As I was driving back from Vegas on Sunday, I realized I was looking forward to going home to Death Valley. Right on cue too-- I had just passed the three-week mark of living here. I suppose the list of places that I can call home will only grow now-- it’s looking like I’ll lead a pretty seasonal life for the next couple years. The magical thing about living a seasonal lifestyle in a park is that everyone who I live with is doing the exact same thing. I don’t get the same quizzical reaction here when I discuss future plans, or lack thereof. No one here quite knows what is coming next in their career, but they know that they’ll end up in a beautiful place with a solid community of people who are pursuing similar national park dreams. That’s the mentality I was chasing when I left DC. It’s good to be here.
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Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
a week in the life
I've been here for about three weeks, and I can safely say that this is the most unpredictable job I have ever had. Things I have control over/ can predict:
-my lunch and snacks for the day (alllll of the beef jerky)
-how much water I bring/drink
-I'll probably have to drive the truck to the site
-I'll always have to grab the sat phone, my radio, and work gloves
-it's going to be sunny
Aaaaand that's about it. Every day here is completely different. I'll write out my past week to give you a sense of how I spend my days. A bit of background: My boss and I work with a group of 12 Americorps members pretty much every day. Sometimes the numbers fluctuate, sometimes I'm "in charge," and sometimes we're working with random other park people who need assistance for the day.
Monday: 7:30 am, I drive us on very windy roads with crazy drop-offs, down a dirt road with beautiful Joshua Trees, onto a 4WD road, and then switch with my boss and he takes over for the intense last bit of the 4WD road. One conservation I had with Charlie, my boss goes as follows:
Here is a portion of the aluminum debris we collected.
Tuesday: Organized the aluminum and other metal recycling with Charlie, then loaded up 2 trucks and drove them to Pahrump, NV to weigh and recycle the metal. We went out for Japanese food and then drove back.
Wednesday: Drove out an hour to a hillside in the south part of the park to cull invasive Sahara mustard with a couple of invasive management employees. Transect the hillside all day long and pull out any Sahara mustard we find (our group won!), see lots of lizards!
Thursday: I'm kinda in charge, so I lead the group to work with pulaskis and McClouds to hack up some burm on the roadside that we're trying to turn into a trail. Then we get a tour of Scotty's Castle, a big tourist attraction in the park. We drive to Ubehebe Crater and pick up trash along the edges, then drive the hour back home.
Friday: Big day-- we're off at 7:30 to meet up with a large group of Sierra Club volunteers. Drive up a pretty rocky 4WD road to the mouth of a side canyon where at an undisclosed location a couple of miles up, there is a marijuana grow site for us to clean up. I radio in with a law enforcement ranger who is at the site for directions, as I am in the lead with three Sierra Club volunteers. I almost lost one of them, and I learn how to use my radio in the process. We pack out a lot of irrigation tape and hike it back out, and drive back. I get invited to the Sierra Club potluck afterwards, where they feed me and ask lots of questions about my life in front of the whole group (my favorite pastime).
Weekend: Backpacking trip with friends from the dorms! We hiked up a beautiful canyon that turned into a smooth slot canyon. Played frisbee, ate chocolate, and slept under the moon. And got back in time for the halftime show, of course.
-my lunch and snacks for the day (alllll of the beef jerky)
-how much water I bring/drink
-I'll probably have to drive the truck to the site
-I'll always have to grab the sat phone, my radio, and work gloves
-it's going to be sunny
Aaaaand that's about it. Every day here is completely different. I'll write out my past week to give you a sense of how I spend my days. A bit of background: My boss and I work with a group of 12 Americorps members pretty much every day. Sometimes the numbers fluctuate, sometimes I'm "in charge," and sometimes we're working with random other park people who need assistance for the day.
Monday: 7:30 am, I drive us on very windy roads with crazy drop-offs, down a dirt road with beautiful Joshua Trees, onto a 4WD road, and then switch with my boss and he takes over for the intense last bit of the 4WD road. One conservation I had with Charlie, my boss goes as follows:
Charlie: How did that driving go for you?
Me: Pretty well, I think! Uhhhh how do you think it went for me?
Charlie: I think it went well, but you drove like a 90-year-old grandma!Despite my driving, we made it to our worksite for the day: a plane crash clean-up! The plane crashed in the 80's, and we were tasked with picking up the bits of aluminum that were scattered a huge distance along the hillside. We carted it out in backpacks and buckets and sorted out the trash, then drove back.
