Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Are we born to explore?

As a people exploration has been the root of our very intelligence. Just think if no exploration of any kind never occurred. The fact is if we do not explore we do not learn. Is it possible for us as a people not to explore? We seem to be driven to discover new things every day.
Some may say that exploration is dangerous. I would agree that there is risk involved in exploration. But even the the people that try to stay away from risk will find themselves exploring. Exploring how to stay away from risk.
I call myself an explorer, I make a plan for the sole purpose of finding something new. Even if I don't find what I'm looking for, I find something that I have never seen or heard before.
When in the hills I am always looking to the next ridge or peak. I will take a trail to a place where hundreds have been before me; if I have the chance to be in a place that no one has never set foot, I take it without a doubt. To be in a place that few eyes have seen, to make your own trail through the thick underbrush, that is my idea of true exploration.
In the rafters of a auditorium, I have the ability to explore my creative side. Every one of my light designs comes from exploring what many would deem "too much" I am always walking the line of over the top and just enough. Finding new ways to direct a beam of light or create a shadow that will shock the audience is a thrill.
The most exploration that I do is in my photography. When I look through the lens I will try every angle and then some. If I took shots strait on all the time there would be no interest with in the image.
These are ways that I find myself exploring, taking the risk to find something different. I can't help but to explore, I would know what to do if I lost the ability to explore. I was recently asked why we shouldn't explore; I have no answer for this. There are certainly limits to what we should explore. If you take our social lives; a persons personal life or relationships should be left to that person. If you take scientific study; rights and respect can be violated. If you take geological exploration, this to must be done with respect. I cannot give to a reason why we should not explore anything to some degree.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Navigating Emotions

I love the mountains, I love the tranquility of them. I often retreat to them when I need to get away from life. My life is far from tranquil, its full of schedules, projects, hardships, emotions and demands.
I have realized that it is foolish to hide in a happy place when life throws something at you. It would be nice if we had a off switch to our emotions, but we would cease to be humans created in God's image if we had the ability to do this simple task. God wired us with permeant emotions. I am grateful for this, yet I must say that these emotions confuse me.
Life is confusion, a confusion left for us to interpret into meaning and signal. The problem is when the translation doesn't line up with your personal feelings. We tell ourselves that the translation is wrong or missing, but the fact is that life can not be translated.
Looking at a map of the surrounding terrain can be helpful to plot a course. If however you don't know your current position it can be downright impossible. I have been wandering through life this way, with no location and no compass. When I plotted a course it led me to the wrong point. Although beautiful you must leave this point and plot a new course. It seems the true course is the overgrown trail that has not been taken for years. You are certain that it is impassable, but because it leads in the general direction you are traveling the decision is to follow where it leads. It is a risk, will this lead you farther into the brush, or take you to an oasis.

I wish life had a GPS system, complete with preloaded waypoints. To keep me from wandering over a cliff or into a rushing torrent. But life uses maps that I must mark myself.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Power in the Snow

On my way up to a logging road I found something that I expected to see. As I continued up the rough road I found myself in a land of white right where I wanted to be. I got out of my truck a proceeded on foot, after a few minutes of waking a significant flash came out of nowhere! Thinking that is was a random strike of lighting I continued; after all when is there lighting in the snow, right? Then I did one of the dumbest things in my life. I continued up to the summit of the mountain. As soon as I reached the top the light dimmed, the clouds rolled up the backside, and the wind started gusting. Knowing that the weather was upon me I started back down the mountain. Too late, instantly I was engulfed in a white out! Unable to see farther than fifteen feet I followed my footsteps that I had made on the way up. But within three minutes a new inch of snow covered everything. On my way down the hillside a huge flash of light accompanied by a earsplitting crack tore down the mountain. The place where I had been standing not three minutes early was struck! You could feel the sheer power through the ground. Knowing that I was in a dangerous position I quickened my pace. When I arrived at my truck lighting struck right behind me. It was time to get out of there; but now I had to navigate a slippery logging road with a fresh two inches onto of what was already there. What took me thirty minutes to travel up now took more than two hours coming down.

