Note to reader: this is fixing to be my longest post ever. Make sure you've got no commitments for at least a little while.
I finished with Mom's ginger snaps, and transfered my peanut butter fudge into the tupperware they were in. I left that on my dresser.
-Today I went to calculus. When I came back, something leapt off my dresser; it paused on the windowsill and I saw it was a squirrel. Then I saw this:
Luckily, I seem to have chased it off before it was able to get to any of the fudge. However, probably some fudge disappeared while it was in the box that Nana & Papaw shipped it to me in. I didn't keep that closed. That's Grinnell.
* * *
Let's listen to a tale of Rock Creek. [Mostly excerpted from my journal directly after the fact]
After I made that last blog, I put on some longer clothes, failed to get a Maid-Rite (they were closed; I had to have a sub instead), and started biking. It was a very different ride by daylight. There seemed to be a lot fewer hills now that I could see the whole hill each time. It was tough going when it was uphill, because I was fighting the wind too. But I got there in good time.
-I started off at the same place I was last time, which was, it seems, a mooring dock for sailboats and stuff, but it was out of season. I eventually found a place to get water, which I needeed, because in my hasty non-planning I didn't bring a water bottle. It was a well, and I had to kneel down to drink out of it, but that was fine. So then I set off to find good krokay. The trail around the perimeter of the lake is nothing llike straightforward. I kept getting whisked away from the shore whenever I got close. However, I did find a couple good spots. It looked like I had come to a dead end, but then I found the "Multiuse Trail". It wasn't a short trail from one point to another, I discovered, but rather a long ad spderwebbing trail with more ups and downs than a roller coaster, and steeper too. Frequently I found myself hurtling into an invariably mud-filled low point in te trail. This was often filled with sharp rocks for no discernible reason but to make me nervous about my tires. Just as often, I had to power up a 45° incline, which was often also muddy. I only kinda kept in view of the lake. I found a few good krokay spots, but realized that it would be ridiculous to bring krokay equipment this far just on foot. I mean, that stuff is heavy. Ovvasionally, - two or three times - the trail dumped me out into the collective back yards of a lakefront neighborhood. I also ran into a few more dock-type things. The last neighborhood had a large, wavy field behind all the houses, and te field was covered with Canada geese. There were probably 300 of them. I was getting worn out frm the ups and downs, so I moved onto the paved road instead. It took me up to a gravel higway. THe sky was getting darker for the night. As I biked down that road, I realized I'd gotten pretty far afield of the lake. Finally I saw it off in the distance, at the bottom of a big giant hill. THere was agracel loop that went to it - or so it seemed. It was actually just a vantage point, and got nowhere near the lake itself. I moved on, looking for a better way to get to the lake. But the road just moved farther and farther away. I turned around and went back to the gravel loop. There was a chain around it, but I was determined to get back to the lake, so I lifted my bike over and rolled down a hill all the wy to the shore, tall yellow grass smacking me in the face the whole way. But, skirting the shore, I had found a trail. Yes. So I followed that around the shore. I had realized long ago that I would circle the lake, or most of it (there's a bridge that crosses it - sort of like a long pier that goes all the way across, at a narrow part). From the view I got I was a little more than halfway done. I had miles left, probaby. But I kept going. It was pretty smooth, and the trail was pretty good for biking at least compared to the trails earlier. But it never seemed to end. And it never came near anything that wasn't forest. I was getting exhausted. And it was getting hard to see. The trail had lost sight of the lake, but I kept turning right so I knew I must be following the shoreline at some remove. Still, I could now see nothing but the trail a little ways ahead, and even that was getting dim. I stopped and caught my breath, took off my zip-off sleeves. I was hot. I had been biking aong this trail for what seemed like a half-hour, surely, and probably all of one - I wasn't checking my watch. There were no lights to be seen, except one, which, as I got closer to it, turned out to be totally out of my way. I couldn't see the road, couldn't see anything but trees. I didn't know if this trail led anywhere. For all I knew, it was taking me to the middle of Iowa via a route that crossed no roads, but it seemed to be following the lakeshore at least very vaguely. I had no water, and I was really exhausted. The lactase in my spit was forming crusts on the sides of my mouth. I had no cell phone, and even if I had, I didn't have any way to place myself for search & rescue people or whever I would call. I could be out there all night, especiall if I got a flat.
