn money for our high school’s Junior Classical League. Soooo nerdy!

But when some friends at work mentioned having tickets to the Steve Miller Band concert at the Hard Rock Casino in Catoosa, I leapt at the opportunity. He had a long string of pop hits in the 1970s and 1980s, with my favorites being Take the Money and Run, Jet Airliner, and The JokerAt the Catoosa concert I would hear all of these and other hits like Abracadabra, Fly Like An Eagle, SwingTown, Rock’nMe, and Jungle Love. Everything was spot-on great. Joseph Wooten really shines on his keyboard solo on Fly Like An Eagle.

The Steve Miller Band of today: Jacob Peterson, Joseph Wooten, Steve Miller, Kenny Lee Lewis, Sonny Charles, & Gordy Knudtson

But Steve also played some lesser-known tracks from various albums and a few blues numbers from his 2010 album Bingo! The song which took me by surprise was All Your Love (I Miss Loving) with Sonny Charles of the Checkmates doing the lead vocal. Steve lauded songwriter and bluesman Otis Rush of Chicago for this song, first recorded in 1958. Steve calls the song a “love rhumba” – he says Otis Rush treated him very well when Steve was very young seeing him in clubs in Chicago, taking off his guitar and handing it to Steve and inviting him to play.

The dark Afro-Cuban sound of the Steve Miller Band’s performance with Sonny Charles made me want to hear that song again, so when I got home I looked it up and found out about the Bingo! album, which came after a 17-year break in studio albums for Steve Miller. All Your Love (I Miss Loving) is the 8th track, featuring Michael Carabello on the congas and Adrian Areas on the timbales with the reverb-laden guitar playing reminiscent of Jimi Hendrix. The 1958 version of the song by Otis Rush was recently inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame, and influenced the later Black Magic Woman by Peter Green and made famous by Santana as well as Beyond Here Lies Nothin’ by Bob Dylan.

Steve Miller Band performing at the Hard Rock Casino in Catoosa on September 28, 2012

I also really like some other tracks on Bingo! and bought the whole extended Special Edition of the album. Sonny Charles’s Ooh Poo Pah Doo (YouTube) was fun at the live concert and on the album, and You Got Me Dizzy (YouTube video) is well-placed on the album right after All Your Love (I Miss Loving) as an upbeat contrast.

 

All Your Love (I Miss Loving)
Cover by Sonny Charles and the Steve Miller Band

All the love pretty baby, I have in store for you.
All the love pretty baby, I have in store for you.
You know I love you baby, I know you love me too.

All your loving, I miss loving.
All your kissing, I miss kissing.
All your loving, I miss loving.
All your kissing, I miss kissing.
Before I met you baby, I didn’t know what I’d been missing.

All the love pretty baby, I have in store for you.
All the love pretty baby, I have in store for you.
You know I love you baby, I know you love me too.

Ohhhhh…..mmmmmmm….
Aw shucks!

October 2012 Song of the Month >

< August 2012 Song of the Month

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Apple Updates: iOS 6 and iPhone 5

September 29, 2012

I received my iPhone 5 this week.

Four years ago I bought my first smartphone: the iPhone 3G. It was empowering to have the internet almost always available, and the phone enabled me to allow my occasional day hikes to explode the following year into a full-blown obsession which thankfully has both physical and emotional health benefits. Having audiobooks and podcasts to entertain me on the road and along my walks, coupled with my TomTom GPS app and later my MotionX GPS trail tracker, encouraged me to take 156 days to hike almost 1,000 miles since July 2009.

I enjoyed the upgrade in 2010 to the iPhone 4, although the reception problems with its around-the-rim antenna made the limitations of AT&T’s rural phone network, my technological lifeline on many travels, even more annoying. I enjoyed the iOS environment enough to buy Apple’s iPad and upgrade my pads with each new release. I use the pad around the house to watch videos, get my daily text-based news, and surf the internet.

So I was very interested in this fall’s release of the latest operating system, iOS 6, for both my iPhone and iPad,, as well as upgrading from my iPhone 4 to the iPhone 5. The standard two-year phone contract means I only upgrade the phone every other year, and I feel I hit the cycle in the right spot: I skipped the iPhone 3GS and iPhone 4S and instead my phone upgrades match up to the major product revisions rather than simply hardware speed boosts and refinements.

