Willard’s First Rule of Programming
Adding more engineers to a late software project makes it take longer.
Willard’s Second Rule of Programming
Effort estimates will always match exactly the number of days management makes available to complete a project.
Willard’s Third Rule of Programming – (aka Occam’s Antithetical Razor)
When you have two competing programming solutions that produce the exact same results, the more complex one is the most likely to be coded.
Willard’s Fourth Rule of Programming
The relative skill of a coder is inversely related to the amount of time said engineer expends in telling you how talented they are.
Willard’s Fifth Rule of Programming
Complexity and grace are not mutually exclusive.
Willard’s Sixth Rule of Programming
Success is in the eye of the beholder.
Willard’s First Corollary – Facts are for people with small imaginations.
Willard’s Seventh Rule of Programming
Newer does not mean better. Better means better.
Willard’s Second Corollary – Older may actually be wiser.
Willard’s Eighth Rule of Programming
Documentation is for people with weak memories.
Willard’s Theory of Software Estimation
Time and engineering staff are flexible only to the extent that there is never enough of either.
Willard’s Enduring Principle of Initial Development
Real Programmers don’t invent, they copy.
Willard’s Principle of Divergent Convergence
The Principle of Divergent Convergence defines the ability of an individual to maintain conceptual agreement with two distinctly dissimilar and antagonistic views.
This requires the individual to develop an internal explanation supporting the Postulate of Harmonious Recombination – a non-logical axiom in which these opposing views are in some fashion explained as either unrelated or, in the most egregious of cases, actually forced to coexist in a new framework of reality that redefines the expected outcomes in an acceptable (to the individual) way.
Both the Principle of Divergent Convergence and the Postulate of Harmonious Recombination are observed within the definition that exists only to the individual supporting the concepts. It is typically blatantly obvious to the non-participant that facts do not support either the thought process supporting such naturally opposing perspectives or resultant behavior.
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
A trip to Colorado - Part Deux
The Historic Stanley Hotel. I think that is what they officially call it. And the street sign as you approach announces you are entering the "Stanley Hotel Historic District". Estes Park, just on the eastern boundary of Rocky Mountain National Park, is a beautiful location with stunning views of Long's Peak from the veranda of the hotel that overlooks the small and very appealing town. This is rather like Leavcnworth, Wa without the Bavarian theme. And with better shopping.
The hotel is a result of FO Stanley, inventor of, among other things, the Stanley Steamer. His fortune from his creative pursuits allowed him to build this spectacular structure in what was, at the time, a near wilderness and equip every room with not only electricity (unheard of at the time) but also a private bath in each room. At the 100th anniversary of the hotel - this past July - it still remains an elegant and appealing destination. All the more so given the rather unbelievable activities within.
I attempt to remain somewhat skeptical of paranormal activities, although I can't really say why, given the number of things I've experienced in my life. In any event, I usually make great fun of Suzanne and Royce as they sit around the house watching Ghost Hunters on tv. In spite of that, it was mostly me, not Suzanne, that encountered the unexplainable at The Stanley.
She does have a camera full of pictures with hard to comprehend grey and white and black shadows over the scenes. I watched as she took a series of photos of the same subject and one would be a perfect representation of what I was looking at and the next would be half covered with a misty looking veil that was then gone for the next shot. Over and over she did this. Something is going on in this place.
Our first night in the stuffy fourth floor accomodations I got up to try and get some air through the tiny window of the gabled room and sat next to the screened opening, sitting in a small, overstuffed chair. Moments after sitting, while Suzanne snoonzed peacefully just a few feet away, I received four sharp smacks on my backside. While I was sitting in the chair. Behind me was the wall, next to me was my suitcase, shoved next to the chair because of the lack of space. Yet something was clearly smacking me. For several minutes afterward I had recurring sensations of my entire body tingling from head to toe - rather like the sensation of the hair on the back of your neck standing up, but all over my body. It would wash over me and I'd look around the room half expecting to see someone. Something is going on in this place.
The following day we spent hiking around town and in the mountains and before dinner I got into the shower to freshen up. Due to my techincal incompetence, I was unable to get the water hot so it ran and ran and ran while I waited in vain for it to warm up. (Turns out I needed to not turn the handle all the way to the left but about three quarters of the way to get hot, but I digress). I finally gave up and amidst much complaining I got in and begain railing about my "tepid shower" and how I should complain to the management. While in the midst of this low level tirade, while facing into the cool stream, my neck and shoulders were suddenly hot, as if a heating pad were laid across my shoulders. The cold water continued to run over the very part of me that was the hottest. I was shocked. It only lasted a few moments and then, cold water again. Something is going on in this place.
Dinner was in the small private dining room where we had watched Senator John McCain eating the night before. (And no, he did not ask my opinion on either the war in Afghanistan or my opinon on health care.) The room was a bit cooler the second night but we still had the fan running when I was wakened at about 2am by a pounding on the wall just opposite my head. Four or five good whacks and then footsteps running down the hall. I was up in an instant and put my eye to the peephole in the door. Its fisheye lens let me see the end of the hall in both directions. A long hallway both ways, but nobody there. Back to bed and about fifteen minutes later the same thing although this time the pounding sounded like it was on the opposite side of the hallway. Up in a flash and looking at the door as I still heard the running footsteps - nothing. Something is going on in this place.
The night we got home Suzanne put in a dvd she had purchased at the gift shop in the hotel and in it was a series of interviews of hotel workers. One of the things they reported were frequent phone calls from guests on the fourth floor complaining about the children banging on the wall and then running away.
You can draw your own conclusions. Maybe the place is rigged ala-Disneyland for these effects. Or maybe there really is something going on in this place. I can only report that what I felt and heard was real for me. I would suggest you book a trip and find out for yourself. Just be prepared for anything !!!
The hotel is a result of FO Stanley, inventor of, among other things, the Stanley Steamer. His fortune from his creative pursuits allowed him to build this spectacular structure in what was, at the time, a near wilderness and equip every room with not only electricity (unheard of at the time) but also a private bath in each room. At the 100th anniversary of the hotel - this past July - it still remains an elegant and appealing destination. All the more so given the rather unbelievable activities within.
I attempt to remain somewhat skeptical of paranormal activities, although I can't really say why, given the number of things I've experienced in my life. In any event, I usually make great fun of Suzanne and Royce as they sit around the house watching Ghost Hunters on tv. In spite of that, it was mostly me, not Suzanne, that encountered the unexplainable at The Stanley.
She does have a camera full of pictures with hard to comprehend grey and white and black shadows over the scenes. I watched as she took a series of photos of the same subject and one would be a perfect representation of what I was looking at and the next would be half covered with a misty looking veil that was then gone for the next shot. Over and over she did this. Something is going on in this place.