-I could die.
-I had nothing to recharge my rpidly dwindling energy. I might have been able to find food, but it was dark, and a pretty sparse Iowa ecosystem as well. My only choice was to keep going. Backwards would kill me; I knew I was so far already. I would gladly ask help of the next person I saw, but I saw no one. I got back on the bike and kept pedaling. It was pretty much night. The trail started getting more erratic, taking on those unreasonable peaks and calleys I'd left behind earlier. A few times, I felt myself biking over rocks. I planed through mud frequently, barely keeping the bike upright. Once I had to wade a mud puddle. I considered ditchin the bike, but realized that was a "mega-dumb idea", as I said out loud; it was helping me, no matter if I did have to walk it uphill sometimes. The forest was closing in more now. I rounded a bend and ound the trail vanishing into obscurity, or perhaps behind some stacked sticks, in a sickly field. I began walking my bike, occasionally sinking into an area of soft ground made by I didn't want to know what. But: I now could see the lake.
-The trail rematerialized. I followed it along the shore; it was getting more definite. THere were lights visible on opposite shores. W H A M. I ran into a chain blocking the trail. I've always wondered what it'd be like to hit one of those at top speed. It just stopped me, that's all, and not gently. I lifted the bike over the chain and found myself on paved road.
-"Thank you, God," I said. "I am not going to die in Rock Creek State Park." I biked along and found two guys who had stopped their cars as they passed, and were having a conversation about hunting. They told me where there might be potable water, but it was too dark to find it, so then they both gave me a bottle of water and pointed me in the right direction. I biked down the "pavement", he called it, and found the bridge over the lake. I couldn't find any water at my original entry point, because the well had vanished into the night, so I went without. Then I started up the hill, to Grinnell.
-On the way, I fixed my fender. A screw had come out, and it was flopping around, so I replaced the screw with a twig; amazingly, it worked. The wind was at my back now, so I made it back to Grinnell in what seemed ridiculously quick time. Then I had a giant meal at Subway, which was mercifully still open. I'm sure I appalled them with my absolutely filthy bare feet, one with a previously acquired wound on it that I'd reopened on the trip. But no one said anything. I filled up. I had an appetite for the ages. I ate every bite and could've eaten more.
-The rest of the night, I think I was justified in siting at the computer. Before I did that, though I took a long, hot shower.
-I need to be better at the wilderness. I need to be able to know that I won't die if I'm in this type of situation again. Ideally, I won't be. Well, at least not until I know I can live.
* * *
On Tuesday, I left for home; a guy named Jordan was giving me a ride. It was a long ride. He's a cool guy; we talked some, but mostly listened to music. I slept, but vaguely. We lost a time zone, and arrived at around 1800. The first person I saw was Micah, who uncharacteristically gave me a hug. He was playing RuneScape, still. Dad was downstairs, and introduced me to the ferret (as Mom noted, the kittens ran off). Mom came home and gave me a big hug and went into that squeaky voice of hers. So, from there, I proceeded to just hang out there for a couple days. The ferret bites a lot. Dad took Micah and me out for 5-Ways, which I had been missing. Micah and I walked to the park by the railroad a couple times and talked and watched trains go by. On Friday, Mom took me out to see the marching band. Ah, marching band. I miss it, but there again I don't. Even so, the band this year is just awesome. I was really jealous, because I was never in a band that took Grand Champion at a competition. There were seventeen trumpets, so the band sounded great. And powerful. It was the band's last gam, the Halloween game, s everyone was wearing costumes. They all said hi to me, and I swapped stories with Tim Schafermeyer and some other people. They left to the band room after third quarter, because it was raining. I followed them, and before I left, they made me snap for old time's sake, so I did Vesuvius. It's nice to get in touch with old friends, though I'd like to stay away from the Compound as much as I can. On Saturday, Dad took Micah and me to New Paris, Ohio, for SCUBA-diving. That was pretty cold, but not too bad. I got to wear my new тельнашку. That's a telnyashka, in the accusative: a blue-and-white striped shirt that they wear in the Russian Navy. Dad had ordered three of them from Russia. After we dove, we had a good old-fashioned breakfast for dinner at Grandma & Grandpa's. But, finally Sunday came and I had to go home. I feel pretty good about having gotten back in touch with everyone during my break.