Siri’s Potential

I’m hopeful Siri will make me a safer driver.

I’ve never had the vaunted Siri voice-recognition assistant before, and the voice commands for audio playback control on my first two iPhones never worked well enough to bother with. Siri is like the Star Trek computer brought to life with less gear grinding, but I always regarded the talking computer in my favorite television show of all time as more of a dramatic device tailored to the needs of television entertainment than a future necessity.

iOS 6 brought Siri to my iPad, but not my iPhone 4. I’d have to wait a few weeks for the iPhone 5 to have Siri in my pocket. And I’ve only rarely used Siri on the iPad, since voice control seems superfluous when I have my hands free. But having Siri available when I’m driving sounds promising – I know I shouldn’t be trying to read and type on my iPhone while driving, although I do manipulate the TomTom GPS app and the iPhone’s playback controls while driving. With Siri I could hopefully control playback, make calls, send texts, and manipulate turn-by-turn GPS functions without having to take my hands off the wheel to manipulate icons and keyboards, except for pushing the home button a couple of time to activate Siri and then having to confirm some of Siri’s actions. I haven’t had a chance to really try all of that yet since the iPhone 5 only arrived a couple of days ago, but I’m looking forward to it.

VERDICT on Siri: I’m still in the discovery phase and haven’t even gone to trial yet.

10/2 UPDATE: On a trip to and from Oklahoma City, I never used Siri. I’ll need to be driving to unfamiliar locales to put it to the test.

Maps

I will continue to use my TomTom GPS app for road trips.

Unfortunately the arrival of Siri marks the departure of both the YouTube and Maps apps which I’ve used for years on the iPads and iPhones. Apple had a deal with Google which provided the back-end for the Maps app but did not offer the voice turn-by-turn driving directions Google added to Android smartphones some time ago. So while I could get graphical driving directions, locate business and points of interests with smart links, and use Google’s Street View to even get an idea of what my destination looked like, the built-in Maps app was not a practical way to navigate when driving alone.

Years ago I bought the then-quite-expensive TomTom GPS app to address this shortcoming. It has been upgraded steadily since then, so the up-front cost no longer stings. Somewhat like when Google updates its various free services, I’m not always thrilled with the changes in my TomTom app, but overall it has improved. I call it Trixie since with the voice I’ve selected it is my navigatrix and also because the inevitable shortcomings of GPS and the on-board maps and database means it sometimes leads me astray.

The TomTom app was greatly improved when it began linking to Google Local Search awhile back. The latest upgrade defaulted to using Facebook’s Places and that fooled me into thinking the Google Local Search was gone, which was a great disappointment. But I find that I can still access the Google database if I press the right icon in my Places search, which is a relief. Google simply has the best database out there, although it does have its flaws, having directed me more than once to a spot a mile or more distant from the actual location of the business I was seeking. It is addresses along the busy highway corridors in smaller towns which seem to be the most unreliable.

But the TomTom app has been a godsend for my travels and will remain so for now, even though iOS 6 finally brings built-in audio turn-by-turn GPS navigation to the iPhone 4S and my new iPhone 5. That’s because Apple ditched Google Maps for its own solution and, as evidenced by the recent apology by CEO Tim Cook, its maps product has significant shortcomings. My limited use has shown that it is not nearly as powerful as the old Maps app in regards to search and it lacks Street View. But the new Maps app is far from useless: it had no trouble finding a Tulsa restaurant location listing last night and allowed me to quickly phone in for reservations. I’ve downloaded the Live Street View Free app so I can use Street View if needed, although the experience is far from seamless.

But on my frequent road trips I often am in rural areas with slow or non-existent cellular data service, so I wouldn’t rely on the new or the old built-in Maps app anyway, since it needs access to an online database to function. My TomTom GPS app has its maps built-in and many points of interest (POIs) to boot, although its on-board database of POIs is a pale and skinny shadow of Google’s robust online database. So I’ll continue to rely on my TomTom GPS app for road trips and only use the built-in Maps app for quick searches and directions in metro areas.

