Friday, December 3, 2010

Petoskey State Park Camping (and more!)

Due to computer problems and laziness, I had not yet made a post about my latest [real] camping trip in Petoskey, Michigan.

The trip took place early September near the end of my summer break, and I had really wanted to go backpacking somewhere, like North Manitou Island of Sleeping Bear Sanddunes. But, my parents wanted to go to an area close enough to the national lakeshore to taunt me, but far enough to not be able to go backpacking there. My parents wanted to stay in a Hampton Inn.

But Petoskey State Park turned out to be quite a nice place for camping and exploration. And the drive there yielded some nice pictures of the clouds.



We arrived at the Hampton Inn on a cold night, and we were all staying together in the hotel first. It was a bit stressful; a lot of people, including my parents, are too disconnected and afraid of nature. I had to go downstairs and relieve my stress on the treadmill, so I jogged barefoot on it.

The next morning we enjoyed a nice free hotel breakfast. I don't know why, but I always enjoy those. The food is always good enough for me, and I guess family breakfasts just don't happen that often.

Anyhow, we drove out towards the park through the town of Petoskey
, which is a pretty rural/suburban community. A very wealthy one, too. There were a lot of quaint Victorian looking houses (that my mom was obsessing over due to the recent decision to repaint the house).

But civilization was not what I was looking for; I had had enough of that for the time. But before we arrived at the park, we stopped at Walmart to do last minute camping shopping, since this was sort of an ill-prepared camping trip for us. All I have to say is that I wanted to get out of that Walmart immediately. The sterile, artificial atmosphere, the low-quality, materialistic products, and all the people there that did not interact with each other... Ugh.

We arrived at the park, and at first it did not look too promising; there was a simple parking lot, some forests in the distance, and a small ranger station. But I looked at a sign and saw a picture of a good looking set of sanddunes.

We got our camping pass and set our tent up.



After setting up camp, Bryan and I sat around for a little while my parents walked on the beach. We later went walking around on the dunes as well, but Bryan was tired and went back. I continued exploring.

The beach was beautiful, and even more so were the sanddunes.



The entrance, so to speak, into the valley of dunes was quite beautiful. The grass flowed from the lake shore wind. The expanse of the dunes seemed outdone only by the intricate, cloud-filled sky. I had to walk with my two bare feet through the dunes and explore all the nooks and crannies.



There was a bunch of drift wood speckling the landscape. You could easily use them to build a little dug out shelter. I continued walking, up the dunes this time, and into all the bushes at the tops of the hills.





There were a number of secrets. Little groves of bushes that almost formed an organic grotto that you could peak out of and stare across the dunes. There was also a clump of three trees with branches that hung down, and they formed a sort of hut. The area had even been lined with rocks by a previous traveler, and there were perfect branches to sit on.

I of course explored the area with bare feet and open shirt, and my goodness it felt amazing. It felt so right to be so open and intimate with nature.
I briefly returned to camp, but then got bored and continued hiking along the dunes. When I returned again, my parents had apparently driven to and from the hotel. They had bought sandwiches to eat.

We also prepared a bowl of ramen noodles with tomatoes, corn, and spinach using the Supercat alcohol stove.

It was very delicious. As we ate, this guy was watching us keenly, just sitting up in a branch the whole time. I fed him some cashews.















After eating, we all went to this trailhead that led up some wooden stairs and to a trail that sloped along a sandy, forested hill. It was beautiful. The sandy soil and the birch trees gave off a bright, earthy vibe.







We hiked up and down the hill, and my dad stopped often to point out some natural phenomena, like an insect egg in a plant or some fungi. There were lots of birches, pines, and oak trees. As we hiked, we looked for good sticks for firewood. And at one point, after coming down the opposite slope of the hill, the forest opened up to a little grassy prairie-like landscape. The sudden openness of the place was refreshing but mysterious. It felt like some ancient land full of magic.



This open area eventually connected to the main dunes. We walked back through a forest though and crossed a road into another forest. We hiked on a little trail until we got back to the camp.

We went to watch the sunset, which was absolutely beautiful.





We made a fire and toasted some marshmallows, which my parents enjoyed. After this, they left, and Bryan and I ate a bit more.



