Thursday, October 31, 2013

The Most Awesome Camping Trip From Hell Ever

A few weekends ago I set out to go camping with some friends from work and a few old co-workers who happened to be visiting town.

The word I would use to describe the conditions that day is "yucky." It was drizzling/raining pretty steadily all day on the day we had planned to go, and it had rained all week, so the ground was also quite muddy. But we had been planning this trip for over a month, so we decided to go for it. A total of seven people loaded up into 3 cars and we caravan-ed it out to George Washington National Forest, only a 30 minute drive away.

Now, for those of you who live under rocks, the government was actually closed for a pretty significant amount of time just recently. Something about a budget issue I think, who knows. Technically in GWNF it is legal to park and camp anywhere, except for in registered campsites where they ask either a fee or a donation for entrance. The government decided not to let anybody into these nice campsites while it was closed. They called it trespassing on federal property. So we showed up at Hone Quarry campsite, only to be deterred by a blockade telling us to go home. Foo.

Our solution: drive approximately one mile down the road and camp there instead.

Yeah, take that government!

We started setting up camp pretty late in the evening, so we had to use the headlights on the cars to illuminate the clearing by the road that we picked to camp at. It was rocky and muddy and there was a ton of tall grass, but we got camp set up and a fire going despite the rain within 12 minutes. We were smart and brought our own firewood.

One of my co-workers is a camping top-chef, and we feasted on pre-cooked chicken sausages, homemade quesodillas, and in the morning....the worlds most satisfying pancakes!

We had a lovely evening braving the rain with our warm campfire, good company, delicious food, and Angry Orchard Hard Cider. Then things took a turn for the worse.

We had thought the rain was going to let up. At least that was what Weather.com had told us. (The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration was not reporting the weather that weekend. Thanks again government.) It most certainly did not let up. As a matter of fact, it got heavier.

It started to get cold and we started to get tired, and fortunately our tents have waterproof tarps, so we decided to turn in for the night. My tent was the largest, so my friends Sarah, Richard, Johnny, myself, and Johnny's pooch Piper piled into my tent. It's an old thing, but I do love it. Not sure where it's from, but I've been camping in it since I was a girl scout. We all bundle up and go to sleep.

I wake up some hours later. It's still dark out. The rain seems to be louder on the tarp now. But that's not what woke me up. There's a strange, repetitive sound down by my feet. It sounds like someone is rubbing their finger over a synthetic rain jacket over and over again. I look up and click on the flashlight. It's Piper. She is walking around the perimeter of the inside of the tent....licking the walls. Her tail is wagging like crazy, and as she completes another lap, it whaps me in the face. I'm wondering what the hell is up with this dog, and as I sit up, my head brushes the tent wall, and a trickle of water cascades down my forehead. The tent has soaked through. I scan the floor of the tent, and there doesn't seem to be much water, but there's a small pool starting to collect close to where my feet are. I look over to the other side of the tent, and Sarah and Richard are gone. I reach over Johnny and put my hand down on the floor. There's a quarter inch of water that ends just before Johnny's sleeping bag. The dog circles around again, and I feel she is soaked also.

Good grief.

I wake Johnny up, and we bring the dog's crate in from Johnny's car to keep her dry and warm, and also to keep her from licking the tent all night. Johnny tells me Richard woke him up an hour earlier because he and Sarah got soaked, and they were trying to go sleep in one of the cars to get dry. Since they didn't come back, he imagined they found their way into a car and were fine. We fell back asleep, hoping the tent wouldn't totally flood before morning.

And then morning came.


Brian, semi-soaked.


Poor Piper, stuck in the muddy swamp that is now my tent.


Poor Brittany's nice new canopy got ruined by the rain.


The fire was all but extinguished. One lonesome log was salvageable and still emitting warmth. Thank goodness too, or we would not have had breakfast.


Piper LOVED the mud. 

We found Richard and Sarah in Brittany and Matt's car. Both of their sleeping bags had soaked through in the puddle. Brittany cooked us all some grub, and then we loaded up our soggy gear into the trunks of our cars. We were all about ready to get home. Then Brittany realized her car wouldn't start. She had left the headlights on too long to set up camp the night before. Rats.

Fortunately, I had gone to Walmart to buy jumper cables just a few days before, and we got her car running in no time. We all went back to Britt's to hose down our gear and recuperate. It took 3 days for my tent to air out over my balcony. 

I love camping. Even when it's miserable, being with the right people and having the right attitude can make all the difference. In my opinion, there is no such thing as a crappy camping trip. Everything that can go wrong might very well go wrong, but we will still find a way to have a good time.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

It Is Fall

Dear September,

You are my favorite month. 
Here's ten reasons why:


#1) Apples!

#2) Oktoberfest Beer!

#3) Kettle corn!

#4) Perfect biking weather

#5) Blue Hole gets super cold and peaceful

#6) Hiking boots and wool socks come back into style

 
#7) Cool foggy mountain mornings

#8) Sunrise is not at an ungodly hour (thank you Daylight Savings)

#9) Prettiest time to be on Skyline Drive

#10) Cold colorful hikes 

So far this month, I've gone camping a whole bunch, been to a new lake, hiked a few new hikes, made some new friends, learned to slackline, biked several new routes, gone to my first vineyard (CrossKeys!), toured 3 amazing Virginia microbreweries, and gotten 2 flat tires in a 50 mile bike race!

