Author: Roger

  • Plow with the storm

    Where I live in southwest Colorado, we have been hammered by snow storms since just after Christmas. We got about two feet of snow in the week following Christmas. Then we had a minor flurry of around four inches a week ago. Then yesterday, we got hit with nine inches, four more today and five more tomorrow.

    One saying that snow plow drivers have “plow with the storm.” It is easier to plow an inch or three at a time rather than wait for eight inches or more to pile up. As you plow, the snow on the blade increases as you move forward. If you are pushing during the storm, the process is easier on your equipment, and you can move faster.

  • The Art of Waking up

    In the Art of Shralpanism, snowboarder Jeremy Jones mentions his process for waking up regardless of if he is at home or in a tent at 14,000 feet with a blizzard surrounding him.

    1. He repeatedly fires his glutes and quads to wake his legs up and get the blood flowing. When he is in the backcountry, this has the additional effect of heating his sleeping bag.
    2. He counts ten breaths. Inhale, then exhale while keeping his mind focused on the breath. If he deviates and starts thinking about breakfast, taxes, or some other random thought, he starts over. He continues this process till he has the ten breaths.
    3. Then he gets up and goes with his day.

    I love this process and have been practicing it for a few weeks. I have managed to get the ten breaths on the first try once. It’s a great kind of short meditation and helps me realize how random my brain is and how much I need to work to keep it focused on whatever task I am working on.

  • Habits all the way down

    In November last year, I watched several Ryan Holiday YouTube videos that affected me in several ways. Ryan is a stoic and he talks about stoic values and texts, especially Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. The videos are well produced enough, and the information he shares is intelligent and helpful philosophy of life.

    One thing he mentioned was how he spends the first 30 to 60 minutes first thing in the morning outdoors and screen-free. This helps him to wake up physically and mentally.

    Physically because he is outside moving around and interacting with nature. Mentally because he is away from his phone or laptop and with his thoughts and interactions with other people and life.

    My life is so much about screens that taking a break from them is something I need to do. Daily and as much as possible. I earn all of my living on a screen, but that isn’t all of who I am.

    In November of 2022, I started spending 30 to 60 minutes each morning going outside and getting some very light exercise. Sometimes I take Enzo for a quick short walk, but I always get in a lap or two around the property. I start a walking workout on my watch and then do my best to think of it as something other than a workout.

    We got our first substantial snowstorm in November, and I used my snowshoes a few times to get around the land. As that snow melted, I switched back to walking in my boots. Then we got crushed with 2 feet of snow in late December in under a week. Since then, I have used my cross-country skis to tour around in the pre-dawn light, moonlight, or almost no light. It’s pretty dark here at 6 am in the winter.

    The experience has been revelatory on a few levels. The first one is that I consistently get up and move around without any distractions besides being alive. Second, I appreciate being active and outdoors first thing in the morning. This sets a tone for the day and puts the rest of my life into perspective.

    I see deer eating breakfast in a field, which causes me to change my path and let them be. I notice various animal tracks in the snow and wonder where they slept last night and what they will eat today. I appreciate these little things before I move on to the big stuff like work and existential dread.

    Ryan Holiday also mentions writing in a physical journal. He has a great story where he appreciates a friend’s extensive library of personal journals and says, “I wish I had started doing this when I was younger.” The friend shares the old proverb: “The best time to plant an apple tree was 20 years ago. The second best time is right now.”

    From that moment on, he started keeping a physical journal, which changed his life. I have been keeping a digital journal for years. It has been convenient, and I can easily add photos and look up old entries, but it requires me to be on a screen, which works against the habit of avoiding screens as much as I can.

    So I started keeping a daily physical journal. Once I am done with my morning sojourn, I come in and spend twenty minutes or more writing in the journal. I start with my morning routine and then meander into whatever is on my mind. Sometimes I write about work stuff, but mostly, it’s just about life in general.

    Between my morning walk/ski and writing in my physical journal, I have started a few other habits and quit some others. I don’t know if this will work for you, but it has changed my life. If you wonder where the day went and need help to get things done, this may be an excellent way to create space in your day by starting it more clear and focused.

  • Great Falls Park Maryland

    Fun place to hike near Washington DC.

  • Trail work day – Lost Chicken drainage improvement

    Trail work day – Lost Chicken drainage improvement

    Wow it’s September already! How ya been? My excuses for not posting in a while are all valid and award winning. Basically I got busy and needed to focus on other things. Sorry.