Well, after this my camera broke. It had been acting up as we watched the sunset (sand seemed to have gotten into it). And you know, right as this happened, the clouds cleared and all the stars came out, and you could even see a faint but nonetheless distinct milky way in the sky. I was breath taken. The absolute infinite expanse of the stars, with the glory of the milky way, was amazing.

Bryan and I walked out to the dunes to lie in the sand, endure the cold wind, and gaze at the stars. Some thoughts on this: I wondered if my camera breaking was actually a good thing; it helped me to remember the stars in the moment, rather than obsess over capturing them on camera. I had thought about this while taking pictures of the sunset. Yet, at the same time, I wish I had been able to photograph the stars; the Milky Way is such a rare wonder these days.

And you know, as we lied there stargazing, Bryan eventually started talking about ordinary things like videogames. I suppose the Milky Way was still too faint to capture his wonder. And of course, society's forces on one's mind are powerful. But isn't it weird that we've taken away the milky way from our own skies? I do not think it has made the Milky Way more magical by making it rarer. I think it has only taken wonder away from those who desperately need it. Granted, I was desperate to photograph it because it was so rare, but only because I would not be able to enjoy it in real life each night with the new or crescent moon.

The sun sets every night, yet never fails to amaze me.

We headed to bed. During the night I woke up from the cold and discomfort a few times (the rocks I left in my pockets didn't help). I shifted positions quite a bit.

Bryan and I awoke at about ten, and we started a fire from the previous coals and had hotdogs (cheese-filled jalepeno dogs. I had to give up my vegetarianism for this. BUT! I will say, no matter what the nay-sayers say, vegan sausage/hotdogs taste JUST AS GOOD. Anyone who says otherwise is simply not hungry enough and too greedy.)

We headed to the beach and ran. Bryan did sprint intervals, while I jogged about 2 miles down and back the beach. It was very fun, jumping over the water, avoiding the rocks, and running through the soft seaweed that had washed ashore. My parents arrived as I finished jogging (which felt fantastic!). We walked for a while and then came back to make a fire.

I had what I thought to be cedar bark (it was from the pines there), which i had heard makes good tinder. It must not have been the right kind, however, because even after I ground it up into a dry, fluffy powder and mixed it with magnesium, the sparks from my flint would not catch.

However, a sheet of birch bark, completely unaltered other than some magnesium scraps, INSTANTLY caught my spark and gracefully lit up. I had so much fun wandering around the campsites in my bare feet, looking for firewood and tinder, and gathering it with my knife. I carefully took small strips of birch bark off multiple trees, careful to leave plenty of bark to supply the tree with life.

We had noodles and baked beans with my parents, and after that they left. It was a bit sunnier this morning, and Bryan and I hiked through the forested hill path again. I went barefoot this time, and it felt so liberating and wonderful.

We watched as some campers pulled in, but for some reason did not talk to them. If I remember correctly, I hiked around on the beach some more, and Bryan and I chilled about at the campsite.

Later, my parents returned to watch the sunset with us. It was absolutely beautiful, like a portal into a Japanese painting. The clouds looked as though they had been dipped in pink fire, swirling around in such a mysterious but majestic manner.

We sat for a long time watching, and Bryan and I sang Trevor Hall's Unity while he strummed the guitar. It was a great time. We headed back to the campsite and had hotdogs and marshmallows. My parents left eventually, and unfortunately the sky clouded up again. We were going to call them if it ever cleared up, but unfortunately it did not.

The next morning, I started a fire using birch bark and last night's embers to warm both of us up as we packed.

After packing, we returned to the hotel for breakfast. The lady working there was extremely nice and talkative, as I so wish more people could be. I wonder, is she that way to stay human during her job? Stay Human...








Some Beachy Treasures


Well, that was the end of the camping trip. But that day, we still wandered around the town quite a bit. We saw lighthouses, restaurants, art galleries, and more. Thinking back, I am very surprised at how much we did and saw on that last day. It is interesting, this town Petoskey. It is full of people and ideas which sometimes sicken me and at other times fill me with hope.

For example, we were in a very bourgie part of town, with buildings most would regard as idyllic. There were clothing shops full of stereotypical rich-man sailor style clothes. The kind with the nerdy slacks and the polo shirt with the sweater wrapped around the neck. Seriously.