-I rode home with Jordan. We talked more on the way back, about stuff like living a real life, not delaying your gratification for 65 years. He and I are looking down the same road. We reinforced each other's ideas. It was pretty great. He does creekwalking, and he devoted some of his time last year to finding places around here to do it. He found a place called Sugar Creek, which he says in addition to being a great little creek also has something matching the description I gave of good krokay territory. He also does trackwalking, and along the various railroads that lead out of town, he's found several really nice places to relax. He's slept out there a couple times. I've wanted to sleep outside, but I haven't, because I hadn't realized there was anywhere good to do it. The loggia? Mac Field? Rock Creek is too far away. But we're going to go trackwalking this weekend, and he's going to show me one of those places. I'll find the rest on my own. This is pretty great.
“What news! how much more important to know what that is which was never old!” —Thoreau
Monday, October 29, 2007
Sunday, October 21, 2007
By golly, you do learn in college!
I'm certainly learning how to budget my time. At least, I won't be having a repeat of this week anytime soon. This week was a result of not starting my work in advance: but, to have made a difference, I would have had to start my work about halfway through the semester. Next time a bunch of due dates converge (which will presumably be at the end of the semester), I'll be ready for them. I'll finish papers weeks ahead of time. Otherwise, I'll have no life, like I did for these two weeks. It's just unbelievable how the tension gets to you when you have about two weeks of solid work and you're constantly trying to turn out something both high in quality and short in time commitment. The second week, this week, was worse, because I had to write two five-page papers. Now I'm done. And it feels so good. Not to mention that we're on fall break now, so I have all the time I want to do whatever I want. Earlier today, I biked to the local Goodwill and bought three ridiculous shirts. Perhaps I'll post pictures. I'll have to take some first if I do. When I'm done writing this, I'm going to have a Maid-Rite and bike to Rock Creek. Can you believe that I haven't had a Maid-Rite since I've been here? The meal plan always has me covered, so I don't have a need to spend money elsewhere. But I'll be at Rock Creek around dinnertime today, so I've got to get food beforehand.
-What's been going on recently? Basically, fifty-seven varieties of work. I also came up with a ride to Cincinnati, such that Grandma and Grandpa don't even need to inconvenience themselves coming down here; the guy's also taking me back afterwards. He's visiting some friends there. So, it looks like I get to be introduced to the two (2) new cats and one (1) new ferret that we have now. So far I've only seen them hazily in a webcam.
-It's the perfect day to go to Rock Creek. I plan to bike there and look around for krokay places until it gets dark. Then, I'll play it by ear, I guess. Tomorrow I'll find out how much ash rods are from the lumberyard, for mallet shafts. I'm collecting information to get together a budget for when I make krokay a club. I may have to wait until next semester to form the club, because the committee in charge of granting funds accidentally ran through practically all their budget in half the semester. They'll have more money next semester.
-The squirrels here are really audacious. There's one that comes right up to my window. Then, when I look at it funny, it just stays there. I put my screen up last night to keep it out. It was climbing all over the screen. I was able to bop it off onto the loggia once. I wonder what it does when I'm not here to keep it out. I haven't noticed my peanut butter fudge disappearing … but, time to put up the other screen.
P.S.: Well, I still haven't had a Maid-Rite. They're closed Sundays.
-What's been going on recently? Basically, fifty-seven varieties of work. I also came up with a ride to Cincinnati, such that Grandma and Grandpa don't even need to inconvenience themselves coming down here; the guy's also taking me back afterwards. He's visiting some friends there. So, it looks like I get to be introduced to the two (2) new cats and one (1) new ferret that we have now. So far I've only seen them hazily in a webcam.
-It's the perfect day to go to Rock Creek. I plan to bike there and look around for krokay places until it gets dark. Then, I'll play it by ear, I guess. Tomorrow I'll find out how much ash rods are from the lumberyard, for mallet shafts. I'm collecting information to get together a budget for when I make krokay a club. I may have to wait until next semester to form the club, because the committee in charge of granting funds accidentally ran through practically all their budget in half the semester. They'll have more money next semester.
