Archive for April, 2007

10 Falls Trail - Canyon Trail

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

Got up around 10 today and decided to go for a nice ~10 mile hike in the very scenic Silver Falls State Park just east of Salem about an hour away.  When I got there I realized the ticket machine for the parking pass couldn’t break a ten so452032593_73ac77802d_b
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had to beg for a buck from passing motorists in the parking lot.  The first guy I asked, a nice looking older guy, happily gave me a buck (I love the friendliness of people in Oregon - especially the outdoorsy types).  After parking I got started on the hike which was very well maintained.  So much so that I saw elderly people walking it with canes and families with young children as well.  It was more of a very well built and well maintained walkway path through the woods than a trail.  It led past well more than the ten waterfalls the book wrote about although the others were smaller ones. 

I can’t say enough about this hike.  It starts off walking behind South Falls which is easily 90+ feet tall and drops to a gorgeous pool below then continues for 5 or452039639_8da6c3940c_b
so miles along multiple streams and rivers past many more enormous falls.  I believe I literally walked behind 4 falls in total.  When I mean behind I mean you 452034849_1335e3b550_b
can literally follow a path underneath the falling water cascading off the cliff above your head.  I took lots of pictures and stopped multiple times at each waterfall but I have run out of picture space on this blog to post them unfortunately.  Click Here to see the full set of pics from this hike as well as many others from my travels in the Pacific452040423_0752ff271b_b
Northwest so far.  When I got to the end of the Canyon Trail I turned around and literally ran the Rim Trail so I would get home in time to go to Kristen Splinter’s Easter Pot Luck.  Awesome hike.  The 10 mile hike took me about 3 hours and that was with a whole ton of stops for pictures as well.

Rodeo!

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

After SAR training today and putting my crank arm back on my bike… (I went riding with Chris on Wed and got all the way to the trailhead from town and my damn pedal fell off… pretty awkward goofy looking ride back to town with one leg) I met up with Anna, Brendan and Eleanor to go to a Rodeo!  Eleanor and Anna had cowboy boots on and for the first time in a long time I saw Anna in skirt… pretty cute!  Brendan showed up in an all denim outfit and we rolled out to my first rodeo.  It was just outside of town and they had barrel racing with the "queens of the rodeo" girls, horseback riding, bull riding, and a cute egg race for the little kids.  I saw a ton of people from school there including Jan in a cowboy hat, Pam, Tiffany, Hartz, Toshi, the bucket of hair, Shilo etc.  It was really cool to see all the competitions and all the tough cowboys get their asses handed to them by the animals.  One guy even got dragged two times around the entire place by his hand still attached to the strap on the horse all twisted up.  It looked like he should have been dead but he just got up and walked it off.  Another kid flew off a bull and landed on his head…. so messed up but he decided to take a 2nd turn and got his ass handed to him again… poor guy.  He was the last one and as we left he was still hobbling around in the dirt.  Eleanor was nice enough to get a poster signed by all the rodeo queens for me which I now have stuck on our whiteboard.  After the rodeo the four of us came back and watched Die Hard in my room which Eleanor hadn’t seen before.  It was a long day and a cool night but I’m happy to get to bed now cause I’m going to go for a 10 mile hike tomorrow.

Human Tracking

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

This morning I got up very hung over to go to the Search and Rescue field Training for Benton County to learn how to track human beings that are lost through pretty much any terrain.  The trackers who taught us were experts and can find a trail in any conditions.  It was sad to hear that they often aren’t called out on rescue searches and because of that rescue teams often head off in the wrong direction based on incorrect information that the trackers would have picked up on easily.  I learned a bit but definitely not as much as I’d like to.  I really want to take more tracking classes and get certified so that I can bring that skill to CMRU when we are out looking for lost people but right now I don’t have enough time in my life.  Perhaps next year or the year after.

Karaoke

Friday, April 6th, 2007

What a first week of school!  Three of my classes were cancelled so I now have only one class.  I do have a reading and conference with my advisor that will be as tough if not tougher than a class as well though.  It’s been beautiful all week long so today Anna and I decided to go for a hike up nearby Mary’s Peak at 4pm.  We got pretty close to the summit but turned around because Anna’s poor knees were hurting her.  I didn’t mind.  Once I have a summit I could care less if I make it to the top or not… wierd huh?  At 7 we met Chris Holm and Tiffany at the climbing center for a couple hours of climbing.  Tiffany is pretty damn good and has obviously learned a lot from Anna.  Chris was a sweaty bastard, and I of course stuck to only 5.9’s. 

Another interesting story from the day is that I went to the OSU doctor for an x-ray of my back and it appears to him that I may have a compound fracture of one, if not two of my vertebrae in my mid-upper back!  No wonder my back has been hurting for so long!  Maybe I should stop flipping upside down into pools of water and racing my mountain bike downhill for a while?   Well, we might be able to add a broken back now to my list of injuries! 

After eating some bratwurst at home I met up with the gang (Abby, Brycen, Robyn, Eleanor, Anna, Chris, Aaron, Toshi, and Brendan) at Crowbar downtown for a quick drink before heading to Platinum to see Amadon Play.  There was a $10 cover at Platinum which we decided we didn’t want to pay so we headed to the Peacock for some Karaoke instead.  What ensued was hysterical.  Eleanor and I stole the show of course singing multiple songs including a horrific rendition of "Barbie Girl"!  Apparently, I did a pretty good job on "Ice Ice Baby" and "Busta A Move" giving several shoutouts to Anna, Eleanor, and Hartz, "the heart breaker" whome I found out the next morning after watching a video of myself Brendan taped, I called a "table cloth"!.  Hahaha.  It was a great night with all my buddies and I got to rock it like a rockstar for atleast a little while until the Lord of the Rings "troll" DJ decided not to play anymore of my songs so we left.