VERDICT on Maps: Use the TomTom GPS app for road trips for its on-board maps and database; Apple Maps will do for quick searches in metro areas until Google offers something better or Apple catches up. Try Live Street View Free as an enhancement when needed.

10/2 UPDATE: I used Apple’s turn-by-turn directions on the drive home from Oklahoma City. The visuals were attractive and the directions accurate, but the estimated time of arrival was not as accurate as my TomTom and I could not zoom very far out on the view without switching to Overview mode. I will be happy to use the Apple Maps app for quick turn-by-turn directions but for longer trips will rely on my TomTom app.

YouTube

The decent old YouTube app on the iPad has disappeared, replaced by an inferior iPhone app from Google.

The biggest disappointment in iOS 6 has been the loss of the YouTube app on my iPad. Apple wrote that app years ago and hadn’t updated it, but it worked very well for my needs, allowing me to quickly access new video podcasts I had subscribed to in YouTube. And the app allowed me to quickly flip my viewing from the iPad to my large HDTV by using the AirPlay service and my Apple TV box. The new operating system deletes the old built-in YouTube app and offers no suitable replacement for the iPad.

I presume Google was caught off-guard, since their only response thus far has been to release a YouTube app that works okay on the iPhone, but is annoying on the iPad. Their new app insists on listing videos only in portrait mode, and I only use my iPad in that orientation when reading a long text article or my Tulsa World. Since my iPad is usually sitting on a surface using the great ZeroChroma Vario case with built-in stand, it is most annoying to have to pick it up and turn it to portrait orientation to pick a video to watch, and then have to rotate back to landscape mode to watch the video full-screen.

Even worse, the stupid app does not support AirPlay nearly as well as the old one did. The new one can only display video through the Apple TV in mirroring mode, which means you have to dedicate your iPhone or iPad to playing the video. The old app would send video and audio to the Apple TV via AirPlay and keep working in the background when you switched to a different app. Google needs to get that functionality back, pronto!

I’ve tried some alternatives, from Frequency to Squrl to Vodio, but each of them had significant drawbacks. So for now I’m watching all of my TWiT network technology podcasts using their own TWiT iPad app, which supports AirPlay in the background. But I’m stuck using the lousy YouTube app to watch the wonderful model-building videos posted by Steve Neill and other YouTube videos.

VERDICT on YouTube: Watching YouTube videos on the iPad or iPhone has taken a significant step backward in the new release. Google’s YouTube iPhone app needs to be “plussed” to offer landscape mode on the iPad and needs to add background AirPlay capability.

10/2 UPDATE: Chrystal Cain Shiarla recommended Jasmine, an iPhone/iPad YouTube client app that supports background AirPlay. I’m back in business on my iPad!

Welcome Changes in iOS 6

Siri is the most obvious new feature of iOS 6 for my iPad 3, but a few other new features of iOS 6, independent of the new iPhone 5 hardware, have stood out for me.

  • I’m glad that I no longer have to put in my iTunes password when I just want to install a free app update.
  • I learned to never leave my iPhone or iPad by my bed at night, because texts, reminders, and unwanted phone calls could make the device light up and make noise, waking me unnecessarily since I am a light sleeper and insomniac. I immediately used iOS 6’s new Do Not Disturb settings to tell both devices to keep dark and quiet during my normal sleep time unless someone in my contacts list is trying to reach me.
  • I haven’t used them yet, but I like the various options you can invoke when receiving a call while you are busy.
  • I shot my first iOS 6 panorama on the iPhone 5 tonight. I didn’t have subject matter worthwhile to post the photo, however of the orchard along the Pathfinder Parkway. Previously I’ve used the Autostitch Panorama  and PhotoSynth apps for such functionality, but having it built into the normal Camera app makes it far more likely to be used. However, the iPhone 5 camera is no match for my Canon superzoom camera; most of the photos I took at a Steve Miller Band concert last night at the Hard Rock Casino in Catoosa were unimpressive; here’s the best of the bunch after some cropping and Photoshop tweaking, and the original photo is shown below, which was shot with the flash on – shots without flash led to massive blooming and oversaturation of the performers on the brightly lit stage.

