Published on Sunday January 11, 2004 .
Creative Class War: How the GOP's anti-elitism could ruin America's economy.
This article made me very afraid for America's future. It also actually made me think about leaving the US, and I decided that if I ever end up leaving, Vancouver would probably be a pretty nice place to live.
Published on Sunday January 11, 2004 .
Mirth of a Nation: How Bill Clinton learned to tell jokes on himself--and get the last laugh.
I liked this article fairly well: It had stories I'd never heard, and interesting insights into things it had never even occurred to me to think about.
Published on Friday January 9, 2004 .
Our trip to Mt. Bachelor (near Bend, OR)
over new years was pretty awesome, and it was all thanks to Mr. Rick, who hooked
us up with free frequent flier plane tickets and took care of all the other
travel arrangements. All we had to do was get up early enough to catch the flight.
For reference, here are large trailmaps of the
main mountain and the
northwest mountain.
- Date(s): Wednesday, December 31st, 2003 through Sunday, January 4th
2004.
- Who: Rick, Tyler, me.
- Wednesday, December 31st 2003:
- This was just a travel day, but unfortunately, the only tickets Rick could
get us left SFO at 6:50 am. Trisha being the saint that she is got up at 5 am
and drove Tyler and I to the airport and then went to work and slept in her car
for awhile. We got to Portland and met up with Rick, and then we all got on
another plane and got to Redmond, OR around 10:30 am, only to discover that they
took Rick's bag off the flight because they thought he wasn't on it. So the
plan we had hypothetically discussed of going to Mt. Bachelor for a half day was
dashed when we had to wait around Redmond for a couple of hours for Rick's bag
to come in on the next flight. So we got breakfast at "Big O's Family Diner"
(insert geeky joke about complexity here) where I had a pretty tasty omelette,
and then we went back to the airport where we played cards until Rick's bag
showed up.
- We got to Bend and checked into our hotel sometime in the early afternoon,
and after sitting around for awhile we went to get an early dinner at the Deschutes Brewery Pub -- except
Rick managed to lead us to the actual brewery instead of the brewpub. Of course,
when I got home later that week and looked at the bottom of the 6 pack box of
the Deschutes beer we had in the fridge, the distinction was quite clear...
- After hanging out at the brewpub for awhile, we headed back to the hotel and
watched tv for awhile before going to bed a little after midnight... or so we
thought.
- Friday, January 2nd, 2004:
- Though the clock was set correctly, the alarm was not, and we woke
up at 7:20 am, which meant we didn't get to the mountain until 9 or 9:30 or so.
It was a beautifully clear day that morning, and though the summit wasn't open
when we got there, the northwest lifts were open, and the summit was quite
visible so we had high hopes for the afternoon. We skied on Outback and
Northwest that morning before heading back to the Sunshine Lodge for lunch.
- After I had some problems with the powder and my stance on the first day, I
decided to move my stance back a spot, which resulted in a much improved riding
experience. Remember folks: powder = lean back.
- Despite my adjusted stance, I still managed to take a few head first tumbles
when my nose sank in a powder pit. But twice on Friday I managed to do
a full forward flip in the powder, land on my board, and keep going. It was
completely unintentional, and I clearly ate powder doing it, but the first time
was right under the lift
- Since I've been desiring a Burton iPod
Jacket, I figured I better decide if I actually like riding while listening
to music. So I spent awhile that morning experimenting with listening to my
iPod while riding. Unfortunately, I was trying to use the Apple provided iPod
earbuds (I was afraid of falling with my normal earbuds that actually protrude
into my ear canal), but they continually fell out of my ears, making the test
next to worthless. I liked it alright when everything was working, but the
earbuds falling out of my ears and the complication of having to unzip to adjust
anything made the experience less than ideal.
- As we were returning to Sunshine Lodge for lunch, we saw a line of people at
the summit lift (it wasn't actually running yet), and at the lodge we overheard
someone say that the summit was open. "Yay!" we said. Unfortunately, by the
time we finished lunch, conditions had taken a turn for the worse again and they
had re-closed the summit. As it turned out, we happened to be eating lunch
during the one hour that the summit was open in our four days there.
Damnit.
- We spent the afternoon taking some runs on Pine Marten and Red Chair before
calling it a day.
- That night we got some Mexican take-out on the way home before hitting the
hot tub and calling it a night.
- Saturday, January 3rd, 2004:
- Rick once again failed to set the alarm (this time he set it to PM instead
of AM), and once again we woke up at 7:20, but we got to the mountain a little
earlier this time. However, it was snowing pretty seriously again, so the
summit was again closed.
- We spent pretty much the whole day taking runs on Outback, because it was a
little windy for Northwest. Heck, the top of Outback was a little too windy,
which made getting away from the top of the lift awfully hard.
- I was nearing exhaustion by mid-afternoon on Saturday, so we called it a day
a little earlier. Unfortunately, on the traverse back to Sunshine, I ended up
going a little too low and ended up back at Pine Marten instead of Skyliner as
intended, and on my second attempt from Pine Marten I accidentally fell into a
wide flat bowl full of deep powder which took me quite a long time to crawl out
of. By the time I made it back to the car, I was dead on my feet.
- We decided to go out one more time for dinner, but when we arrived at the
random place we picked out of the phone book we found it smelled like smoke.