Our first night in the stuffy fourth floor accomodations I got up to try and get some air through the tiny window of the gabled room and sat next to the screened opening, sitting in a small, overstuffed chair. Moments after sitting, while Suzanne snoonzed peacefully just a few feet away, I received four sharp smacks on my backside. While I was sitting in the chair. Behind me was the wall, next to me was my suitcase, shoved next to the chair because of the lack of space. Yet something was clearly smacking me. For several minutes afterward I had recurring sensations of my entire body tingling from head to toe - rather like the sensation of the hair on the back of your neck standing up, but all over my body. It would wash over me and I'd look around the room half expecting to see someone. Something is going on in this place.
The following day we spent hiking around town and in the mountains and before dinner I got into the shower to freshen up. Due to my techincal incompetence, I was unable to get the water hot so it ran and ran and ran while I waited in vain for it to warm up. (Turns out I needed to not turn the handle all the way to the left but about three quarters of the way to get hot, but I digress). I finally gave up and amidst much complaining I got in and begain railing about my "tepid shower" and how I should complain to the management. While in the midst of this low level tirade, while facing into the cool stream, my neck and shoulders were suddenly hot, as if a heating pad were laid across my shoulders. The cold water continued to run over the very part of me that was the hottest. I was shocked. It only lasted a few moments and then, cold water again. Something is going on in this place.
Dinner was in the small private dining room where we had watched Senator John McCain eating the night before. (And no, he did not ask my opinion on either the war in Afghanistan or my opinon on health care.) The room was a bit cooler the second night but we still had the fan running when I was wakened at about 2am by a pounding on the wall just opposite my head. Four or five good whacks and then footsteps running down the hall. I was up in an instant and put my eye to the peephole in the door. Its fisheye lens let me see the end of the hall in both directions. A long hallway both ways, but nobody there. Back to bed and about fifteen minutes later the same thing although this time the pounding sounded like it was on the opposite side of the hallway. Up in a flash and looking at the door as I still heard the running footsteps - nothing. Something is going on in this place.
The night we got home Suzanne put in a dvd she had purchased at the gift shop in the hotel and in it was a series of interviews of hotel workers. One of the things they reported were frequent phone calls from guests on the fourth floor complaining about the children banging on the wall and then running away.
You can draw your own conclusions. Maybe the place is rigged ala-Disneyland for these effects. Or maybe there really is something going on in this place. I can only report that what I felt and heard was real for me. I would suggest you book a trip and find out for yourself. Just be prepared for anything !!!
A trip to Colorado - Part 1
On Thursday the 20th Suzanne and I flew into Denver and rented a Hertz-mobile for the drive to Winter Park. I've been through this town before but so many years ago I can't really remember anything other than that I've been there. Prior trips to the state have been mostly in the winter for skiing so it was fun to be there in the summer for a change. At my neice's insistence we booked into a bed and breakfast along with a collection of other relatives of hers and her now-husband Craig. This gave us a chance to meet the rest of the family as well as catch up with my other neice Wenny and nephew Ryan as well as my sister Pat. Good times.
The wedding that was the reason for the trip was between my niece Rachel and her new husband Craig. The event was at a really cool place called Devil's Thumb Ranch which was highly reminiscent of the spot Suzanne and I had our wedding at. A nice ceremony (if I do say so myself) and great food at the following reception. It was very nice to reconnect with everyone and meet the new folks that are now in my family list.
We also managed to visit the Winter Park ski hill while there - another Intrawest property (like Whistler) so it's very nicely done. The hill was smothered with mountain bikers the day we visited. Based on the fact that they were all dressed like darker versions of the Star Wars storm troopers (i.e. shrouded in plastic protective gear) I've determined that I have little interest in pursuing this sport. It's clear that some portion of your time is spent in crashing into the rocks and gravel, else why all the plastic shin and knee and arm protection?? Think I'll stick to walking.
We also tried the summer "tobaggan" run on the mountain which was fun. It consists of what seemed to be some sort of plastic track which contained the wheeled sled you ride to the bottom. Pulling back on the center mounted "stick" caused the wheels to retract and skids to come in contact with the track, thereby slowing you down. Forward on the stick results in wheels descending and speed increasing very quickly - much the same as the effect experience by pushing your stick forward in the airplane! Good times.
The wedding that was the reason for the trip was between my niece Rachel and her new husband Craig. The event was at a really cool place called Devil's Thumb Ranch which was highly reminiscent of the spot Suzanne and I had our wedding at. A nice ceremony (if I do say so myself) and great food at the following reception. It was very nice to reconnect with everyone and meet the new folks that are now in my family list.
We also managed to visit the Winter Park ski hill while there - another Intrawest property (like Whistler) so it's very nicely done. The hill was smothered with mountain bikers the day we visited. Based on the fact that they were all dressed like darker versions of the Star Wars storm troopers (i.e. shrouded in plastic protective gear) I've determined that I have little interest in pursuing this sport. It's clear that some portion of your time is spent in crashing into the rocks and gravel, else why all the plastic shin and knee and arm protection?? Think I'll stick to walking.
We also tried the summer "tobaggan" run on the mountain which was fun. It consists of what seemed to be some sort of plastic track which contained the wheeled sled you ride to the bottom. Pulling back on the center mounted "stick" caused the wheels to retract and skids to come in contact with the track, thereby slowing you down. Forward on the stick results in wheels descending and speed increasing very quickly - much the same as the effect experience by pushing your stick forward in the airplane! Good times.
Friday, June 19, 2009
It's raining outside for the first time in twenty-some days. That's unusual for this part of the country. As I look out my office window at the clouds piled up over the Olympic Mountains, I am reminded of a time there - when it was raining for real.....
The Bear
The Olympic Peninsula. The most northwestern land of the continental US. Still isolated by lower 48 standards, even today. Roads surrounded it. US highway 101 encircles it on the East, north and west sides. There is no way across this mountainous region except by walking. Or flying. Light plane pilots tend to avoid flying over the center of the area because of the problem that a forced landing would entail. Having flown often over the Cascades - following one of the highways that provide ground passage - I feel reasonably secure in that an unexpected landing could be effected within a reasonable distance of a highway or at least a logging road, and with some reasonable hope of success. Not so on the Peninsula.
From my earliest arrival in the Northwest I had been drawn to this remote area and had made the car trip around the Peninsula several times. My foot ventures had been extremely short and by way of trails, never more than a mile or two from the road, so I was very unfamiliar with the terrain. I had, however, been working in the woods for six years - in the Cascades of Washington and Oregon - when I arrived for my first taste of life in the Olympic Mountains. My trusty partner Dan had followed me once again on a contract job with the Forest Service, this time to examine stands of timber that ranged in age from about ten years up through old growth. It was in one of these younger stands of ‘reprod’ that we found ourselves this particular day.