10/2 UPDATE: Andy Ihnatko also had annoying low-light blurring on the iPhone 5 and speculates that it is switching to a four-pixel blend mode for low light which is causing the loss of resolution, made apparent in zoomed images. Hopefully he’s right and a software update can fix this, reserving the pixel-blend mode for lower-light situations.

Unaltered iPhone 5 photo of a Steve Miller concert.

The iPhone 5

I was so eager to get an iPhone 5, yet unwilling to suffer waiting in lines, that I got up at 3:30 a.m. to order one an hour after pre-orders began. Even then the demand was high enough that I was told I’d have to wait two weeks after they went on sale in stores to receive mine. Thankfully it came in much earlier than that, only five days after the sales debut. I got a quotation from Gazelle for my iPhone 4 before the iPhone 5 announcement and shipped it off today, so I’ll get back $175 to cover part of the $399 up-front cost of my new phone.

I spent the dough to get the 64 GB iPhone 5.

Memory Management and iCloud

I ordered the largest 64 GB model since my 32 GB iPhone 4 had maxed out its memory with my various apps plus my large collection of iTunes-rated songs, audiobooks, and podcasts. I had to set the phone to use 128 kpbs AAC audio files rather than 256 kpbs and to only load the latest 10 unplayed episodes of each podcast to save space. iCloud music management was more annoying than useful, with slow-to-update-or-appear playlists and having to force many songs to be uploaded into iCloud before I could get them on the phone, so I had finally turned it off on the old phone.

I’m trying iCloud music sync again on my new phone, although I was careful to not turn that on until I had synced it with iTunes on my Windows desktop computer to preload over 2,000 rated songs from my collection via USB cable rather than using up over 15 GB of my CableOne internet bandwidth to update the phone via iCloud over WiFi. Then I turned on iCloud and it is now syncing my music and the like.

Sadly the same frustrations with iCloud I had before are recurring, so I’ll likely turn that off and return to manual syncing with iTunes, even though iTunes on Windows is a bloated slow hog. It is supposed to be updated later this fall and I sure hope they slim it down and speed it up!

Hardware

I like the new design, which is a bit taller than before, enough room for another row of icons on each screen, which is welcome. Apps don’t have to be updated to still look fine on the bigger screen, and the phone is very snappy and responsive. Unlike my iPhone 4, the new phone supports the so-called 4G service AT&T offers in Bartlesville and Tulsa, which is HSPA+. Web pages load noticeably faster than with 3G, let alone poor old EDGE, although I suspect I would get even better results with LTE service. Too bad AT&T’s LTE in the Sooner State is currently limited to the Oklahoma City metro area. I’ll be there in a couple of days and will try to run some speed tests.

10/2 UPDATE: While briefly in Oklahoma City I ran some off-the-cuff speed tests:

Location Network Best Download Speed (Mbps) Best Upload Speed (Mbps)
Bartlesville My home’s WiFi (802.11n on 5 GHz band to a cable modem’s 10 Mbps service) 8.83 0.97
Bartlesville AT&T HSPA+ at my home 5.28 0.74
Oklahoma City AT&T TLE at my parents’ home 8.51 2.97
Oklahoma City My parents’ WiFi (802.11g  to a DSL line) 4.72 0.53
Oklahoma City Bricktown hotel’s WiFi 5.81 2.84

So, as expected, the TLE cellular data service was very fast (although in my little test it was nowhere near as fast as what some folks are getting with TLE around the country), while my local HSPA+ “4G” data service was nice but not spectacular, albeit noticeably faster than 3G and of course EDGE.

The phone is noticeably lighter and slimmer, and I’m glad the back is no longer glass. For years I used a very thin plastic case to help with the antenna signal attenuation problem on my iPhone 4, but eventually chucked that and used it bare. I’m using the iPhone 5 uncased as well, a risk since I didn’t buy AppleCare for it, but I’ve yet to break an iPhone. I need to find a nice slim belt holster, since the cheap BlueHarbor ones I’ve used for the iPhone 4 do not fit well.

Everybody wants to know about the iPhone 5.

