Monday, March 22, 2010

I'm back, I'm back





Well then....so after my brief absence from the interweb highway I am back online to update the latest adventures, which have been very exciting over the last week.

I ended my last trip visiting the pictographs on Hagman Lake, riding the wind on glare ice 8 miles down Moose Lake up into Canada. This was such a fun day. We loaded up 35 dogs, 7 sleds, 19 people into our trucks, trailers, and shuttles, and drove to Moose lake about a 45 minute drive from Wintergreen.

As you can imagine, the amount of dogs and participants was quite chaotic at the launch sight. It's what I would call a shit show. But credit to the other 2 guides and myself, it was a fairly organized shit show. We launched in intervals of 2-3 sleds per guide to avoid a the maximum number of 9 people per group in the Boundary Waters, spaced about 1/2-1 mile apart. As the first team launched our princess dog Lady Convington aka Covy took off chasing them as nobody noticed she was loose. So we were down a dog right away.

Next the second team launched without any problems and away they went. This left me with my group to launch last. As I hit the lake on my ski's I felt I was going to fly across the lake this morning. The glide was long, wind blowing to my back, and nothing but dark smooth ice ahead for 8 miles. I signaled for the first team in my group to launch and they did with no troubles, the second team launched next and their dogs decided to take a short cut over a significant rock pile next to shore. Two woman were riding this sled and as the dogs bolted over the rock the pile, one of these woman shot into the air but never letting her grip loose on the handle bar. The dogs kept running and brakes of the sled do little on the ice, so this poor woman who wouldn't let go was dragging behind the sled on her back. After a hundred feet or so we stopped the team and she stood up laughing hysterically. She hopped back on and away we went.

We flew for an hour gliding across the ice, with me having to wait up for the dog teams. We traveled north from Moose Lake, into New Found Lake, and into Sucker lake up to Prairie Portage which borders the Canadian Wilderness Area, Quetico. We had a great lunch, one of the guides fell waist deep through the ice near shore, and people relaxed for while.

We trekked back the same route enjoying the sunshine, endless landscapes, and bellies full of chocolate, coffee, and shore lunch.

The next day was a short day on White Iron and we cruised around showing the group Blueberry Cliff lookout point. As we headed back to the lodge we came across a section of ice that was pretty thin from all the warm weather. The first few teams raced by with no difficulties, but then came a team that felt the ice break a bit and this guy jumped off the sled thinking it would be good so the sled didn't break through, as he took two steps, he crashed through the ice and caught himself with his arms before submerging. Carefully, I came around behind him and reached my ski pole out to him. He grabbed hold tightly and another guide pulled my other ski pole and we pulled this guy to safety. A very intense moment, but handled very calmly, and most people we laughing at the guy.

I have had a few days since that trip and managed to find adventure on my days off. I headed to Ashland, WI to visit an old professor and friends. When I arrived I was asked to go paddle the Bad River which was running high from all the snow melt.

Friday morning we loaded up 4 boats, 4 dudes, in 2 cars, in hopes of a epic day of paddling. I am usually quite anxious when I paddle whitewater and this day was no different. I knew the river would be high, the waves would be meatier, the holes would pull harder, and the paddling would be technical. Basically it would be ready to kick my ass.

So I made a deal with myself that I would not walk any rapids this day, and wanted to avenge my last time on the river where I swam about 4 times, and walked a series of rapids.

We paddled hard all day, crashing through waves, catching eddies, avoiding big holes or paddling out of them when we did get stuck. We even shattered through a Class IV which I must say was the biggest piece of river I've ever done. An 8 foot drop into a pool of churning water which immediately dropped into a 10-15 foot slide of super fast raging water ending with a smooth exit. All of us dropped it, and we all came out successful.

We continued paddling the day and had some fun on the river, all laughing and ready for a hard earned beer. After realizing my social life has been minimal at best lately I decided to head out with friends for the night.