But worse than the expensive and untasteful clothes was this: A leather case that was designed to hold two cigars. Do you know how much it costed? How much should something like that cost? Ten dollars? Fifteen? Twenty? This damn thing costed NINETY-EIGHT DOLLARS. Think about this for a moment. Someone who buys this is willing to spend MORE MONEY to give shelter and security to his CIGARS than he is to help a man on the streets! Perhaps I overgeneralize, but when the wealthiest of this nation fight so hard to prevent their tax cuts from expiring, how can I think anything else?

Yet at the same time, as we went all around town looking for the famous Petoskey Stone, at one point my dad and I were climbing about on a limestone cliff on the side of the road. We found some fossils, when suddenly a truck slowed to a stop near us. I thought someone was going to yell at us for climbing the cliffs. But no, this man got out and started talking to us about the stones. He happily opened up the back of his truck for us and showed us a giant Petoskey Stone he had found, and told us about how he likes to sell them to support himself. He told us where he found some good specimens. This is how people should be: open, unjudgemental, friendly, and willing to talk to strangers.

In the original Adventure Archives I wrote for this trip, my last sentence simply states: "We can learn a lot about what to and what not to do from these people."

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Supercat Alcohol Stove

So I've made my own Supercat backpacking stove!


I had been reading a lot about home-made stoves on the internet, from things like soda can stoves, penny stoves, etc. But it all seemed really complicated to me. One day I stumbled upon a website about a stove made from an aluminum can called the Super Cat, and read up.

Turns out, it's super easy to make and get working. All you need is a can of food, a hole puncher, and some de-natured alcohol. You take the can of food, empty it out and clean it, measure out holes, and punch them out. Use some pliers and maybe a file to clean things up.

Check this out:


Also:


So I finally got it working, and it worked almost too well! It cooked eggs in no time, and boiled in about 5 minutes too. There was plenty of fuel with one thing of alcohol (a "thing" being the amount of alcohol in the can from the bottom to just below the holes).


So here's the video I made of me using the stove for the first time. Enjoy!


Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Cool videos, and some thoughts.

So for way too long, I feel I've been living vicariously through internet pictures and videos and blogs (like this one) about camping, adventure, and nature. I recently stumbled upon (using stumbleupon.com) this link: http://perpetualweekend.com/wordpress/?p=333

I read through this, and my god, what an epic adventure that must have been. If you go to the home page, there are more trips talked about. Man, the part about that trip that would scare me is walking across those glaciers. But I long for the mountains and the valleys.

One of my friends, Ben, recently went to Montana, and hiked around in Glacier National Park. It makes me wonder why I'm here at the computer, and not in the Sierras.



I mean, look at that. I would go off that trail and, treading lightly, explore that entire freaking valley. I'd love to just set up a tent out there behind some trees and camp. To live that simple, rugged life, just for a week or so.


Seriously, what am I doing? What is everybody doing, not being out there just living the life? Why do I work at a restaurant as a retail person? Why do we concern ourselves with trying to earn so much money, going to great lengths, sacrificing our own (and often times others') well being to do so? Why, when no money is needed for the greatest riches that earth provides?

Insanity...

As I write this blog, I know that I have to go to work later today, and to a dentist's appointment. But even just looking at pictures of nature calms my soul and gives me hope. It's as if those pictures tell me, one day, I will be out there again. One day, I'll be the one hiking through fields and up mountains. That is the life I long for. One with a connection to nature, including my fellow people.


Well, anyway, I've been doing some reading. I actually finished Sand County Almanac pretty quickly, though I didn't read it with as much attention to detail as I did Walden, or the last book I read. But I still got a lot of goodness from its pages. I dog-eared many pages for future reference.

I loved when Leopold talked about the high-tech gear, and how it's only good in a balanced amount. He talks about the difference between using a modern gun to hunt and using a trailer or something to go camping.

One great thing Leopold talks about his how people often try to justify protecting the environment in economic terms. For example, scientists said we had to conserve endangered animals, because without them the food chain would be thrown off and we ourselves would be at risk.

This is not unlike today, where our primary motive in environmentalism is to prevent global warming so that coastal cities don't become flooded, crops don't die, etc. etc. It's like how the oil spill primarily brought up ideas of how the fishing and tourist industries were potentially ruined.

People know something is wrong when they see trash or black oil in our otherwise pristine forests and seas, but it seems too many are motivated to even consider environmentalism purely for economic reasons.

I am now reading a new book, Last Child in the Woods, by Richard Louv (a great book so far, by the way). He had a fantastic point: "Today, kids are aware of the global threats to the environment - but their physical contact, their intimacy with nature, is fading."