Even if I tell you, it’s hard to believe what things are like off the road in the western reaches of the Olympic Peninsula. To say that it rains here is a ridiculous understamement. It rains here most of the time. There are times in the summer when you may get weeks of good weather, but this was not the case the summer that I was here. The result of this moisture and of the relatively mild climate that exists in proximity to the ocean is one of extreme vegetative growth. Let me put it another way; it’s a jungle out there. Move this terrain a few degrees to the south and you’d expect to see toucans and monkeys in the trees. This nearly impassable tangle of growth must be described in more detail to be fully understood.
Anyone who has traveled in the Northwest has seen the dense underbrush alongside whatever road they happened to drive - assuming of course that the traveler ventured off the freeway or away from the strip-mall development. I had spent several years of forestry work negotiating my way through this vine maple and devils club infested areas in search of timber. I’ve seen many a hillside where the vine maple was so dense and tall that I couldn’t quite make out the trees above my head. I’ve battled my way uphill through head high (and higher) huckleberry patches that invariably seem to point downhill while I invariably seem to need to go uphill. In all cases, my determination has prevailed and although I often spent long minutes extracting devils club thorns from my hands (and various other places) I always managed to get to where I was headed. Then I experienced the Olympic Mountains.
I recall stepping into a second growth stand of about ten years of age and walking no more than five feet into the brushy tangle before I came up against a wall. A wall of branches of the cascara tree. The cascara is a hardwood that grows throughout the Northwest, reaching small tree size at best, that provides an herbal laxative extract from the bark. This area was taken over by an aggressive group of these trees that were about five to ten feet tall. It seems that the young cascara tree begins branching about a foot or so off the ground and sends out additional lateral branches at about one foot intervals. This usually presents little problem because the trees are not typically found in more than ones or twos. This stand was decidedly different. This was a cascara plantation. Unable to move forward through the tangle of branches, I moved to one side and attempted to work my way through. Again, I was literally stopped against a wall of interwoven branches. With the base of the trees only a few feet apart, the branches all but wove a fence that started at ground level and extended to head high. I tried again and was stopped. I lay down on my belly and attempted to crawl underneath, believing that the clump was only one or two trees deep and I could break through on the ‘other side’. I was trapped on my belly, crawling under the trees as though I were a soldier in the fields of France crawling under concertina wire trying to get through the enemy lines. I never did make it. I backed out, literally, and made my way back to the truck on the road, not two hundred feet away. There stood Dan. Grinning.
“You couldn’t get through that either, could you?” We never did do that particular item of work, telling the Forest Service that it was inaccessible. I don’t know what they thought. With this explanation in mind, I now return to the tale at hand.
While my current location did not rival the density of the cascara plantation, it was incredibly dense with the typical brush. It additionally offered a lovely plant known as the evergreen blackberry, a species of the tasty fruit bearing bush that was particularly hardy due mostly to its inch thick stems that liked growing horizontal. The fat stems contained appropriately sized thorns that inflicted memorable wounds on the unwary. Due to this, both Dan and I were forced from time to time to revert to the “crawlin’ on my belly like a snake” mode of travel in order to maintain a reasonably straight line of travel as we surveyed the contents of this southeast facing slope. We were doing our usual cross slope travel, following parallel lines about three hundred feet apart when I began smelling a foul odor. Rotting fish. I looked to the bottom of the hill where the clear cut area reached toward the timbered bottom. I saw no river down there, but given the quantify of rain in the area, every ravine, draw and low spot had some sort of water moving through it so I supposed the smell could be related to that. The smell came and went as I continued on my way, walking, climbing over logs, crawling under blackberries, wet from the drizzle, cold, and examining my motives for doing this kind of work.
I continued to wonder about the odor as I moved. It had become stronger and seemed to hang in the air, not fading in and out as before. As I rose from crawling under a downed log, I heard a tremendous crashing and commotion in the brush below me, followed in just moments by a sudden blur of dark and whoosh - past me raced a medium sized bear on a mission to get to the top of the hill in as short a time as possible. The bear passed directly in front of me, about ten feet away, not so much as glancing my direction. I don’t think it even knew I was there. It happened so suddenly, so unexpectedly, that I never began to think of danger or fear or other bear-related emotions. Mostly I was just surprised.
The smell that had been hanging in the air was from the bear. That much was clear as it fled uphill past me, leaving in its wake a sickly, rotting aroma. Whatever that critter had eaten for breakfast did not smell appetizing. I continued on my line of travel as I heard the bear break out of the brush above me, probably onto the road that ran parallel to us, and went on his way. In a few minutes I reached the timber on the opposite end of the clear-cut and broke into relatively clear terrain on the old fire trail that had been cut alongside the clear-cut, providing a holding line for the crew that burned the slash left after the logger departed. I followed this line down the hill to intercept Dan where he and I would continue down to the next line of travel and begin the return trip for our next line of survey. As I neared Dan, standing on a stump, I could see a grin.
“Imagine my surprise,” he bellowed at me as I came into view, “when, crawling on my belly through the brush, I looked up and into the eyes of a bear! Not two feet away from me mind you! There was no way I could get away, I was pinned to the ground. The bear looked at me, I looked at him. I don’t know whose eyes were the biggest.”
“So did he eat you?” I asked.
“He woofed at me and left in such a hurry that he kicked dirt into my face.”
I guess if I encountered Dan crawling on his belly through the wet underbrush of an Olympic Mountain morning, then I, in the manner of the bear, would have run for my life as well.
The Bear
The Olympic Peninsula. The most northwestern land of the continental US. Still isolated by lower 48 standards, even today. Roads surrounded it. US highway 101 encircles it on the East, north and west sides. There is no way across this mountainous region except by walking. Or flying. Light plane pilots tend to avoid flying over the center of the area because of the problem that a forced landing would entail. Having flown often over the Cascades - following one of the highways that provide ground passage - I feel reasonably secure in that an unexpected landing could be effected within a reasonable distance of a highway or at least a logging road, and with some reasonable hope of success. Not so on the Peninsula.
From my earliest arrival in the Northwest I had been drawn to this remote area and had made the car trip around the Peninsula several times. My foot ventures had been extremely short and by way of trails, never more than a mile or two from the road, so I was very unfamiliar with the terrain. I had, however, been working in the woods for six years - in the Cascades of Washington and Oregon - when I arrived for my first taste of life in the Olympic Mountains. My trusty partner Dan had followed me once again on a contract job with the Forest Service, this time to examine stands of timber that ranged in age from about ten years up through old growth. It was in one of these younger stands of ‘reprod’ that we found ourselves this particular day.