    Our local trails group, Mancos Trails Group, has been busy all summer with multiple trail work days. Today we spent over 5 hours in the pine forest of the Lost Chicken trail. Flags had been set across 2 miles of trail where drainage was an issue.

    Dog break during drainage instruction session

    We continue to have impressive volunteer turnout for these work days. Lots of people and people who are motivated to get shit done. We flagged out more area than we though could be completed and still managed to get everything done. Amazing.

    Managing volunteers is tricky as no one is getting paid. You need to give direction and guidance but then need to keep everything light and fun so they don’t go home.

    It seems this is how all management should be approached but when money is attached we feel the need to change tactics. Money adds incentive and stress which can lead to irrational thoughts and actions. The worst offense being micromanament. That beast with infinite heads and endless annoyance.

    Delegation requires trust and faith. Starting from there we give people an opportunity to succeed or fail. Once one of those happens we can either revise what went wrong or move onto the next stage. Rinse. Iterate. Repeat.

  • Starting with sunrise

    Starting with sunrise

    For most of my life I abhorred sunrise. I was not and still am not a morning person. What has changed is that I now wake up before sunrise on the reg. This is not something I have chosen. Rather it has chosen me.

    Now that I get up early and see the sun rise each morning I find the enormity of the days tasks feel a little more possible. I guess I’m becoming an optimist too.

  • Finding the route

    Finding the route

    strava.app.link/ZwMdyhCyrrb

    Last weekend I did this ride in part to find a better way down the mountains to the east of my home. The Mancos Spur Trail is a collection of trails that connect my town of Mancos to the Colorado Trail. It is primarily a hiking trail and isn’t the most friendly for riding a bike on.

    Challenge accepted.

    Two weekends ago I had Kate shuttle me up into the mountains so I could try part of the route out. That ride went well till I hit one section of the trail which proved to be mostly un-rideable. I was so upset after that section that it almost ruined the entire day. Eventually I recovered but it made me wonder if there wasn’t a better route to ride down.

    After taking with a good friend I came up with the route you see here. While it still has one additional improvement I can make it is a much more enjoyable route.

    In two weeks the plan is for a small group of us to start an additional six miles out and ride from Kennebec pass. Those six miles are no joke though and cover terrain that is entirely above tree line. That leaves us exposed to weather and also means that the ground is mainly made up of rocks.

    Having the remaining 20+ miles scoped out is going to be helpful though. Once we get through those first six miles I’ll know where we will want to go and hopefully we will finish with smiles on our faces.

  • A good day to ride

    A good day to ride

    strava.app.link/zBMehMixhpb

    Good day to ride fast. We got Kate a new/used road bike. So we had to do a 27.8 mile break in ride around our neighborhood. I like this ride cause about 30 minutes in we stop at the local coffee shop For caffeine and cherry tarts. We also spend half the ride or more on backroads with much less traffic.

    Kate riding her road bike towards the camera. Mesa verde national park entrance behind her to the right.
    Bottom of the hill.

    Field or purple lavender to the right of the road. Tree truck frames the left side of the frame.
    Purple durple.

    Four multi colored wind socks with long tails. Some glitter in the sun. Mesa verde national park in the background.
    Freedom flags flying proudly.

    Our local bison herd in a field. The bottom of the frame is a glimpse of pavement and then a silver roadside guard rail. Behind the bison are pine trees and then multiple snow covered peaks of the San Juan mountain range. Blue sky with various clouds are at the top of the frame.
    Bison not buffalo

  • Possibly the best thing

    Possibly the best thing

    We built a shower into the garage for dog washing, but if we had children I could see it being equally useful. When we lived in the trailer dirt was just a fact of life. Now that we are in a house it is refreshing to have as little dirt as possible. Now Dazey and Enzo can do their dirt rolls and I wash em down on the way back through the garage rear door. It’s the little things.

  • 59 miles and a Birthday

    59 miles and a Birthday

    We got in our first big ride of the 2022 cycling season last Saturday. It was our friend Ondine’s birthday so we rode her age in miles. It’s something Kate and her parents have done for a number of years and now our friends are participating.

    Ondine came up with a course that went near routes we have ridden in our county but we hit a number of smaller roads this time. I have ridden by most of these roads but never turned down them. This day we did and it was glorious. We rode on asphalt and gravel and my skinny road bike tires did fine. Though my front tire had a slow leak I managed to get back home just fine.

    It was just 40 degrees when we started at about 9am. We had a few layers of clothing on that we slowly thinned down as the day progressed. The temperature was pretty perfect all day and we kept the pace slow and conversational.