Eagle Creek to Tunnel Falls

Sunday, April 1st, 2007

On Saturday morning after waking up and a great breakfast from Eleanor at the Cabin, Chris, Toshi, Emily and I headed around Mt. Hood down to the ColumbiaEagle_creek_tunnel_falls_33107_008
River Gorge for a hike I had found in one of Jason’s books up Eagle Creek to Tunnel Falls.  Chris had done the hike several times before and knew some secrets the book didn’t tell so he was to be our guide.  We got to the trailhead around 1pm and toEagle_creek_to_tunnel_falls_33107_013
my amazement I found that I had forgotten my approach running shoes…. This posed a HUGE problem.  Nobody else had a size 10 shoe and I only had my Mick Fanning Reef flip flops or my ski boots… I chose the flip flops.  It was about 50 degrees out and rainy so I made sure Emily wore my REI gore-tex jacket and I through on my old EMS one as well.  The hike was a 12 mile round-trip hike out to Tunnel Falls and back. 

I’ll be completely honest right now when I say I was really nervous about it.  I have extremely tough feet but 12 miles over volcanic rock and terrain in flip flops seemed to push it a bit, but I wasn’t about to cancel a beautiful hike because of my mistake and was determined to suck up any pain that might occur from me being a dumb-ass.  At first I started off switching back and forth between barefoot and the flip flops but then just chose to keep them on because the rocks were so sharp.  My feet were definitely soggy and cold and I know my body was working extra hard to keep my extremities warm.  I the beginning of the hike the sun was out occasionally as it was also at the end of the hike but in the middle deep in the forest it was cold and pouring rain so all of us were a bit cold and wet but ultimately it was all worth it and I can safely say that it was one of the top 5 best hikes I’ve ever been on.

The hike itself followed Eagle Creek deep into the mountains surrounding Columbia River Gorge.  The trail was mostly perched on the steep slopes of the hillsides above the river and often had steel cables bolted into the wall for safety.  The trail was very busy with a lot of people who gave my feet funny looks as they passed by in their mountaineering boots…  Many of the walls we walked Eagle_creek_to_tunnel_falls_33107_007
around were dripping water off the top overhangs so we were actually walking behind tons of little water falls on the way up (weeping walls).  We continued on to Punchbowl falls which was a 25 foot waterfall into a pool of water below.  We scouted it out and noticed a perfect place to cliff jump there possibly later this summer when it was warmer and the water was less dangerous.

As we continued on the trail become a lot steeper and elevated above the riverEagle_creek_to_tunnel_falls_33107_025 Eagle_creek_to_tunnel_falls_33107_023
which funneled through a chute that kayakers were taking.  We stopped several times to check out the kayakers from a bridge
up the trail.  We were also trying to determine how high of a cliff jump I would be from where we were standing.  I was estimating 100 feet but I couldn’t tell for sure.  Check out the picture here, blow it up, and look at the top right corner to see a man standing on the trail for a reference scale of how big the Eagle_creek_to_tunnel_falls_33107_097
area was.  The kayakers looked like they were having an amazing time running the rapids.  One flipped his boat and almost got pulled back but righted himself just in time. 

We continued on and after a while of sludging through the rainEagle_creek_tunnel_falls_33107_037 we came upon Tunnel Falls.  There is absolutely no way for me to justify the beauty of this place in words.  It was absolutely amazing.  Due to spring snow melt and the rain all morning the
raw power of the water pouring over the edge 50 feet above youEagle_creek_to_tunnel_falls_33107_048
to 50 feet below you was amazing to behold.  The best part is the “tunnel” part – a hole blasted in the rock for the trail to walk directly behind the waterfall.  Blow up the pictures again here and look closely at them to see how big the falls were compared to ourEagle_creek_tunnel_falls_33107_045
bodies.  It was absolutely nuts!  I actually got so close that I stuck my head into the falling water briefly for a few shots.  This is usually where people turn around and head back but Chris took us a little further up the trail to another awesome waterfall gushing over a ledge right next to us from a different tributary of Eagle Creek. 

By this time I was getting really cold as was the rest of us so we picked up the Eagle_creek_to_tunnel_falls_33107_090
pace and actually made it back to the car in about half the timeEagle_creek_to_tunnel_falls_33107_092
it took us to get to Tunnel Falls.  Thankfully the half inch piece of leather holding each of my flip flops together actually held (I will forever by Reef products now).  When I got to the car the leather had rubbed through some of my skin on my feet and they were bleeding.  It felt so good to occasionally stop in creeks and waterfalls on the way back to cool my sore feet off. 

We decided to take a small trip on the way back to Multinomah Falls because there was so much water we guessed it would be much bigger and powerful then when Kenny and I saw it last September during the dry season and we were right.  On the way Emily and I decided to stop to get gas and while we were Chris and Toshi passed us only to be pulled over on the highway by a dumb cop that obviously didn’t have his bifocals on and couldn’t read chris’s inspection sicker or something leaving Chris with an unnecessary warning.  Emily and I did get a laugh as we drove by them pulled over though!   

After checking out the falls Emily and I thanked Chris and said goodbye to Toshi and took off to Portland for a wonderful dinner at Steamers (I’m in love with Pacific Northwest Oyster Shooters now) and overnight at a motel there.  In the morning we got a quick breakfast and I said a painful goodbye to her.  It really sucks living so far away from her but hopefully this trip led her to fall in love with Oregon and possibly visit again soon!