Even if I tell you, it’s hard to believe what things are like off the road in the western reaches of the Olympic Peninsula. To say that it rains here is a ridiculous understamement. It rains here most of the time. There are times in the summer when you may get weeks of good weather, but this was not the case the summer that I was here. The result of this moisture and of the relatively mild climate that exists in proximity to the ocean is one of extreme vegetative growth. Let me put it another way; it’s a jungle out there. Move this terrain a few degrees to the south and you’d expect to see toucans and monkeys in the trees. This nearly impassable tangle of growth must be described in more detail to be fully understood.
Anyone who has traveled in the Northwest has seen the dense underbrush alongside whatever road they happened to drive - assuming of course that the traveler ventured off the freeway or away from the strip-mall development. I had spent several years of forestry work negotiating my way through this vine maple and devils club infested areas in search of timber. I’ve seen many a hillside where the vine maple was so dense and tall that I couldn’t quite make out the trees above my head. I’ve battled my way uphill through head high (and higher) huckleberry patches that invariably seem to point downhill while I invariably seem to need to go uphill. In all cases, my determination has prevailed and although I often spent long minutes extracting devils club thorns from my hands (and various other places) I always managed to get to where I was headed. Then I experienced the Olympic Mountains.
I recall stepping into a second growth stand of about ten years of age and walking no more than five feet into the brushy tangle before I came up against a wall. A wall of branches of the cascara tree. The cascara is a hardwood that grows throughout the Northwest, reaching small tree size at best, that provides an herbal laxative extract from the bark. This area was taken over by an aggressive group of these trees that were about five to ten feet tall. It seems that the young cascara tree begins branching about a foot or so off the ground and sends out additional lateral branches at about one foot intervals. This usually presents little problem because the trees are not typically found in more than ones or twos. This stand was decidedly different. This was a cascara plantation. Unable to move forward through the tangle of branches, I moved to one side and attempted to work my way through. Again, I was literally stopped against a wall of interwoven branches. With the base of the trees only a few feet apart, the branches all but wove a fence that started at ground level and extended to head high. I tried again and was stopped. I lay down on my belly and attempted to crawl underneath, believing that the clump was only one or two trees deep and I could break through on the ‘other side’. I was trapped on my belly, crawling under the trees as though I were a soldier in the fields of France crawling under concertina wire trying to get through the enemy lines. I never did make it. I backed out, literally, and made my way back to the truck on the road, not two hundred feet away. There stood Dan. Grinning.
“You couldn’t get through that either, could you?” We never did do that particular item of work, telling the Forest Service that it was inaccessible. I don’t know what they thought. With this explanation in mind, I now return to the tale at hand.
While my current location did not rival the density of the cascara plantation, it was incredibly dense with the typical brush. It additionally offered a lovely plant known as the evergreen blackberry, a species of the tasty fruit bearing bush that was particularly hardy due mostly to its inch thick stems that liked growing horizontal. The fat stems contained appropriately sized thorns that inflicted memorable wounds on the unwary. Due to this, both Dan and I were forced from time to time to revert to the “crawlin’ on my belly like a snake” mode of travel in order to maintain a reasonably straight line of travel as we surveyed the contents of this southeast facing slope. We were doing our usual cross slope travel, following parallel lines about three hundred feet apart when I began smelling a foul odor. Rotting fish. I looked to the bottom of the hill where the clear cut area reached toward the timbered bottom. I saw no river down there, but given the quantify of rain in the area, every ravine, draw and low spot had some sort of water moving through it so I supposed the smell could be related to that. The smell came and went as I continued on my way, walking, climbing over logs, crawling under blackberries, wet from the drizzle, cold, and examining my motives for doing this kind of work.
I continued to wonder about the odor as I moved. It had become stronger and seemed to hang in the air, not fading in and out as before. As I rose from crawling under a downed log, I heard a tremendous crashing and commotion in the brush below me, followed in just moments by a sudden blur of dark and whoosh - past me raced a medium sized bear on a mission to get to the top of the hill in as short a time as possible. The bear passed directly in front of me, about ten feet away, not so much as glancing my direction. I don’t think it even knew I was there. It happened so suddenly, so unexpectedly, that I never began to think of danger or fear or other bear-related emotions. Mostly I was just surprised.
The smell that had been hanging in the air was from the bear. That much was clear as it fled uphill past me, leaving in its wake a sickly, rotting aroma. Whatever that critter had eaten for breakfast did not smell appetizing. I continued on my line of travel as I heard the bear break out of the brush above me, probably onto the road that ran parallel to us, and went on his way. In a few minutes I reached the timber on the opposite end of the clear-cut and broke into relatively clear terrain on the old fire trail that had been cut alongside the clear-cut, providing a holding line for the crew that burned the slash left after the logger departed. I followed this line down the hill to intercept Dan where he and I would continue down to the next line of travel and begin the return trip for our next line of survey. As I neared Dan, standing on a stump, I could see a grin.
“Imagine my surprise,” he bellowed at me as I came into view, “when, crawling on my belly through the brush, I looked up and into the eyes of a bear! Not two feet away from me mind you! There was no way I could get away, I was pinned to the ground. The bear looked at me, I looked at him. I don’t know whose eyes were the biggest.”
“So did he eat you?” I asked.
“He woofed at me and left in such a hurry that he kicked dirt into my face.”
I guess if I encountered Dan crawling on his belly through the wet underbrush of an Olympic Mountain morning, then I, in the manner of the bear, would have run for my life as well.
Friday, May 1, 2009
Another trip back in the time machine...
- i wrote this in about 1980....
By the time April arrives in the Cascades most people have hung their skis back in the garage and are dragging out the bicycles and kayaks and backpacks, getting ready for the next season’s worth of outdoor sports. For me, that’s the time of year when the skiing is at its best. The crowds have thinned out and the days are longer. It also warms up enough to be able to shed a few of the layers of clothes needed in the colder months. All those things were part of the reason Erik and I chose to take one particular April weekend and use it for one of our backcountry trips.
At about midday, we shouldered our packs and climbed into our skis. Erik chose to slog along in a pair of downhill skis with climbing skins. I had a pair of mountaineering skis with fishscale bottoms and the old fashioned Silvretta bindings, a cable affair that would attach or detach at the heel. For climbing, I’d disconnect the heel and could climb with relative ease. For downhill, I needed only to reattach and I had almost the same control as with a rigid binding. The problem with them was the need to use a leather climbing boot as opposed to a plastic downhill ski boot. Uphill I easily outdistanced him. His more rigid boots gave him much greater control on the downhill.