-The squirrels here are really audacious. There's one that comes right up to my window. Then, when I look at it funny, it just stays there. I put my screen up last night to keep it out. It was climbing all over the screen. I was able to bop it off onto the loggia once. I wonder what it does when I'm not here to keep it out. I haven't noticed my peanut butter fudge disappearing … but, time to put up the other screen.
P.S.: Well, I still haven't had a Maid-Rite. They're closed Sundays.
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Sunday, October 14, 2007
Note
I have more or less constant work until Friday, but after that it's mercifully fall break. I might go home. I've posted a request on the ride board, though I don't know what are the chances someone will grant it. If no one does, there are things I can and probably should do here as well. Either way, no blog post until at least Friday. Unless somehow I manage to finish my ridiculous load of work ahead of time, which would be pretty impressive.
One other thing: I ordered and have received a copy of Tally Hall's only album thus far, Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum, and it's definitely absolutely excellent.
One other thing: I ordered and have received a copy of Tally Hall's only album thus far, Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum, and it's definitely absolutely excellent.
Saturday, October 6, 2007
The expedition
First off, I would like to offer my sincere thanks, Aunt Irene, for those cookies. I haven't started on them yet, because I just got them today before lunch, but I'm pretty confident they'll be excellent. And a compound thanks for a nice letter to go along with them.
It's been a lot of work. I recently picked up a shift at the Spencer Grill, which is located in the Joe Rosenfield Center, which I understand used to be a parking lot. It's on the southern end of Mac Field. The shift is from 2300 to 0300 on Saturdays. I've only done it once, but I'll be doing it again today. Last week it only ran until 0215, which was nice. "Work" work doesn't account for most of my time, though; most of my time is schoolwork. I have two papers due on Tuesday, both of which I'll do tomorrow. I also have really tough calc to do tomorrow. So I haven't been doing a whole lot of leisure stuff.
-Last night, I got off work about 2030. I sat in my room and did internet stuff for a while. I've been trading emails with Bob Warseck of the Connecticut eXtreme Croquet Society, preparatory to starting my own krokay club here. I've asked him for advice on how to make mallets, and talked about rules. They have a very complex rule set, developed over years of extreme croquet. They've been playing for 23 years. It's pretty impressive. You ought to check out the feature that the Discovery Channel did on them. There was a different feature about them by a local news channel that won an Emmy, but the Discovery Channel's is much more informative. The local one was just interesting, I guess. I think it was also part of a three-part series. Anyhow, at about 2330, I decided I needed to get off the computer ad out of the dorm. I wanted to go see if Merrill Park might have any good krokay grounds. I biked there, but even in the dark I could tell it didn't have much in the way of extremity. It was flat, with just a playground. Also, a plastic lion, which was weird. So, I left Merrill Park. I started heading west. They've built a bike trail to Rock Creek, and I wanted to see if I could find it for future reference. It's even miles from Grinnell to Rock Creek, so obviously I wasn't going to bike there tonight. I found two streets that seemed like they ought to have the bike trail on them, but they didn't. The third one didn't seem to either, until I turned around and realized it was right there, but I couldn't see it in the dark because I was biking on the other side of the road. The sky was clear and so was the Milky Way. I had seen one car since I got to the trail. It had only one headlight on. I continued heading east. Most of the time, I could only see about five or ten feet of trail in front of me; luckily, though, it was completely straight. I could make out how far there was until the crest of a hill based on the dim horizon. Occasionally I passed buildings with lights on. The only noise was the diligent drone of the insects. Two fences rose up on my sides. "Ths is definitely a bridge," I said in surprise. "That was definitely a bridge," I said once I got off it. I kept on biking. I was barefoot, and immersed in a cool summer night. I felt it all around me. There were no mile markers, so I kept track of how far I'd gone by how many hills I'd come over. I didn't count them, but each one put me a little farther away from Grinnell.
-The last one I took was a neverending downhill. At the bottom there was a road closed barrier with flashing lights. Across the bike trail there was orange fence, which was hard to see, and I was lucky I braked before I got to it. The lake was strangely bright. I stopped the bike and stood looking at it. There was a sound of waves hitting a wall, but it took me a while to figure out what it was. I sat on a dock and put my feet in the water. I wandered around and felt the soft breeze bouncing off the lake to me. It picked up a part of the lake as it went by. Wind has the character of all the places it's visited. If I could understand the language of the wind, maybe I would be everywhere. I turned around and biked back up the hill. I know how many hills there are from Rock Creek to Grinnell: the same number as there are from Grinnell to Rock Creek. I assume it's the same number in the daytime, but it wouldn't be quite the same overall. The Milky Way followed me to the outskirts of town, and then it disappeared.
