Thursday, July 23, 2009

Incredible Campsites


Our campsite situation began as a fiasco and has ended as a bit of a disappointment; we did, however, enjoy two extremely nice sites this past week. Arriving late Thursday night we were surprised to find our supposedly reserved site already occupied. We spent the night at the horse corral (group site with a place for horses to stay), which was fine until our sleep was interrupted by others arriving around 4:30 am and setting up camp in the same location. As a side note, it amazes me that the National Park System not only allows horse riding on all trails, but even includes specific horse infrastructure, while banning bicycles from all roads and trails except paved roads (of which there is only one in the park). Hopefully that will all change soon.

Fortunately, the following morning we found campers who were moving out of their site, and so we moved in. The site was incredible, right on the beach. Above photo shows where I chose to pitch my tent, an amazing place to sleep under the stars, awakening right next to the lake in the morning. Monday morning we filled our packs with everything for the next few days and hiked out to Snag lake to spend Monday and Tuesday night. We managed to get a number of plots finished up out in that remote section of the park while we stayed at Snag lake. The experience was incredible, hiking everything you need in is strenuous but enjoyable. The best part of the trip was choosing our incredible site right on the edge of Snag Lake. Just a short walk away was our own personal beach, and we saw only a few people the entire three days we were there.

Night Photography

Looking out at Juniper Lake from our campsite, I had a lot of fun experimenting with shutter speeds, apertures, iso speeds and utilizing a tripod. The big dipper almost fits in the frame, but I couldn't get the top couple stars while there was still light on the horizon. Around 11 pm the dipper rotates low enough to fit, so perhaps I'll be able to get it to work by merging a couple photos. Tripods open whole new opportunities for fun and creativity with the camera!


Light Painting

After discussing light painting with Andrew for a week, I was in town last Thursday and saw that my sister Sher had posted on that exact topic. See her full blog here, just don't expect to understand everything (such as the title). Fantastic stuff though, really interesting and creative. This whole light drawing/painting thing inspired me to try my hand at it, so here are a few Andrew, Evan and I made last Thursday night at Juniper Lake.





Andrew drew his initials... nice one.


The coolest thing about these photos is the sharpness/clarity. If you zoom in really far, the picture remains incredibly sharp and the beams of light are incredible. So much fun! I will have to experiment with different apertures and iso speeds next time, and get more creative with the actual drawing.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Photos




Mid-


Here we are, already mid-way through the seventh week in LVNP, and it seems like just last week I was passing through Salt Lake City en-route to Reno to meet up for the start of our research. We've spent two weeks each at Butte Lake, Manzanita Lake, and Crags campgrounds, and tonight we move to Juniper Lake. This will be the first time we visit the southeastern part of the park, and I'm excited as I've heard it is some of the most beautiful country in the park.

The new camera I got for my birthday last Saturday received its fair share of use this past week. I am ecstatic with the results, such as the photo above of Lake Helen's incredibly clear, glacial-blue waters.

Unfortunately, we climbed this mountain for no real purpose, as after Andrew finishes perusing this map, he comes to realize it is Mt. Helen, not Bumpass Mountain. The views were worth the scramble up and down, however, and soon we were over on top of Bumpass for the correct repeat photo location.




The camera takes incredible close-up shots, as well as landscape shots. One of the most enjoyable features is the simple ability to manually focus the lense, something I've desired for years. Still, more practice I do require before truly magnificent shots can be taken. The camera is capable of far more than my current level of skill and understanding can produce. I am having a blast learning how to use the new and complex features available to me, however, and have managed a few presentable shots.