We climbed for about two hours and reached a sheltered and flat spot at the end of the ridge which was the perfect spot for camp. We unloaded our gear, set up the tent and tossed out our sleeping bags. Freed from the burden of shelter, food and water, we felt light as feathers as we stepped back into our skis and headed for the edge of the ridge. It was a glorious sight. All around us were the fiercely rugged peaks of the North Cascades. The sun was intense, so much so we were able to strip to sweaters before we dived into the bowl in front of us. For the rest of the afternoon we dived into untracked bowls of shaded, powdery snow. By staying in the shadows we avoided getting into snow that had thawed and refrozen. As soon as we’d reach the bottom, we would painfully climb to the top of the ridge and look for another way down, once again claiming first tracks in the isolated basin all the while yelling and laughing. Erik was by far the better skier and filled the long, painful climbs with stories of ski patrol rescues and dynamiting cornices before the resort opened. Gradually, the sun sank lower and our energy finally gave out.
Just below the tent, we paused alongside a great, house-sized rock needing to take a rest in order to make the last few hundred feet back to camp. Erik kicked off his skis, leaped onto the boulder and climbed to the top where he peeled off his sweat soaked shirt and proceeded to absorb what heat was left in the sun. I disconnected my clingy cable bindings and planned to do the same. As I approached the rock I noticed the melt gap between the heated rock and the snow. I crouched to jump the distance so as to clear the short void as Erik had, but as I did so I broke through the crust and my right leg dropped into the gap with an audible noise. As I heard a loud tearing, popping sound I experienced rather intense pain in the vicinity of my ankle followed by pain in several other parts of my body as I crashed face first into the rock.
Erik heard me yelling and soon he was pulling me out of the snow hole. After a brief examination revealed nothing dangling or broken, we decided it was best to head immediately for the tent.
As soon as I arrived at our weekend home, I unlaced and removed my boot to see what sort of ding I had received. Although it was painful, things didn’t seem too bad and there was no real visible sign of damage. The most pressing question was one we didn’t even ask as we watched the sun go down and Erik started the stove. That question was, what kind of shape was I going to find myself in tomorrow?
(part deux…after the fall)
I got my answer the next day. In spite of having spent hours the night before with my foot shoved into the snow outside the front of the tent, my ankle was horribly swollen. I was hopeful that by icing (in this case “snowing”) my injury I would minimize the problems. Wrong. I managed to pull a sock over the melon sized appendage and when I attempted to stand I realized for the first time, I was in serious trouble. There was no way I was going to be able to ski out from our camp. I couldn’t even put weight on my foot. That was not too big an issue since I was never going to be able to get my boot on anyway, so attaching myself to the ski was out of the question.
While making breakfast of hot coffee and tea and oatmeal and a generous helping of cookies, Erik and I discussed the problem. The first option was for me to sit tight and for him to ski out and get help. We figured the most likely scenario to be a few ski patrollers from the Stevens Pass ski area dragging in a stretcher to retrieve me. The terrain between where we were and where we needed to be contained a couple of extremely steep segments that would be a problem with a stretcher, even for experienced rescuers. There was also the possibility of having to use a helicopter to reach me where we sat at the end of the ridge. Neither of these options was particularly appealing to me. I think it must have been a combination of stupidity, stubbornness and embarrassment that affected me as we tried to decide. The longer I thought about it, the less interested I was in involving anyone else in my “rescue”. I’d gotten myself into this fix because of my own stupidity, so it somehow seemed to make sense to try and extricate myself without involving anyone else. Except, of course, Erik.
As I mentioned, he was an exceptional skier, so when I first proposed getting out ourselves, he thought it was a marvelous idea. It was just wacky enough to appeal to a guy whose idea of fun consisted of tossing half sticks of dynamite into the air above a freshly snowed face so as to blow out any likely avalanches. We still had three good legs between us, so we decided to go home on three skis.
While I pulled on every leftover sock we had, Erik broke camp and packed us up. I stuffed my unused ski into the sleeve of the pack and hung my extra boot off the back. We hefted out packs and headed up the slope to the top of our ridge, just a short distance away. Fortunately, the uphill part was very short, since there wasn’t much Erik could do to help me there. I mostly hobbled and shuffled as I made my way to the top. Once there we had a gentle downhill for the better part of a mile in which we could develop a technique for three-legged skiing. It wasn’t pretty. Or even very effective since there were rocks and trees scattered along our route, but I somehow managed to hang onto Erik’s pack frame with one hand while balancing on one ski with my spare foot in the air between us. Having extremely good edging skills is a must for this sport since single ski travel requires all turns and all control to be focused on the one foot. I wasn’t particularly good at that so I spent a lot of time crashing into my buddy, knocking us both down numerous times. We finally established enough proficiency that we were able to travel for considerable distances between crashes. Luckily for us, the steeps didn’t come until we had a chance to practice.
At the first of these exposed crossings, we stopped to rest and consider our chances. It appeared likely that if (more likely when) I fell, I’d be able to stop myself if I acted quickly. The slope angled steeply, and went for a long way before ending in cliffs and trees. I would be skiing with my good leg on the ski that put me on the downhill side of Erik. If I fell, at least I wouldn’t take him with me. By what must have been sheer will, we crossed both of these exposed areas without so much as a slip. By this time we were atop the last ridge and the parking area along the highway came into view. The rest of the trip was a simple exercise in pain as I made my way down through areas that were simply too steep and broken for us to “three leg” ski.
Erik is no longer with us, having succumbed to a cancer that was discovered when he visited the doc for x-rays of a few broken ribs sustained in another ski adventure later in our lives. His memory remains alive with me for this trip and for others we took.
By the time April arrives in the Cascades most people have hung their skis back in the garage and are dragging out the bicycles and kayaks and backpacks, getting ready for the next season’s worth of outdoor sports. For me, that’s the time of year when the skiing is at its best. The crowds have thinned out and the days are longer. It also warms up enough to be able to shed a few of the layers of clothes needed in the colder months. All those things were part of the reason Erik and I chose to take one particular April weekend and use it for one of our backcountry trips.
At about midday, we shouldered our packs and climbed into our skis. Erik chose to slog along in a pair of downhill skis with climbing skins. I had a pair of mountaineering skis with fishscale bottoms and the old fashioned Silvretta bindings, a cable affair that would attach or detach at the heel. For climbing, I’d disconnect the heel and could climb with relative ease. For downhill, I needed only to reattach and I had almost the same control as with a rigid binding. The problem with them was the need to use a leather climbing boot as opposed to a plastic downhill ski boot. Uphill I easily outdistanced him. His more rigid boots gave him much greater control on the downhill.
We climbed for about two hours and reached a sheltered and flat spot at the end of the ridge which was the perfect spot for camp. We unloaded our gear, set up the tent and tossed out our sleeping bags. Freed from the burden of shelter, food and water, we felt light as feathers as we stepped back into our skis and headed for the edge of the ridge. It was a glorious sight. All around us were the fiercely rugged peaks of the North Cascades. The sun was intense, so much so we were able to strip to sweaters before we dived into the bowl in front of us. For the rest of the afternoon we dived into untracked bowls of shaded, powdery snow. By staying in the shadows we avoided getting into snow that had thawed and refrozen. As soon as we’d reach the bottom, we would painfully climb to the top of the ridge and look for another way down, once again claiming first tracks in the isolated basin all the while yelling and laughing. Erik was by far the better skier and filled the long, painful climbs with stories of ski patrol rescues and dynamiting cornices before the resort opened. Gradually, the sun sank lower and our energy finally gave out.