The phone looks much like the iPhone 4, but the larger size is a give-away. A local patrolman pulled me over today because my car’s license tag had expired (either the reminder card was lost in the mail or wasn’t sent due to budget cuts or a bureaucratic snafu), and as soon as he looked in the car he eagerly asked, “Is that the iPhone 5? Do you like it?”

That helped prompt me to write this review, although I doubt the friendly patrolman will ever know about it. By the way, he let me off with a warning and I promptly drove to the tag agency to get my new sticker, but it was closed on weekends. That prompted me to find out that I could renew my tag online and have a new sticker mailed to me, so I did that and they should now email a reminder to me each summer so I can follow that routine. I also added an annual reminder to my online calendar system.

Changes in the headphone and sync/charging ports on the new phone are annoying.

My “conservation of happiness” principle applies to this hardware upgrade, however. The improved size, weight, and speed are offset by cable connection annoyances. They ditched the 30-pin connector used for years for both iPhones and iPads for a new smaller one, prompting me to order three expensive new cables to make charging my iPhone easier: one for battery pack in my hiking backpack, another for the spot in the living room where I typically place the phone to be charged, and a third one for the car. The cable that came with the iPhone is hooked up to my Windows desktop computer. I could use one cable for everything, but I’m sure I’d lose track of it and don’t need the hassle.

Thankfully when I wired my old car radio with an FM modulator to feed the iPhone audio signal through the car speakers I used a standard TRS audio cable and not a 30-pin connector. But Apple moved the line out jack from the top of the phone to the bottom. I was annoyed when they did that in some iPods years back and truly dislike it on the phone. It means I have to feed the cable in the car up through the bottom of the dashboard phone mount. Gravity tugs down the cable and causes the connection to cut out if the cable isn’t plugged in very firmly. You can’t just put the phone upside down in the holder, because in portrait mode it insists on having the home button at the bottom of the phone and won’t rotate the display 180 degrees. I find all of this annoying and stupid.

VERDICT on the iPhone 5: A faster processor and 4G support while being lighter, slimmer, and longer are all nice improvements, outweighing the annoying port changes.

The Future

It will be interesting to see how much I use Siri on my road trips. I hope it proves useful and makes me a safer driver. I also look forward to seeing what I can get out of the iPhone 5 camera on those occasions when I’m not carrying my Canon superzoom camera.

I expect Google will get its act together and release a better YouTube app for the iPad and eventually offer an iPhone Google Maps app. Until then, my TomTom GPS and Apple Maps, combined with occasional use of Live Street View Free, should meet my needs.

I empathize with this fellow.

I’m glad I upgraded to the iPhone 5, but I had been tempted to investigate the larger Samsung Galaxy S3, prompted to do so by my presbyopia and some nice photos I’ve seen taken with the S3. It has never been fun to be nearsighted, and presbyopia makes it all the more agonizing. I probably need larger bifocal lenses, but decent frames with the Crizal lenses I like are incredibly expensive.

I’ve made a large investment in the iOS ecosystem and know that it is more seamless, if at times more limiting, than Android. So while I’m still using Windows at school and home for desktop computing, my mobile hardware is still all Apple.

The last couple of weeks have been fun with iOS and iPhone upgrades, and later in October I should receive my fourth Kindle: the Paperwhite. Great gadget goodness!

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Withrow Springs

September 23, 2012

War Eagle Creek

The forecast said one of the remaining hiking spots on my list would only hit the mid-70s on Sunday, so on Saturday I graded in the morning and did the laundry to leave the next day free for the three hour drive to Withrow Springs State Park in Arkansas. It is less than 20 miles south of Eureka Springs, which I’ve visited countless times, but I don’t recall ever hearing of it until I scoured the internet for hiking trails in northwest Arkansas. The park has three trails which I walked in a loop, along with some connecting roads, to form a 4.4 mile hike.

Dawn Along Hwy 75

The rising sun fought obscuring clouds as I drove south from Bartlesville, away from a small lightning storm and then through the rain along the familiar straight shot along 412 east of Tulsa into Arkansas. As soon as I entered our neighboring state, my progress was slowed by the interminable series of uncoordinated stoplights through Siloam Springs, Tontitown, and Springdale. Twenty-five miles after finally punching my way through the long north-south sprawling strip of Bentonville/Rogers/Springdale/Fayetteville, I turned north on familiar Arkansas 23 to pull off at the War Eagle trailhead immediately after crossing War Eagle Creek.