Also, John Butler Trio makes an excellent soundtrack for adventuring. Highly recommend.

I made a new friend! His name's Xander, he's a salamander.

Here's a few more pictures that I really liked from this month:















I love nature.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Taste of Misty Moonshine, Teardrop in My Eye

And thus, John Denver sums up the end to my summer.

Cheesy song lyric title works three ways:

1) It's about Western Virginia (that's right, NOT West Virginia, for those of you who didn't get that the Shenandoah River is pretty specific to regular Virginia), and those country roads have once again taken me home to the place I belong, Harrisonburg VA.

2) I DID go to West Virginia, and I brought back moonshine. WhaBAM.

And finally, 3) summer has ended, and there are indeed a few sad teardrops in my eye. I will miss this wild quasi-nomadic summer lifestyle I've been living.

SEGWAY: Check out my view from the new digs!

I am not a city person, but me-oh-my I love me a good sunset. 
Plus, walking distance to my favorite bar. Bonus points!


Backtracking to before summer ended though, I went to the lake with the fam a bit. Here's a dog in a boat!



Also one day the lake disappeared...

Just kidding, it was only pretty fog. And spiderwebs!

Anyway, now I'm back at school and that's pretty cool. This year I've decided my goal for the year is going to be supporting the local community any way I can. So far, I've gone to the farmers market every Saturday to buy all my vegetables and eggs. When I go to the bar, I buy beer from my local brewery, 3 Brothers Brewery!
My two favorites! I highly recommend both!
(Left: 3 Bros Elementary Porter, Right: 3 Bros Tri Brathair Scottish Ale)

This goal is inspired by a movement my cousins started called Farm to Pint, out on the North Fork! They grow hops locally and sell them to nearby breweries, not to mention doing other cool things like making soap! My cousins are pretty cool. Check them out on Facebook if you can!  https://www.facebook.com/FarmToPint

One of their big projects is selling hop plants at their farmer stand for locals to grow their own! They gave me one too.

Ladies and gentlemen, introducing.....  HOPTIMUS PRIME






































Happy banana :)

Friday, August 9, 2013

A Cape Codder, A Little Late

I took a temporary hiatus to Cape Cod a few weeks back with the lovely duo of Grace Cobbins and Madeleine Arenibia. I took the ferry from Long Island up to Cape Cod on Sunday, July 21, and we stayed in Barnstable,MA with Grace's lovely grandparents. To kick off our wild week, we had a lobster dinner!



The first few days on the Cape consisted of a few things: Beer Beach Fish and Chips.



Wednesday was super fun. We drove to Provincetown to go whale watching. (For those of you who aren't familiar with Provincetown, MA, it is famous for being a local gay community hotspot.)
We got there early in the morning and decided to go for a little hike to a lighthouse across a jetty. We never made it to the lighthouse, but we did get to go whale watching after This is where the pictures get good...

 The jetty. WE SAW A SHARK.
 I want to go to there
 The tide starting coming in as we were walking back...Thank goodness we left when we did!
 Goofing around on the whale boat
 Rainstorm on the horizon!
"The Spectrum of Tan"
 Thar she blows!
 This whale is really old. She was the first humpback ever spotted by a whale watching tour in MA!
 It was windy, and we were soaked
Da girls :)
Blow-drying my jacket on the way back
Stormy sunset on the Atlantic

Thursday consisted of a rainy but fun trip to Martha's Vineyard! Lots of flowers and shopping and lighthouses!



On Friday, Madeleine had to fly back to VA so she could go on vacation with her family, so we drove her to the airport in Boston. After we dropped her off, we explored a little! We toured a few graduate schools for Gracie, and then we checked out some local towns, and we found some cool things!

 This is the Norumbeca monument, built in 1889 to mark the spot that Leif Erikson decided to settle his Viking colony in 1000 AD...
 ...and we got inside!
 Grace and I at the top of the tower! We were afraid we might get in trouble if someone saw us, so we had to stay low and couldn't get a picture of the view.
 But from the ground this is basically what it looked like! That is a river/pond, covered in lilly pads.
A cool log we climbed out onto in the pond

Grace and I spent our last day in town enjoying the beach some more, kayaking a little, and spending time with her relatives. I was supposed to catch the 3 oclock ferry back to Orient Point, Long Island on Sunday from Connecticut. At the last minute, I decided to switch my ferry so I could explore New England while I was up there. 

Sunday began my 600 mile, 24 hour road trip. I drove to NH first, and on my way through I stopped at Walden Pond, like Thoreau's Walden Pond! I also saw a few battlefields from the Revolutionary War, and a few mountains! I checked out a graduate school in NH, and then drove on to explore Portland, ME. It was rainy, but I saw the ocean, got a lobster roll, and checked out another graduate school. Finally, I drove down to Newmarket, NH, a small town sandwiched between Massachusetts and Maine, where my cousin Betsy and her fiance Pete live. They very generously let me sleep on their couch Sunday night. Monday morning, I had a few hours to kill before I left for my ferry, so Pete took me out on his canoe to check out the river. It was awesome! I left around 11:30am to drive the final 150 miles from Newmarket to New London, CT, and caught the ferry back to Long Island!