Just below the tent, we paused alongside a great, house-sized rock needing to take a rest in order to make the last few hundred feet back to camp. Erik kicked off his skis, leaped onto the boulder and climbed to the top where he peeled off his sweat soaked shirt and proceeded to absorb what heat was left in the sun. I disconnected my clingy cable bindings and planned to do the same. As I approached the rock I noticed the melt gap between the heated rock and the snow. I crouched to jump the distance so as to clear the short void as Erik had, but as I did so I broke through the crust and my right leg dropped into the gap with an audible noise. As I heard a loud tearing, popping sound I experienced rather intense pain in the vicinity of my ankle followed by pain in several other parts of my body as I crashed face first into the rock.
Erik heard me yelling and soon he was pulling me out of the snow hole. After a brief examination revealed nothing dangling or broken, we decided it was best to head immediately for the tent.
As soon as I arrived at our weekend home, I unlaced and removed my boot to see what sort of ding I had received. Although it was painful, things didn’t seem too bad and there was no real visible sign of damage. The most pressing question was one we didn’t even ask as we watched the sun go down and Erik started the stove. That question was, what kind of shape was I going to find myself in tomorrow?
(part deux…after the fall)
I got my answer the next day. In spite of having spent hours the night before with my foot shoved into the snow outside the front of the tent, my ankle was horribly swollen. I was hopeful that by icing (in this case “snowing”) my injury I would minimize the problems. Wrong. I managed to pull a sock over the melon sized appendage and when I attempted to stand I realized for the first time, I was in serious trouble. There was no way I was going to be able to ski out from our camp. I couldn’t even put weight on my foot. That was not too big an issue since I was never going to be able to get my boot on anyway, so attaching myself to the ski was out of the question.
While making breakfast of hot coffee and tea and oatmeal and a generous helping of cookies, Erik and I discussed the problem. The first option was for me to sit tight and for him to ski out and get help. We figured the most likely scenario to be a few ski patrollers from the Stevens Pass ski area dragging in a stretcher to retrieve me. The terrain between where we were and where we needed to be contained a couple of extremely steep segments that would be a problem with a stretcher, even for experienced rescuers. There was also the possibility of having to use a helicopter to reach me where we sat at the end of the ridge. Neither of these options was particularly appealing to me. I think it must have been a combination of stupidity, stubbornness and embarrassment that affected me as we tried to decide. The longer I thought about it, the less interested I was in involving anyone else in my “rescue”. I’d gotten myself into this fix because of my own stupidity, so it somehow seemed to make sense to try and extricate myself without involving anyone else. Except, of course, Erik.
As I mentioned, he was an exceptional skier, so when I first proposed getting out ourselves, he thought it was a marvelous idea. It was just wacky enough to appeal to a guy whose idea of fun consisted of tossing half sticks of dynamite into the air above a freshly snowed face so as to blow out any likely avalanches. We still had three good legs between us, so we decided to go home on three skis.
While I pulled on every leftover sock we had, Erik broke camp and packed us up. I stuffed my unused ski into the sleeve of the pack and hung my extra boot off the back. We hefted out packs and headed up the slope to the top of our ridge, just a short distance away. Fortunately, the uphill part was very short, since there wasn’t much Erik could do to help me there. I mostly hobbled and shuffled as I made my way to the top. Once there we had a gentle downhill for the better part of a mile in which we could develop a technique for three-legged skiing. It wasn’t pretty. Or even very effective since there were rocks and trees scattered along our route, but I somehow managed to hang onto Erik’s pack frame with one hand while balancing on one ski with my spare foot in the air between us. Having extremely good edging skills is a must for this sport since single ski travel requires all turns and all control to be focused on the one foot. I wasn’t particularly good at that so I spent a lot of time crashing into my buddy, knocking us both down numerous times. We finally established enough proficiency that we were able to travel for considerable distances between crashes. Luckily for us, the steeps didn’t come until we had a chance to practice.
At the first of these exposed crossings, we stopped to rest and consider our chances. It appeared likely that if (more likely when) I fell, I’d be able to stop myself if I acted quickly. The slope angled steeply, and went for a long way before ending in cliffs and trees. I would be skiing with my good leg on the ski that put me on the downhill side of Erik. If I fell, at least I wouldn’t take him with me. By what must have been sheer will, we crossed both of these exposed areas without so much as a slip. By this time we were atop the last ridge and the parking area along the highway came into view. The rest of the trip was a simple exercise in pain as I made my way down through areas that were simply too steep and broken for us to “three leg” ski.
Erik is no longer with us, having succumbed to a cancer that was discovered when he visited the doc for x-rays of a few broken ribs sustained in another ski adventure later in our lives. His memory remains alive with me for this trip and for others we took.
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Living on the edge of the continent......
Saturday at about 11:30 we took off from KPAE, full fuel and all seats filled, only about sixty pounds under gross. I had three of my four kids with me on a planned lunch trip to Friday Harbor, taking advantage of Zeke being in town from Boise and both Liz and Steph free for the afternoon. The plan was to zip up and enjoy a bite and some scenery, then fly back home where we'd load up for a trip to Pine River Cabin for a weekend of beer and sun and revelry.
As I've learned, loading a Cessna 172 to gross weight allows one to simulate the performance of a 152. Takeoff was a while in coming and holding five hundred feet a minute uphill was a challenge only met by sacrificing some airspeed in favor of climb. Temps were comfortable at about seventy degrees but the humidity was high. As the ship labored up into the smooth air, I imagined trying to get off the ground with a similar load at Fish Lake. I'm thinking I don't want to try.
There was a fair amount of radio traffic while flying through Whidbey's Class C airspace, but we only saw a couple of other airplanes in spite of that. It's a comfort to have everyone in that corridor on radar, knowing you've got someone on the ground watching for you. We made good time northbound, reading between 134 and 140 groundspeed the entire time. Lunch was quiet and pleasant and followed by a stroll to the marina for some gawking at the incredible wealth floating around there. By the time we were walking back up toward the airport, a very light drizzle was underway but the sky was of no concern since it appeared the ceiling was probably about six thousand feet. This perception remained with me until the Skyhawk lifted off the runway at Friday Harbor International and I was able to get a good look around.