I was again shown the power of God in his natural world. Everyone should experience a lighting strike in close proximity to remind them of this

Monday, November 9, 2009

Glaciers of the North Cascades


The North Cascades are home to the most glacial masses in the lower forty eight states. This part of the world is Gods country; the sheer beauty of the landscape is breathtaking. Most of the beauty of this land has been touched by ice. The North Cascades sit in the northern most part of Washington State. This region is filled with countless canyons and cirques, cliffs and knobs. Within the Cascades lie five

active volcanoes that tower over 12,000 feet above the valley floor. The tallest non-volcanic peak is over 9,000 feet. This massive area is prime for the building of ice and snow, key ingredients in glacial formation. Washington State is an excellent place to find glaciers as the relatively warm climate and abundant snowfall exceeds the loss of snow due to summer melt. Some the mountains in Washington that you will find glaciers are Mount Rainier, Mount Baker, Glacier Peak, and Mount Olympus.

At the high end of where more snow accumulates than is lost is called the accumulation zone this where glaciers are composed of fallen snow that is compressed after many years in thick ice masses and form when snow stays in one location long enough to be transformed into ice. Glaciers will form where the yearly snowfall is more than the loss of snow. Every year new layers of snow cover the previous years falls; the compression forces snow to recrystallize, forming grains the size of sugar. Slowly the grains grow larger and the air pockets between the grains gets smaller causing the snow to increase in density. After about two winters the ice turns into firn. As the glacier increases in weight it causes glacial movement. A glacier is unique because of their ability to move.

The lower region where the more snow is lost than is gained through snowfall and the ice flows downhill into the lower region is called the ablation zone, and in the summer there usually isn’t any snow, leaving the ice exposed. Between the two zones is a transition called the equilibrium line, where the annual accumulation equals ablation. This line is visible in the summer as the transition between the snow covered portion of the glacier and the lower ice section.

There are eleven classified types of glaciers in the word. There are only four found in the Cascades. The most common found here are, the mountain glaciers. They often form at high elevations where the temperature consistently touches below zero. These make up the bulk of the ice fields found here. The Valley glaciers are often spurred off of valley glaciers, they often look like a giant tongue, and they can be very long flowing down beyond the snow line and sometimes down to sea level.

Glaciers affect the landscape by the way they transport material and the way they carve land from beneath them, they will move broken rocks and soil and leaves behind a landscape that has been completely changed. The evidence that these massive ice flows have passed through this land is found all around. Another type of glacier that can be found in the North Cascades is the Cirque Glaciers, which is named for the bowl like hollows they occupy, called cirques. They are usually found high on mountainsides and tend to be wide rather than long. Cirques are created when glaciers erode backwards into mountainsides, creating rounded out hollows shaped like a shallow bowl. Nooksack Cirque, the headwaters of the North Fork of the Nooksack River, is a valley that has been scared by valley glaciers. The canyon walls have been rubbed smooth. This is the land of rocks; rocks left over from an age when glaciers covered the area like a blanket. As the vast sheets of ice slowly move down the canyon they scrape the walls of the canyon down to the bedrock. This rock is ground down to these smooth sheets found on the walls of Nooksack Cirque.

Today the only glacier left in Nooksack Cirque lives up to its name. A Cirque glacier hangs at the end of the valley. These rugged glaciers form low on a canyon avoiding the sunlight for most of the day. Most of the glaciers move rapidly down the side of the canyon wall. Some of these glaciers are completely covered with rock. It is possible to be standing on a glacier of this type with out knowing it. The lower portion of these glaciers is in sheet form. Vast flat expanses of ice formed as the wash from the glacier refreezes on top of itself. Hanging glaciers are very similar to the cirque glacier. These however are found much higher in elevation. The slopes of Jack Mt. and Ruby Mt. are home to four of these types of ice masses. The flat surfaces of ice often produce avalanches. As the winter snow accumulates and freezes to the surface ice of the glacier. The top layer remains soft and unstable.

Crevasses are found on the glaciers on the Lower 48 peaks like Mt. Rainier, Mt. Hood, Mt. Olympus and Mt. Adams. Crevasses often appear where a glacier scrapes against uneven valley walls or turns a corner. A crevasse is one of the treacherous things you will find on a glacier.