After the long day of paddling we dropped off the gear and found spots at the Deep Water Grille in Ashland. After a couple of pitchers of APA we headed back to my buddy John's place and ate some good dinner. Feeling good from the good day of paddling, I looked up some other friends and decided I would make the rounds. I followed another buddy to a house called Gia's Cradle at Northland. When we arrived we proceeded to the "hobbit hole" located in the attic upstairs. Walking into the "hobbit hole" there are old 70's penthouse posters hanging, artifacts or memento's from previous college kids celebrating the hobbit hole. A group of 10-15 joined in the room. To my surprise most seemed to be young 20 something earthy girls. Not to be an insult, but I believe many of them to be lesbian or feminists. As the haze in the hobbit hole grew smokier, the stories and ideas passed around the room were entertaining as I sat in the background observing. I watched two girls cuddled next each other whispering secrets away, another dude in the circle drawing pictures of party. The kid who sounds gay, but who your not sure really is sat next to me sassing all the feminists. My other buddy stares across the circle at me rolling his eyes at the estrogen filled, and smokey air. And some homely shy looking emo kid sat crushing on the lesbian next to him as he rolled spliffs and passed them around. Radically liberal ideas filled the room and it was fun to listen to the passion and some senselessness. I found it amusing that many of them self proclaimed vegans, were later chowing down a pepperoni pizza from Domino's. Guess the hobbit hole doesn't count.

Later on I hooked a ride over to hang with John, Mallory, and Thomas, two of the paddling partners earlier. We joked and exaggerated stories of our epic day on the river swearing it to be the first of many for the year.

FinallyI am back in Ely. I attended a wedding for two of the guides and danced to Irish Folk music. It was fun to see a small community of people group together for a wedding in the woods, and celebrated later with swing dancing and waltzes. I felt we were a group of hobbits clanking glasses and dancing into the wee hours of the night. The last few days have been full and exciting.

Back on trail Wednesday for a 4 day camping trip, but thinking it might involve backpacking rather dogsleds. We'll see!

Monday, March 15, 2010

Me so tired

This guy is getting wore out here. Not sure if I'm sick, feeling older, or just wore out, but I feel tired. I suppose skiing everyday can wear a guy out, but it doesn't feel right. But back in the saddle today and we hit the ice early before it got soft.

This trip is a group of doctors doing seminars and dogsledding and seems to be a fun bunch. We had 7 teams out with 35 dogs and cruised around White Iron Lake this morning. I've been playing chef more and more and cooked up a delightful pancake and sausage breakfast this morning for the 14 members of our group, and I'm enjoying the experience I'm getting cooking for groups. This will be useful for my summer adventures when I'm counted on as the one to cook.

Tomorrow we head to Lake Hagman to look at pictographs from Natives, the original people of this area. Mostly hiking and skijouring tomorrow and lunch in the woods.

Not much to say and I feel too tired to write anymore. Sort of a lonely day up here today, and I'm missing my little monsters big blue, the duder, and smiley jo (nicknames I came up with while skiing today for my beautiful nieces and nephew) They have weighed heavy on my mind today.

Off to bed so I can relieve this tiredness.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Enduring the conditions


Yeah, conditions aren't optimal right now, no snow, warm sun, nights that don't dip below freezing, but we continue to keep on keepin' on.

Just finished another trip with a fun group of 6. Friday we decided to not dogsled as we woke up to pouring rain. So to town we went to visit the International Wolf Center and American Bear Center. These are some neat places. Got to see some wolves running around doing their thing and learn a little more about them, and the same with the bear center. We bummed around town after that and had a relaxing day.

Saturday we awoke early and hauled 4 dog teams over to Moose Lake about an hour away. Since there is no snow on the ground we launched on the lake and cruised across a lake of ice without snow. How the dogs move quickly across the ice, and how the guides can glide across on their ski's moving at incredible speeds (for a x-country skier). It was a gray day with not much moving around. We followed Moose Lake up into Sucker Lake and dipped into Canada for a trail lunch. We found a designated camp sight to set up lunch in and it felt as if we were summer camping besides the dog teams and ice on the lake.

This ice can be quite scary looking without snow. It has a deep black color with cracks shooting randomly in chaotic directions. I feel like I should strap on my hockey skates instead of ski's but I chose the ski's. The melt is happening faster everyday and the season is virtually over. Although I've heard rumors of some winter type weather heading our way. This will do wonders for the trip I'm starting in the morning, otherwise we'll have to get creative and hope the ice stays thick.

Here's another video of some participants in front of me cruising on the lake ice and me holding the drag line as if I was water skiing on x-country ski's, only on ice.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Rain, rain, and more rain...really?

Let me start out by stating the obvious. Rain and dogsledding do not mix. This is exactly what is happening here. Right now Wintergreen has 3 camping trips out in the field, somehow, someway, they are sledging through the watery slushy mess out there. To my delight, I am on support (basically making sure dogs are good here for day trips, lunches are ready, etc...). Not only is this giving me time to do homework (which I must say is hard to do up here, and I feel like I'm slipping a bit there), but also gives my battered hip and back a needed break. I think I tweaked my hip skiing and slept on my back wrong...nothing a bit of ibuprofen won't cure.