To the east and southeast - my intended direction - was a wall. The clouds and sheets of rain falling from them merged into an indiscernible gray with the water. No telling where things were in there. I have no idea where all this weather came from. As I lowered the nose a bit, I could see south across the Strait to the shoreline between Port Townsend and Port Angeles. There was a layer of some sort inland but I could see the shoreline. I held that thought in reserve as I rolled left and aimed toward the clouds to the east. The radio was alive with traffic as I dialed in 118.2 and listened to Whidbey Approach. It seemed as if every light plane in the San Juan Islands was airborne at the same instant, all headed the same direction as me, and all asking for flight following. I heard the Whidbey controller asking several pilots "able to maintain VFR at 2200? (or 2500 or 3000)". I also heard multiple requests for filing in-flight IFR. That was when I became a bit uncomfortable with the state of things. By this time I was over Lopez Island and the wall of cloud and rain was no more than a mile in front of me. I could see the runway at Lopez below me; I could see north to Orcas, and glancing over my shoulder I saw it was still clear at Friday Harbor so I knew my situation was fine but it was time to make a decision. I turned around without calling Whidbey.
My initial thought was to get a little altitude and head south for the open water transit to the north shore of the Olympic Peninsula, but the weather seemed to be growing less friendly there all the time. Meanwhile the radio chatter continued and one airplane was asking for a diversion from Paine to Port Townsend. Another airplane was enroute from Oak Harbor to Port Townsend and called with a request to return to Oak Harbor since there was nothing ahead but zero/zero. In spite of what I thought, things weren't looking good to the south either. At this point I found myself in an airplane with three non-pilots, all of whom were beginning to look a little uncomfortable and it seemed to me that my job was to do something that would not cause them to feel uneasy. If they weren't happy with my explanations then perhaps my decisions were not quite right. As we headed back to Friday Harbor, I told Stephanie, "looks like you're gonna be late for work". I don't think she minded. I now had in mind one additional option I wanted to explore before putting us back on the runway. Remember this; if you're really down to only one option, you're truly in trouble. I had one "additional" option besides landing at FHR.
If you look at a chart of the San Juan Islands, you'll see why it is technically not an island chain, but instead is an archipelago. Heading due east from San Juan Island and the Friday Harbor area, you can follow the crests of the underwater mountain chain that leads directly back into Skagit Bay just north of Anacortes. It occurred to me that we might be able to navigate our way east while maintaining at least minimal VFR by simply flying from one of these islands to the next. Since every one of them (almost) has at least one runway on it, the worst that could happen would be we'd set down on one of these out of the way strips and wait the weather out. I turned east again at the north end of Lopez, explained to the "crew" what I was going to do, and we started descending to a "Commander-Emery-approved" altitude of 1000 feet. The plan worked well and I was able to always see ahead to the next piece of real estate before leaving the safety of the strip below me. What surprised me, however, was how completely disoriented I became in this little jaunt, even though I was navigating with a combination of chart and eyeball and the GPS. I knew where we were by the screen on the GPS but I could not look out the window and make myself see the same thing. We finally broke into the clear just northeast of Anacortes and turned back to the south, calling Whidbey and requesting additional "eyes" as we headed once again toward home.
To the east now I could see the freeway and a wall of rain just beyond it. The weather seemed to be improving to the west, however, so it seemed like we'd pulled it off. I was still hearing a flood of radio traffic to the southwest and south of Whidbey so I remained guarded and kept one eye back to the field at Skagit / Bayview and another at the runways around Oak Harbor. If all else failed I figured we'd simulate being a Navy jet and land at NAS Whidbey. We had to skirt the shoreline along the east edge of Port Susan, between the mainland and Whidbey, because things remained solid to the east. No following the freeway this trip. I was able to get high enough now to pick up the VOR at Paine and pointed us between the clouds while heading in the direction indicated on the OBS. After a few minutes I dialed in the ATIS at Paine and was treated to "visibility three miles, broken fifteen hundred, thunderstorm, lightning". The intercom in the Skyhawk was filled with four voices simultaneously saying "Lightning!!". We laughed at the common reaction and at that exact instant hit our first bump of the day. It was a good one, the cosmos apparently trying to emphasize this new news and make up for the smooth ride to that point.
As I cleared the patch of scud running along the shoreline just north of the Ritts ILS Outermarker, I could see ahead for the first time and noted thick patches of scattered cloud between us and home base with a ceiling about a thousand feet above the water. There were ways through, however, and I could see Hat Island dead ahead and Camano to the west. I heard one airplane inbound on the ILS to the left of us, and two more somewhere in the soup west of us, all of us aiming for the same place and clearly interested in getting on the ground right away. Paine Tower cleared us for the straight in at about the same time the ILS traffic reported breaking through the clouds so I turned a bit west to stay clear of his approach. At the same time we had a Bonanza and a Cessna converging from the right. Everyone was faster than us so the crowd cleared out in time for me to fall in behind and pick up a modified clearance to fly a right base. We zigged and zagged and jigged around a whole collection of clouds, all the while watching an ominous squall line crossing the Sound and just reaching Possession Point at the south end of Whidbey. It was close. And full of lightning. I kept the throttle almost to the firewall all the way to the runway threshold. Fast and high I slipped hard and executed a not-bad landing and then raced for the taxiway.
As we attached the last tiedown chain, the storm reached us with torrential rain, booming thunder and exciting flashes. Exciting, at least from the safety of the inside of the truck.
As I've learned, loading a Cessna 172 to gross weight allows one to simulate the performance of a 152. Takeoff was a while in coming and holding five hundred feet a minute uphill was a challenge only met by sacrificing some airspeed in favor of climb. Temps were comfortable at about seventy degrees but the humidity was high. As the ship labored up into the smooth air, I imagined trying to get off the ground with a similar load at Fish Lake. I'm thinking I don't want to try.
There was a fair amount of radio traffic while flying through Whidbey's Class C airspace, but we only saw a couple of other airplanes in spite of that. It's a comfort to have everyone in that corridor on radar, knowing you've got someone on the ground watching for you. We made good time northbound, reading between 134 and 140 groundspeed the entire time. Lunch was quiet and pleasant and followed by a stroll to the marina for some gawking at the incredible wealth floating around there. By the time we were walking back up toward the airport, a very light drizzle was underway but the sky was of no concern since it appeared the ceiling was probably about six thousand feet. This perception remained with me until the Skyhawk lifted off the runway at Friday Harbor International and I was able to get a good look around.