Which way are the glaciers in the Cascades heading? Are they shrinking, staying the same or growing? Spider Glaciers in the North Cascades has shown what glaciers in most parts of Washington are doing. A recent hike into the area by Andrea Imler it was noted that what once was a glacier is now a snowfield and in a few years it will be extinct. Another glacier in the same area, Lyman Glacier is estimated to have shrunk about one third of its former size and in the past 50 years has receded about 33 feet per year and in 30 to 50 years is predicted that it will completely disappear. The same is true for Nooksack Cirque. National Park Service ices are tracking glacier melting rates in the North Cascades National Parks by Jon Riedel who is a geologist, says the “ice is melting fast especially in the last 16 years. What the loss of glaciers means is that there will be less in the “glacial bank account” and the loss of about 400 billion gallons of water, that represents approximately one month of flow of the Skagit River, less snowpack means less water for fish and wildlife, hydropower, forest fire control and agriculture. Riedel feels this is because it is getting warmer and thinks it’s related to humans and their impact on the atmosphere. More a research scientist at University of Washington says, everything is now retreating, and the smaller glaciers are disappearing.” It is being said that the amount of snow falling in the Northwest is becoming less while the temperatures are rising. “The decline in snowfall in the Northwest has been the largest in the West, and it is clearly related to temperature, “ Mote said.

Glaciers in the Northwest tell their own stories of time and come in different sizes, shapes and color, but the one thing that all glaciers have in common is that they’re just one of the unique pieces of creation revealing God himself as Romans 1:20 says, “For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities -- his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse.”

Saturday, November 7, 2009

realization

I have been hit today. Not by a physical object, but a realization.

Over this weekend I traveled with the Lynden Christian Cross Country team to state. We have done this as a team for the last three years. Things went as expected, we started warming up and made our way to the start line. Before the gun went off the team strided up the hill at the start, just as we have done in years passed, only this time it was our turn. Every year before the state race the seniors share a word of encouragement to each other at the top of the hill.

Latter the gun was raised and fired. The race, my last race, was on. At the finish line I was greeted by the socking realization. This was it, I'm done, no more, final. The team that I have gotten so comfortable with is now missing four people. I would not trade first place for three of these people. Zach Crenshaw, Chris VandenBos, and Lauren Visser.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Schedules

Recently I have been bombarded with one event after another at LCHS. Right now there are three separate events overlapping each other in our auditorium. As the house electrician I have found myself being pulled in every direction by the event organizers. This has tested my ability to keep everything running smoothly and on track. However its not just me, and I am thankful for that. This year I have a crew that I can assign to a particular event and turn them loose. In years past it was my responsibility to setup and run anything and everything, and still be expected to be caught up with everything that life threw at me.

The theater tech at LC was becoming my life. This is not the case so much this year, thanks to my crew. I love theater tech, but its not my passion. Having the crew has allowed me to live my life and do everything that I love!

However I still need to have my phone with me a all times, for I still panicked call from crew members telling me and everything that can go wrong is going wrong. I have the laugh to myself when I get these calls, because it always turns out to be a minor glitch.


Sunday, November 1, 2009

My Review of Primus OmniFuel Backpacking Stove

Originally submitted at REI

Cook up hot meals wherever your travels take you! The Primus OmniFuel™ stove operates on a wide variety of fuels so you can travel the world without worrying about finding a fuel source.


Goes through everything

By Go no stop from Everson, WA on 11/1/2009

 

4out of 5

Gift: No

Pros: Lightweight, Easy To Clean, Stable, Powerful, Easy to Light, Compact

Best Uses: Hiking, High Altitude, Backpacking

Describe Yourself: Outdoor Professional

What Is Your Gear Style: Comfort Driven

I have used this stove all over the North Cascades and it has never failed me. From warm summer nights at high altitude to cold fall down pours, this stove never misses a beat. The overall construction is excellent, from the steel braided fuel line to the distribution plate at the center of the burner.
There is one complaint however. After a period of no use the fuel regulator sticks a little, but after a little torque you are back in business.
I trusted this stove along the Pacific Crest Trail and it never hesitated. Its a great stove at a great price.

cooking on the Omni on a typical rainy morning

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Tags: Picture of Product, Using Product

using the omni in the snow

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Tags: Using Product, Picture of Product

(legalese)