This is so true. I see so many in the urban setting of my campus concerned about animal rights, environmentalism, etc., but it seems that not nearly enough of them have experienced nature. Everyone in an organization I am in at college, for example, is concerned about the environment and global warming. But when I bring up the idea of backpacking for a week, they seem to cringe at the idea of not bathing for that long.

But this is exactly what people MUST do! People need to recondition themselves away from all these creature comforts of our consumerist society. Take your shoes off! Dig your toes into the mud! Feel your sweat evaporate in the summer breeze! Cover your hands in bark as you climb up a tree, and drink and eat when your throat is dry and your stomach empty.

It's only then people will learn to live simply, as Thoreau so advocated a century and a half ago. You see, when one is immersed in nature, they realize that there is NO economic value to life whatsoever. There is only life.

That is one of the primary reasons I love backpack camping so much. Because it lets me live that simple lifestyle, if not just for a temporary while. The riches nature offers to my life via its streams and lakes and mountains and trees are far greater than any riches offered by coins and paper bills.

The views I get atop a mountain peak or amidst a valley field are more high-definition and more enticing than any nature documentary on Blu-ray. Even BBC's Earth documentaries (which I love).

I wish I could stop living vicariously so often. I wish it were easier for me to just travel to wilderness, but there are so few wild areas close to where I live. Hocking Hills is the best place that is nearby. But true wilderness is at least a 6 hour drive away in any direction.

Anyway, hopefully I'll be able to get a backpacking trip in before summer's end, or at least go to San Fransisco for the Power to the Peaceful festival!

Below I've posted two videos: One I took during a heavy thunderstorm. I stood butt naked on my porch and watched as the rain fell and the lightning lit up the entire face of the earth, like a flickering sun. I edited together the best footage of the lightning. Beautiful.

I also took a video of one beautiful summer evening, just at dusk. The porch was illuminated in a magical, ethereal orange glow, and the sky was absolutely beautiful. More so than it appears on camera. Enjoy!

Friday, August 6, 2010

Hocking Hills



Just some days after my trip to Hueston Woods, Thomas and I went down to Hocking Hills State Park. As always, it was a fantastic trip.

We drove down to the park and started getting lost. We stopped at some place called the Rock House that we had never been to before. It was beautiful. We hiked along a trail in the forest and arrived at a large, natural rock structure that seemed like an alternate version of those pueblos at Mesa Verde.

It felt so great to be back in this kind of landscape; to be climbing around on all the rocks and such. I remember at first I was running down the trail (and off of it), climbing rocks and sidling against bluffs. It felt like I was so light and free!

On the actual Rock House structure, there were three large window-like openings on the side, and at the end of the Rock House was a cliff sprinkled with boulders.

Well, I observed this cliff and decided that I could climb down it. On the left you'll see a picture, with that large dark cave on the top being my starting point. I had to make my way down those boulders (I'd say it was 3-5 stories high total). At one point, I had to drop down from one rock to a ledge below it, but my feet wouldn't touch the ledge till I let go, so it felt like a leap of faith.

Then came the best part: The rock slide. That distinct slope in the picture was where I slid down, Bear Grylls-style. It was thrilling! I was going so fast, and when my feet hit the bottom, I was exhilarated.

Thomas was being quite the naysayer, but it was an experience that was absolutely worth it. He was actually talking to someone we met who apparently told him of a person that climbed down a similar cliff and died.

Well, I knew what I was doing.

Anyway, after thoroughly exploring the area, we drove up to the lodge and got some delicious buffet food ($5 a plate if you only have one; 8+ if you get more). Our waitress told us that the place I had been at was the Rock Slide, and she had gone on it as a kid (despite now being a little more protective of her own).


Top: My plate
Bottom: Thomas's
So Dericious...






After eating, we drove to Old Man's Cave and parked there (that's the place we always parked in the past). We started hiking all over, and this time we were going all the way to Cedar Falls.





We saw lots of cool land formations, plants, and animals on the way there. We followed a Blue Heron for a while.


When we finally got to Cedar Falls, it was beautiful. Many people stood around it, gazing at the rock formations. I loved the trickling water and the growing vegetation that sprouted from the rocks.

This was my first time seeing Cedar Falls in person; last time, we had turned around on the trail before reaching it.