I was hungry, but it was 0130 and everything was closed, so I had to get food through slightly illegal means, with the help of three other determined guys. I won't elaborate, so I don't incriminate any of us. In any case, I slept well. By the way, it was too dark to see if there were any good krokay places, so I'll have to go back there in the day sometime.
It's been a lot of work. I recently picked up a shift at the Spencer Grill, which is located in the Joe Rosenfield Center, which I understand used to be a parking lot. It's on the southern end of Mac Field. The shift is from 2300 to 0300 on Saturdays. I've only done it once, but I'll be doing it again today. Last week it only ran until 0215, which was nice. "Work" work doesn't account for most of my time, though; most of my time is schoolwork. I have two papers due on Tuesday, both of which I'll do tomorrow. I also have really tough calc to do tomorrow. So I haven't been doing a whole lot of leisure stuff.
-Last night, I got off work about 2030. I sat in my room and did internet stuff for a while. I've been trading emails with Bob Warseck of the Connecticut eXtreme Croquet Society, preparatory to starting my own krokay club here. I've asked him for advice on how to make mallets, and talked about rules. They have a very complex rule set, developed over years of extreme croquet. They've been playing for 23 years. It's pretty impressive. You ought to check out the feature that the Discovery Channel did on them. There was a different feature about them by a local news channel that won an Emmy, but the Discovery Channel's is much more informative. The local one was just interesting, I guess. I think it was also part of a three-part series. Anyhow, at about 2330, I decided I needed to get off the computer ad out of the dorm. I wanted to go see if Merrill Park might have any good krokay grounds. I biked there, but even in the dark I could tell it didn't have much in the way of extremity. It was flat, with just a playground. Also, a plastic lion, which was weird. So, I left Merrill Park. I started heading west. They've built a bike trail to Rock Creek, and I wanted to see if I could find it for future reference. It's even miles from Grinnell to Rock Creek, so obviously I wasn't going to bike there tonight. I found two streets that seemed like they ought to have the bike trail on them, but they didn't. The third one didn't seem to either, until I turned around and realized it was right there, but I couldn't see it in the dark because I was biking on the other side of the road. The sky was clear and so was the Milky Way. I had seen one car since I got to the trail. It had only one headlight on. I continued heading east. Most of the time, I could only see about five or ten feet of trail in front of me; luckily, though, it was completely straight. I could make out how far there was until the crest of a hill based on the dim horizon. Occasionally I passed buildings with lights on. The only noise was the diligent drone of the insects. Two fences rose up on my sides. "Ths is definitely a bridge," I said in surprise. "That was definitely a bridge," I said once I got off it. I kept on biking. I was barefoot, and immersed in a cool summer night. I felt it all around me. There were no mile markers, so I kept track of how far I'd gone by how many hills I'd come over. I didn't count them, but each one put me a little farther away from Grinnell.
-The last one I took was a neverending downhill. At the bottom there was a road closed barrier with flashing lights. Across the bike trail there was orange fence, which was hard to see, and I was lucky I braked before I got to it. The lake was strangely bright. I stopped the bike and stood looking at it. There was a sound of waves hitting a wall, but it took me a while to figure out what it was. I sat on a dock and put my feet in the water. I wandered around and felt the soft breeze bouncing off the lake to me. It picked up a part of the lake as it went by. Wind has the character of all the places it's visited. If I could understand the language of the wind, maybe I would be everywhere. I turned around and biked back up the hill. I know how many hills there are from Rock Creek to Grinnell: the same number as there are from Grinnell to Rock Creek. I assume it's the same number in the daytime, but it wouldn't be quite the same overall. The Milky Way followed me to the outskirts of town, and then it disappeared.
I was hungry, but it was 0130 and everything was closed, so I had to get food through slightly illegal means, with the help of three other determined guys. I won't elaborate, so I don't incriminate any of us. In any case, I slept well. By the way, it was too dark to see if there were any good krokay places, so I'll have to go back there in the day sometime.
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