I’ve heard of War Eagle my entire life, but in association with the annual fall craft show at the mill 15 miles northwest along the creek, not Withrow Springs. The War Eagle Hiking Trail just north of the Highway 23 bridge led east along the bluffs of the north bank of the creek, the path using narrow shelves of rock. I passed a small cave and then the main cave entrance. Precautions against white-nose bat syndrome meant I could only intrude with my flash and zoom lens, however.

Bluff Trail

A more treacherous section of trail along a high part of the bluff had a steel cable handrail for security. The trail widened but still rode the bluff edge above a dry fork of the creek until the creek area widened out. There a couple of kayaks had been landed on the shore. I walked out on a thin ledge for a panorama of the creek and a view eastward of the mirror-smooth water. I sat on the thin ledge for a self-portrait. It would have been a perfect spot for lunch, but I wasn’t hungry yet.

The trail began to climb uphill, with a narrow animal trail leading off along the base of a high bluff. I climbed upward to a series of overlooks, where I shot a panorama and a view of a home situated above the creek. A tall young Native American male came bounding down the trail, joining a fellow hiker at one of the overlooks. I speculated that they might be the kayakers, since a stout old fellow and the younger woman with him whom I’d spied earlier hardly seemed likely to be out kayaking.

I followed the trail across fields, passing a state park sign to cross Highway 23. The War Eagle trail ends here but the Dogwood Trail begins right across the highway. It began with a climb uphill along an old roadbed and then wound past a dry waterway. I passed what was once a tree with two trunks and now was one surviving trunk beside a hollow stump. There were toadstools along the trail.

Forest Trail Fungus

I reached a spur of Highway 23 and followed the road northeast until I reached a campground. Across the road was the start of the Forest Trail, which is an old forest road leading uphill northwest and then heading southwest across the rolling landscape. I lunched at a bench at the trailhead and then followed the old road. There were some enormous mushrooms along this trail; I placed a Sacajawea dollar beside one to provide scale. The road trail led onward, with more of the big mushrooms along the way and other fungi.

The trail curved past an large old dead tree and then ended at a paved road which I followed downhill to the main park area. Withrow Spring pours out of the mountainside here and the channel has been lined with rock and then dammed to form a large fishing pond. Plaques mounted above the spring were pleased to inform me that Roscoe Hobbs donated 320 acres to form this park back in 1962 and that the park is named for Richard Withrow, who homesteaded here in 1872 and built the first grist mill in the area.

Withrow Spring

I crossed the dam to follow an old neglected trail over to the park office. Past the park office in a picnic area I located the other end of the War Eagle Trail and followed it back to my car. I’d completed one of the few remaining trail sets on my to-do list, which I may wrap up this autumn.

It had only reached the mid 70s, but the humidity was sufficient to have me sweating. I cleaned up and decided I’d rather go back to Tulsa to see Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest flick, The Master, than walk more trails. Princess’s odometer reached the 200,000 mile mark near Tontitown and thankfully she kept on purring. I enjoyed the challenging film, a welcome break from the summer pap in the cinemas, and then dined at El Chico to bring the day to a close. A hike in the Ozarks, an art house film, and Tex-Mex food make for a fine weekend outing.

Click here for a slideshow from this day hike

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Gobbler Mountain

September 17, 2012

As I mentioned yesterday, the return of cooler weather has lured me back out onto the trails. This past weekend two of my fellow teachers joined me for a hike down in Tulsey Town. Our initial goal was the Oxley Nature Center, but the road in Mohawk Park was blocked by some sort of run by military reservists.

That diverted us south to Turkey Mountain, which I’ve hiked a number of times. The urban wilderness, just west of the Arkansas River between I-44 and 71st Street, has seen some major improvements in recent years. There is a big new parking area with restrooms, better trail markings and signs, and even a fancy website these days. All of that has brought far more people out to the mountain to run and mountain bike, although the heaviest traffic seems confined to the red, blue, and yellow trails with far less traffic on the other unblazed trails and the newly blazed pink trail in the western part of the wilderness.