The waterfall was trickling, and the shallow pool of water was calling to me. As if by divine command, all the people there cleared out just as I stepped into the pool. I kicked off my shoes and socks and opened up my shirt, and waded around quite a bit, feeling the slippery rock or soft sand below me.

With each step, the sand would cloud up in lazy wisps. I walked up to a rock and sat on it for a bit meditatively. I also walked over to the waterfall and felt its cooling drops drizzle on my head.


I took many slow motion videos of the waterfall and the sand. I think more people need to experience nature in this intimate of a fashion. People need to let their bare feet touch the rocks and dirt and moss, and let the cool waters fall onto their heads.



It was so fun to get down and dirty with nature like that. To literally let my feet sink into the mud.


Well, on the hike back, Thomas and I ran out of water, and we became extremely thirsty. I started developing pains in my stomach (the kind where you can't tell if you're too hungry or too full). We walked back, taking the old secret pathway along the way (though there was no waterfall flowing, so it wasn't quite as cool).

When we got back to the car, we opened up the trunk and grabbed the igloo thermos thing that contained ice cold water. I poured some into Thomas's bottle and then drank straight from the container itself. We chugged down so much water, and it was the most refreshing thing I had ever tasted in my life. And man, instantly, my stomach pains dissipated entirely.




After this, we made our way to the campsite. It was in a Youth Group area (meaning it can be used by youth groups). The site was very nice - secluded, forested, etc.


Well, we got the tent set up, started a fire, and got to cooking. We had bread (flat bread dough actually works quite well in a bread-shaped toaster device) and vegan sausage and hot dogs and stuff. Thomas wasn't too into the food.

As the night came over us, we sat gazing into the fire, talking about how there weren't any girls our age (other than one who was living in some crazy strict army family or something). Ha. Well, really, I was more disappointed that there weren't people our age period. It was mostly just families that we didn't feel like approaching.


I just wanted to try and meet some people and talk and eat with them. But even with ourselves, we had a great time talking and laughing. We talked about times where we felt hurt or frustrated, and about people we had hurt pretty badly. We mused about life and such.

That isn't to say that there was never time for any Baby Bel cheese, aged Gouda (which Thomas surprisingly or not didn't like nearly as much as I did), and, of course, S'mores (with cookies & cream Hershey bars, not that plain crap, and the option of gummy worms or strawberry marshmallows).

It was just a really good time. Kept drinking straight out of that ice water container. At one point we just lied right down on the ground and watched the fire, listened to the insects, and gazed at the smoke.

At one point we walked a bit down the road to try and see some stars, and there were a good amount, but it was too cloudy to see all of them. So we headed back and packed everything up and went to the tent to sleep.

When we woke up, it was a beautiful, early morning. I grabbed all the cooking utensils from the car and got started on making some delicious breakfast.


Mmm... I made me some eggs in a basket using my dough, an egg, and Thomas's bread-toasting thing, and a piece of pepper jack cheese. It turned out fantastically! Then I fried up some eggs, vegan sausage, and Gouda cheese in a pan and ate it up. Also delicious.

Thomas attempted to make eggs in a basket without poking a hole in the dough. He also put the egg in the other side of the toasting apparatus and didn't even put it together. I have no idea what he was thinking, but it turned out pretty awfully hahaha.

I offered to cook him some stuff, but he refused, lying and saying he wasn't hungry. Whatever, though. I had a delicious breakfast. Those pans were covered in charcoal...

Well, after eating, we packed everything up, and drove off to Conkle's Hollow. We hiked all the way down, and I found the Cherry wood plant I was told about back in the winter. I snapped off a twig, shaved it, sniffed it, and then chewed it. I even ran into a Mennonite person who was chewing a toothpick, mistook it for being a twig, and then told him about it.

Cherrywood.

We hiked all the way down to the beautiful end of Conkle's Hollow, and climbed up on some rocks. Then, as we were going back, Thomas thought he left his car unlocked, so he rushed back, while I walked calmly down the trail, stopping to examine bugs and plants and people.


Well, we got in the car after that, and drove ourselves to good old McDonald's... Thomas wanted breakfast.

It was a fantastic trip overall, just wish we had talked to people, even if they were just families. But we talked to each other about a lot of things, and I got to climb some cliffs and jump in some water, so it was all good.

-Andrew

Followers