This weekend Evan Lawley will once again join us for a couple days of work. We will likely be harvesting core samples of trees as well as doing several fuel plots around the Juniper Lake area. So far we have completed over 110 fuel plots and ~45 photos, not too shabby for just the two of us with occasional assistance. As my understanding of forest ecology has improved, my interest in the subject flourishes similarly. The idea of fire as a natural element of the forest has become more and more second-nature as we visit plots of different tree species and topographic configuration. These two variables, incredibly interdependant, are similarly intriguing. I hope to upload several maps of the park in the next week or two, one simply topographic with features and trail names, and another depicting species type across the park. This past couple weeks saw us working more with Tsme (Mountain Hemlock, Tsuga mertensiana) than in the past, when we largely saw Jeffery and Ponderosa Pine, Western White Pine, White and Red Fir, and Lodgepole Pine dominating our plots. We have also completed a number of brush and shrub field plots, which contain little to no trees, and thusly take far less time to complete. Mountain Hemlock grows mainly in the upper elevations, roughly above 7000', and so we have been hiking amongst snow quite often even in mid-July. Tsme grows in gnarly clusters of trees, some remaining only a few meters tall for fifty to one hundred years because of the depth of snow and intensity of the weather. The trees can reach heights exceeding 20 meters, however they never grow quite as big as the Pines and Firs which dominate the overstory at lower elevations. So as per the usual day-off routine, we must now accomplish our food shopping for the week. If I have a chance I'll post again before heading to Juniper Lake, if not, fairwell until next week, thanks for reading, and feel free to leave comments!

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Getting some rides in!


Just one of the viewpoints from the new, machine built trail network in Susanville Ranch Park. This looks down on the small town of Susanville, formerly a mining and logging town, is now home to a large prison. The majority of the town's economy relies on the High Desert State Prison, as many of its residents are guards or otherwise employees of the prison.The network features many route choices, and though their are just 14 miles of trail, it would likely be at least 25 miles of riding to do every trail. This "stacked loop" format is common in planned recreational-exercise trail networks currently being built. Their are many fast, fun, flowy sections of trails with nice berms and water-bars turned into small table-tops. Unfortunately for me, while soaring through the air off of a particularly nicely placed water-bar, grinning madly, I noticed a purple bag flying next to me out of the corner of my eye. Turns out, it was the bag I use to keep my camera in, and it had come out of my camelback as I launched off the lip of the jump. I landed nicely and came to a stop; the camera hit a large rock, bounced, hit a larger rock, and came to stop in the dirt. Not surprisingly, it was then broken, and the photos in the post are the last ones that camera will ever take.
You Are Here (YAH) maps such as this one are at virtually every intersection in this new trail network. Many of the turns are bermed, however most of the berms are unfinished and unridder. The loose, dry dirt and lack of ridership combined with the mixed use of equestrian riders leaves the trail surface unfit for the smooth, flowing riding style machine built trails are known for. Many of the berm turns are dangerously unfinished, while some are perfect. Similarly, some turns are bermed whereas others simply are not, a combination which hazardously keeps you guessing. Perhaps after a few more seasons of use and maintenance this trail network will be ripping fast and flowy; for now riders will have to settle for an extremely well-marked network of fun trails in a stacked loop format, with no lack of elevation.
These trails may prove to be a fine example of mixed-use trails working properly in a few seasons of use, however currently they need work, and the horse traffic has already wash-boarded some of the trail surface and left nasty piles of poop in the middle of the trail. Why is it horses always choose to shit just after going around a blind turn?

I know it's been a while since I've updated the blog, however we've been very busy with work in the park! When I do have my day off, such as today, I usually spend it taking care of laundry, relaxing, trying to fit a ride in and getting provisions for the coming week. Today was no different, I spent the morning replacing my now useless camera with a new and incredible DSLR camera! This spectacular birthday present will come in handy as we hike around the southern half of the park in the coming weeks. I took a number of test photos, and some good ones during my ride today; the full write-up will have to wait, unfortunately, as it is getting near ten o'clock and I still have to drive back to the park. Our next day off will be next Thursday so I'll try to have a few posts prepared, such as one I've been meaning to write about the changes in the weather since we arrived on June 2nd. Till then, cheers my friends, thanks for reading.

Loomis


Chaos Crags as seen from the peak of Loomis. The left most portion of the mountain was burned this past week in a controlled burn prescribed by the forest. More on that later, we got some photos from the Jumbles parking area (the same place we go to get cell phone reception).
One of the repeat photos we did was a landscape view of the northwest side of Lassen.
Another view from Loomis, this depicts Manzanita Lake with Mt. Shasta in the background. Shasta is about 85 miles away, however its incredible peak elevation of 14,000 ft makes it seem a whole lot closer.