Our 5.6 mile trek on Turkey Mountain

We sprayed our feet and pant cuffs with Cutter to ward off any ticks and headed out on the blue trail, completing that loop and then hiking north along the Powerline road until I veered us off northwest to Pepsi Lake.

I’d never heard of that name before, but a new sign proclaimed it so. I had steered us to the lake/pond to show my friends the weird row of abandoned truck bodies parked shoulder to shoulder along an old road on its northwest edge. A little online research later revealed those to all be old Pepsi bottle truck bodies from the nearby Pepsi plant, which explained the nomenclature.

A weird row of old Pepsi bottle truck bodies gives this pond its name

There is a shot of the trucks from Marshmatt on Flickr. They aren’t the only big debris to be found on the mountain, which was a producing oil field a century ago. There are some large concrete bases left from old oil field engines, large spools of cable, and more. A rusting wheel attached some long wooden beams was sitting by one small pond off the blue loop, and the steadily diminishing remains of a pickup are slowly being scavenged away by the side of Powerline road.

Urban remains

We followed the newly blazed pink trail around Pepsi Lake and northeast back through the powerline cut to the north end of the yellow loop. Since this same group of friends had hiked the entirety of the yellow loop back in April, I led us down the less travelled track that runs directly between the low east side of the yellow loop near the Arkansas on the eastern edge of the mountain and the high ridge-running west side of the yellow loop.

We followed that middle trail back to the trailhead, having completed 5.6 miles. When I tried to save our GPS track in my MotionX app on my iPhone 4 (yes, I’ve ordered the iPhone 5, which should arrive in a couple of weeks), it complained there was already a track for Turkey Mountain from a previous foray. So I named this track Gobbler Mountain.

My friends and I had built up an appetite for some delicious food, so we retired to Kilkenny’s Irish Pub, where I feasted on a Chatsworth Boxty. That’s a potato pancake stuffed with chicken breast chunks sauteed with fresh garlic, shallots, mushrooms and red peppers in white wine, topped with white wine sauce. Oh, it is so good!

Boxty in the griddle,
Boxty in the pan,
If you can’t make boxty,
You’ll never get your man.

And we shared some Irish Balloons for dessert: fried pastry balls dusted with powdered sugar and served with sweet Irish whiskey butter sauce. My good friend Carrie introduced me to Kilkenny’s and its Irish Balloons years ago, for which I’ll forever be grateful.

It was a fun outing and my friends will likely ask me to guide them on some more hikes around the area in the future. I’m learning to be more sociable on my hikes – I even tolerated a friendly dog on a 4.5 mile hike along the eastern end of the Elk River Trail in Kansas with another friend (not the dog) last month. And lord knows I do NOT like dogs, even if they want to be my best friend. But I’m really looking to autumn when I can head out for some long solo hikes on novel trails.

Pickup Remains

Turkey Mountain Map

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Hitting the Trails Once Again

September 16, 2012

The summer heat kept me from hiking from June 22 until August 12, other than some early-morning walks along the Pathfinder Parkway trails here in Bartlesville. I finally broke the hiking drought (but not the real drought affecting the region) when some friends decided to take advantage of a break in the summer heat with a hike at the Red Bud Valley Nature Preserve near Catoosa. That was the first of five hikes over the next six weeks, all at locations where I’ve hiked previously on multiple occasions: Roaring River, two visits to Elk City Reservoir, and Turkey Mountain. Friends have joined me on three of those five hiking days, making repeating those trails more interesting since I could play trail guide. Later this week I’ll post about the latest return to Turkey Mountain.

Through my 155 days of hiking over the past three years I have travelled most of the decent trails which are feasible on a day trip. So it is no surprise that I find myself mostly repeating old trails these days, leaving me far less inclined to take and post photographs and blog about them.

I’ve hiked most of the trails I know of which are feasible on a day trip from home

Thankfully there are still several targets on my list which I’ve yet to hit:

And when a break from school affords overnight visits, I’ll hike more sections of the Ozarks Highland Trail, such as Hare Mountain in Arkansas, and more of the Ouachita Trail and its cousins in Oklahoma and Arkansas.

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