Today I am dedicated to working on at least 2 of my papers in between the daily to do lists around here. So not much action yesterday or today.

Today our awesome Chef has the day off, so the clients out on trips coming to the lodge for lunch and dinner get served by me. Peanut butter sandwiches, granola, and tea is on the menu for lunch, with frozen pizza and beer for dinner. Wonder if they notice the difference from the gourmet meals they get from Bernard the Chef? If they're lucky, the pizza will come out just right rather than burned to a crisp.

That's all today....time to kick my ass and motivate myself for this homework stuff.

Pittackleton

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Fog for an early morning start


Today I rolled down towards Farm Lake and looked out...wicked sites were all around. A lot of the snow melted yesterday leaving puddles of water scattered across the lake. The clouds rolled in, then the Fog, and the view was quite mysterious looking.

Unfortunately for many players involved, we still ran. I found myself streaking through ankle deep water on my ski's moving across the lake while the dogs pulled their best trying to keep cool. We zipped through the Highland Trail into Pickeral Lake, then the portage trail over to the Kawishiwi River. The puddles continued to be where ever we were. Trails in the woods were not so bad, though lacked a good amount of snow, but also lacked standing water. Never skied like this before, and was surely an experience. Ended the day early to give the dogs a break, but not before a nice lunch tucked in the woods with pizza and soup. We all swapped stories, encouraged the dogs, and headed back to Timber Trail Lodge. Another great crew on this trip and I enjoyed their company.

The next few days I am on call I guess I would say, and am supporting other crews where I can. Maybe some laundry and a trip to Virginia for supplies is in the mix...and a big dose of homework.

This dude is still smiling as I'm sure you would guess. Love you all!

Sir Maximus Pittackleton

Monday, March 8, 2010

Wet sloppy days


Spring has definitely come early this year. The melt is on, puddles are forming, and here at Wintergreen we continue to push on. Sure the dogs get tired, ski's stick to the wet slush, and participants get worked pushing to help the dogs, but it still rocks.

I found myself doing a lot of daydreaming today while skiing. I think that is part of the reason behind me loving this so much. I can be a dreamer most of the day. Now when I translate these dreams to reality....you better look up to the top, because I'm sure that is where I'll be chillin'. This whole idea I have for a non-profit Outdoor Ed/Community Garden program I've been cooking up has some serious potential. This dude might actually make a difference one day on a bigger level. We'll see, along with my dreams to be an epic Tele Skier, kayaker, rock climber, disc golfer, part time shitty musician, author, lover, uncle, brother, son, friend, do it yourselfer, liver of frugality, and just an all around bad ass MF, I have some serious hills to climb.

Anyway, just some thoughts I had on trail today. Still liking the pirates around here, they seem to speak a language I understand, and seem to be bad ass MF's themselves.

Heading back into the BWCA tomorrow for a good ride, am looking to spot a wolf, though with the dogs and stuff, its a fat chance. Though I did see 2 owls tonight, and almost ran over a dog. So exciting stuff even after work. Drank some scotch whiskey which burned my tonsils like a firecracker in my mouth, and pondered life and listened to good stories from the Wintergreen crew. Just another good day for a good dude.

Peace out.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

A day off for homework and relaxation


Not much happening here today. The group left this morning after a good breakfast and a good-byes at the cabin. It was fun to see how strangers come together in only a few days to become very fond of one another. I've learned about all this group dynamic stuff in theory at school, which makes it fun to see it in action as groups come together.

Spent the rest of the day kickin' around Wintergreen. Went on a hike and did some Ecology homework on the trail which was a nice way spend the afternoon. Back in my room now to finish some more. Back at it tomorrow with a new group and more skiing and dogsledding.

There's so much I think about while away. It really is amazing how my thoughts change depending on location. Back home in the cities, it's go go go all the time. Even now working part time and school full-time. Go here, then there, then drive way the hell over there for this and that. Life is simpler here. Sure you still have to work and go places and get things done. It just seems to be at a simpler level. Maybe all the complications haven't sprawled this far north yet, or maybe it's the influence of the surroundings. Whatever it is, it feels nice. This isn't to say I don't like it back home, it's just nice to be fortunate enough to get away and do things like this.