Instead of eating there, we retreated to downtown Bend and wandered randomly
around for a few minutes (by which point we were quite cold, on account
of it probably being about 20-25 degrees out) until we came across a place
called "On the Rocks." They had 24 beers on tap (at least 18 of which I like or
probably would like), a very cute waitress, and for Tyler's benefit they were
showing a football playoff game. Rick and I both had their "Garlic Tomoto
Chicken Pasta" (which had chicken, sundried tomatoes, broccoli, and zucchini in
some sort of white wine/cream cause), and we both thought was excellent.
Basically, if I ever go back to Bend, this place is high on my list of places to
go back to. And if you're in Bend, I highly recommend it.
- Sunday, January 4th, 2004:
- Rick finally set the alarm to the correct time, but failed to set the volume to any sort of useful level at all, so once again with the waking up at 7:20. Except half-awake Tyler heard Rick say "eleven twenty" which woke Tyler up pretty damn fast.
- Despite being totally exhausted at the end of Saturday, we somehow found
some extra energy for another day.
- Rick and I both decided to demo gear so we could just have our boards
packed, so I demoed an '03 Salomon Forecast 156 with '03 Burton Mission
bindings. Honestly, the board felt a lot like my Custom, though maybe a little
stiffer. I think it felt more stable once I got used to it, but I still had
some problems because my stance was too far forward (which made for a serious
problem in all that powder) so I kept falling forward on my head. The bindings
still felt like Missions, though I think I liked them a little better than my
stupid '02 Missions that I hated.
- It was stormy again, so one more time we spent some time in the
northwest.
- I finally took a couple of painful falls on day 4: First, jumping off of a
catwalk, I ended up fairly horizontal to the ground, and when I landed my left
arm was extended and I kind of caught it and hurt my shoulder. It still hurts
some, but thankfully at this point it mainly just likes popping all the
time.
- Second, while traversing through some trees I found myself a little out of
control on the board I wasn't used to. When I tried to stop, my toe edge slid
out, and I ended up falling on my face and sliding into a tree. I ended up
hitting the tree with the side of my calf, and I ended up laying face first
downhill in the snow with the nose of my board caught on the tree. Tyler and
Rick found me like that, pretty much unable to move. It took me quite awhile to
scoot my way out of that damn tree well.
- After those too falls, I was pretty tired and hurt and feeling none too
confidant, so I stuck to Pine Marten for the rest of my afternoon and called it
a fairly early day around 2:30.
- General comments about Mt. Bachelor:
- Even though we never got to ride the summit, there was still a lot of
terrain to explore and like there. The biggest problem we had with the mountain
was probably just that there were a lot of flat spots. This was especially a
problem given that we were practically drowning in powder at times. I wouldn't
be surprised if it snowed an average of a foot a day while we were there. This
meant that losing speed in a flat was a big problem -- because you'd get STUCK.
Which happened to each of us. A lot.
- We particularly enjoyed exploring the northwest lifts (Northwest and
Outback), and there was a lot of fun terrain to be found over there. If you
can't get to the summit, that's where I'd recommend you go -- and that might not
be a bad place to warm up in the first place.
- Instead of having a liftee visually screening lift tickets and badges, they
had an entirely electronic system. Season passes had RFIDs in them, so you just
walked up to the turnstile and it would let you through. Day passes had to be
fed into a ticket reader that would then authorize you to pass through the
turnstile. This allowed them to do things like have "point tickets" which
assigned points to lifts, and as you rode lifts you used up your points. It
also allows them to enforce their half day passes, and makes passes transferable
to the locals who want to come up for an afternoon (every day kids asked me if I
was done for the day). Overall it was a neat system, but it was kind of
irritating to have to stop and feed my ticket into a machine every run --
especially when it stopped liking my ticket one day, or when my ticket string
got tangled up in my jacket another day and tried to suck me into the
machine.
- Other random notes:
- I bought some new Volcom Double Decker pants to replace
the too-big pants that were my first item of snow gear. The new pants served me
quite well, kept me drier than my old pants, didn't require suspenders, and are
generally more stylish than my old pants. Best of all, instead of needing
suspenders to keep the pants up, I now just need a belt. The only real problem
I had with them is the velcro to adjust the waist size kept seriously scratching
the back of my left hand whenever I tucked in my shirt.
- My new Flow bindings are awesome. I may devote an entire post to them
later, but suffice it to say they were worth every penny. Not only are they
much easier to get in and out of than my old strap in bindings, but once I got
them adjusted, they performed much better, too.
- I believe this trip increased the number of planes I've been on from 5 to 9, so I still
really find flying in a plane to be a novel experience. Looking out the window most of the
trip wasn't that interesting because there were a lot of clouds, but lookign down at Portland
was pretty cool, and I really liked looking at the bay area. On the morning flight, I was
able to spot Berkeley campus. On the return flight I was really confused because the plane
went past Oakland and then flew south to north along the bay. I was finally able to orient
myself when I found the San Mateo bridge, which looks just as strange from the sky as from
the bridge. If anyone knows, I'd really love to know the design decision behind why that
bridge turns the way it does.
- Lessons I learned on this trip:
- Don't let Rick set the alarm, because he clearly doesn't know how.
- Don't "park" somewhere just because that's where your car got stuck, because
you will have to deal with it later.
- I never thought I'd say this, but yes, there is such a thing as too much
powder.
- Don't have anything to do with a Chevy Cavalier. Ever.
One neat thing is that after the trip, I didn't really feel sore and achy,
despite having to work my way through all that powder. Granted, I was outright
hurt in a few places, but even that hasn't lasted too long. It's nice
to know that I'm getting stronger, which makes me look forward to riding that
much more.