To the east and southeast - my intended direction - was a wall. The clouds and sheets of rain falling from them merged into an indiscernible gray with the water. No telling where things were in there. I have no idea where all this weather came from. As I lowered the nose a bit, I could see south across the Strait to the shoreline between Port Townsend and Port Angeles. There was a layer of some sort inland but I could see the shoreline. I held that thought in reserve as I rolled left and aimed toward the clouds to the east. The radio was alive with traffic as I dialed in 118.2 and listened to Whidbey Approach. It seemed as if every light plane in the San Juan Islands was airborne at the same instant, all headed the same direction as me, and all asking for flight following. I heard the Whidbey controller asking several pilots "able to maintain VFR at 2200? (or 2500 or 3000)". I also heard multiple requests for filing in-flight IFR. That was when I became a bit uncomfortable with the state of things. By this time I was over Lopez Island and the wall of cloud and rain was no more than a mile in front of me. I could see the runway at Lopez below me; I could see north to Orcas, and glancing over my shoulder I saw it was still clear at Friday Harbor so I knew my situation was fine but it was time to make a decision. I turned around without calling Whidbey.
My initial thought was to get a little altitude and head south for the open water transit to the north shore of the Olympic Peninsula, but the weather seemed to be growing less friendly there all the time. Meanwhile the radio chatter continued and one airplane was asking for a diversion from Paine to Port Townsend. Another airplane was enroute from Oak Harbor to Port Townsend and called with a request to return to Oak Harbor since there was nothing ahead but zero/zero. In spite of what I thought, things weren't looking good to the south either. At this point I found myself in an airplane with three non-pilots, all of whom were beginning to look a little uncomfortable and it seemed to me that my job was to do something that would not cause them to feel uneasy. If they weren't happy with my explanations then perhaps my decisions were not quite right. As we headed back to Friday Harbor, I told Stephanie, "looks like you're gonna be late for work". I don't think she minded. I now had in mind one additional option I wanted to explore before putting us back on the runway. Remember this; if you're really down to only one option, you're truly in trouble. I had one "additional" option besides landing at FHR.
If you look at a chart of the San Juan Islands, you'll see why it is technically not an island chain, but instead is an archipelago. Heading due east from San Juan Island and the Friday Harbor area, you can follow the crests of the underwater mountain chain that leads directly back into Skagit Bay just north of Anacortes. It occurred to me that we might be able to navigate our way east while maintaining at least minimal VFR by simply flying from one of these islands to the next. Since every one of them (almost) has at least one runway on it, the worst that could happen would be we'd set down on one of these out of the way strips and wait the weather out. I turned east again at the north end of Lopez, explained to the "crew" what I was going to do, and we started descending to a "Commander-Emery-approved" altitude of 1000 feet. The plan worked well and I was able to always see ahead to the next piece of real estate before leaving the safety of the strip below me. What surprised me, however, was how completely disoriented I became in this little jaunt, even though I was navigating with a combination of chart and eyeball and the GPS. I knew where we were by the screen on the GPS but I could not look out the window and make myself see the same thing. We finally broke into the clear just northeast of Anacortes and turned back to the south, calling Whidbey and requesting additional "eyes" as we headed once again toward home.
To the east now I could see the freeway and a wall of rain just beyond it. The weather seemed to be improving to the west, however, so it seemed like we'd pulled it off. I was still hearing a flood of radio traffic to the southwest and south of Whidbey so I remained guarded and kept one eye back to the field at Skagit / Bayview and another at the runways around Oak Harbor. If all else failed I figured we'd simulate being a Navy jet and land at NAS Whidbey. We had to skirt the shoreline along the east edge of Port Susan, between the mainland and Whidbey, because things remained solid to the east. No following the freeway this trip. I was able to get high enough now to pick up the VOR at Paine and pointed us between the clouds while heading in the direction indicated on the OBS. After a few minutes I dialed in the ATIS at Paine and was treated to "visibility three miles, broken fifteen hundred, thunderstorm, lightning". The intercom in the Skyhawk was filled with four voices simultaneously saying "Lightning!!". We laughed at the common reaction and at that exact instant hit our first bump of the day. It was a good one, the cosmos apparently trying to emphasize this new news and make up for the smooth ride to that point.
As I cleared the patch of scud running along the shoreline just north of the Ritts ILS Outermarker, I could see ahead for the first time and noted thick patches of scattered cloud between us and home base with a ceiling about a thousand feet above the water. There were ways through, however, and I could see Hat Island dead ahead and Camano to the west. I heard one airplane inbound on the ILS to the left of us, and two more somewhere in the soup west of us, all of us aiming for the same place and clearly interested in getting on the ground right away. Paine Tower cleared us for the straight in at about the same time the ILS traffic reported breaking through the clouds so I turned a bit west to stay clear of his approach. At the same time we had a Bonanza and a Cessna converging from the right. Everyone was faster than us so the crowd cleared out in time for me to fall in behind and pick up a modified clearance to fly a right base. We zigged and zagged and jigged around a whole collection of clouds, all the while watching an ominous squall line crossing the Sound and just reaching Possession Point at the south end of Whidbey. It was close. And full of lightning. I kept the throttle almost to the firewall all the way to the runway threshold. Fast and high I slipped hard and executed a not-bad landing and then raced for the taxiway.
As we attached the last tiedown chain, the storm reached us with torrential rain, booming thunder and exciting flashes. Exciting, at least from the safety of the inside of the truck.
Thursday, April 23, 2009
23 April 2009
Greetings all. I'm in the midst of one of those times of life when the day to day seems to keep me completely occupied and unable to slow down long enough to even communicate. Things are basically good right now with a strong sense of relief over the feeling of calm that describes things for me right now. After the past several months, this period of quiet is both much appreciated and very welcome.
Spring is on the way - flowers are starting to bloom around here and the cherry tree in the backyard is loaded with blooms. I have moved into a mode of ignoring more news than I read and find that my anxiety level has decreased substantially. At times it feels like the media deeply desires the most tragic of news in order to capture our attention on tv. It's nice to be paying less attention to the perceptions of gloom and doom and more to the arrival of longer days.
When I rise at 5am I'm now able to see the mountains in the east. I check the calendar and realize that the truly long days of the year are rapidly approaching. It makes me want to pull out my hiking gear, get my tent ready and hit the trails. Visit Mark's blog for info on the early season trips he is enjoying now that he is freed from the corporate world -http://markwhitesell.blogspot.com/
I hope to be joining him soon. Think positive - enjoy life.
Spring is on the way - flowers are starting to bloom around here and the cherry tree in the backyard is loaded with blooms. I have moved into a mode of ignoring more news than I read and find that my anxiety level has decreased substantially. At times it feels like the media deeply desires the most tragic of news in order to capture our attention on tv. It's nice to be paying less attention to the perceptions of gloom and doom and more to the arrival of longer days.
When I rise at 5am I'm now able to see the mountains in the east. I check the calendar and realize that the truly long days of the year are rapidly approaching. It makes me want to pull out my hiking gear, get my tent ready and hit the trails. Visit Mark's blog for info on the early season trips he is enjoying now that he is freed from the corporate world -http://markwhitesell.blogspot.com/
I hope to be joining him soon. Think positive - enjoy life.
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