Here is a portion of the aluminum debris we collected.
Tuesday: Organized the aluminum and other metal recycling with Charlie, then loaded up 2 trucks and drove them to Pahrump, NV to weigh and recycle the metal. We went out for Japanese food and then drove back.
Wednesday: Drove out an hour to a hillside in the south part of the park to cull invasive Sahara mustard with a couple of invasive management employees. Transect the hillside all day long and pull out any Sahara mustard we find (our group won!), see lots of lizards!
Thursday: I'm kinda in charge, so I lead the group to work with pulaskis and McClouds to hack up some burm on the roadside that we're trying to turn into a trail. Then we get a tour of Scotty's Castle, a big tourist attraction in the park. We drive to Ubehebe Crater and pick up trash along the edges, then drive the hour back home.
Friday: Big day-- we're off at 7:30 to meet up with a large group of Sierra Club volunteers. Drive up a pretty rocky 4WD road to the mouth of a side canyon where at an undisclosed location a couple of miles up, there is a marijuana grow site for us to clean up. I radio in with a law enforcement ranger who is at the site for directions, as I am in the lead with three Sierra Club volunteers. I almost lost one of them, and I learn how to use my radio in the process. We pack out a lot of irrigation tape and hike it back out, and drive back. I get invited to the Sierra Club potluck afterwards, where they feed me and ask lots of questions about my life in front of the whole group (my favorite pastime).
Weekend: Backpacking trip with friends from the dorms! We hiked up a beautiful canyon that turned into a smooth slot canyon. Played frisbee, ate chocolate, and slept under the moon. And got back in time for the halftime show, of course.
Saturday, January 24, 2015
notes from the road
Direct from my notebook! This is everything important that happened on our grand road trip, pretty much.
“toilet”
why are there all there cars parked on the side of the highway
shootout in the highway- texas
Truck Driver in Texas-- “wish we could’ve met under better circumstances”
when will I be a good enough driver so that I can drive w/o my palms sweating profusely
gas for 1.74!
why haven’t we paid any tolls?
Fartella
why are there so many tires
objects in the mirror are… rainbows
Sunday, January 18, 2015
New Places, Newly Resurected Blog
Hello blog-land! It has been a while, as per usual. But for real, I am going to try and blog often here. I'm gonna go ahead and say every week and fingers crossed I stick to it. Here's a preliminary post about just getting here, but stay tuned for one about the road trip, and one with more Death Valley deets.
-------------
For basically our entire trip across the country, Amelia and I would get into each new city after dark. The upside of this was that we got to magically wake up in a totally new place each morning, and view the city and landscape after a few hours of sleep.
I experienced the same pattern here in my new home of Death Valley. I drove in at twilight, after a stressful couple of hours shopping and gassing up and getting an emissions test done on my car in the “nearby” town of Ridgecrest. All I saw after crossing the border into Death Valley were signs about the elevation-- climbing up in the mountains and then dropping to Sea Level just before I got to my dorm.
All I really wanted to say in this post is that waking up here is incredible. Driving around and pinching myself and realizing over and over again that I live here is incredible. It’s the harshest of harsh deserts but I’m loving it. Even when I wake up completely parched every morning, I get to look outside and see this:
Bam.
Monday, May 26, 2014
Stick-with-the-plan Soup: The Backstory
On our big Western road trip, we invested a fair amount of funds in food. Mostly we just wanted better lunches than PB&J every day. The end result of our varied lunch endeavor was that we had to cut back a bit on other meals. This cut was most felt at breakfast, where we ate 'gruel' for weeks on end. We called it gruel because after a week of liking it, it got hard to stomach and we had to mask it with copious amounts of salt, nutritional yeast, and sriracha.
Gruel face. |
So but anyway I am supposed to be writing about Stick-with-the-plan soup (which coincidentally also involves large amounts of salt, nutritional yeast, and sriracha). Before I talk ingredients, I have to talk Ed Abbey. Our trip was in the fall, which meant that the sun set earlier and earlier. So immediately after dinner, there was nothing more enticing than our sleeping bags... at 7 pm (8 pm if we really pushed it). Lying under the stars on the slickrock, we took turn reading out loud from Desert Solitaire and assorted stories by Terry Tempest Williams.
After about a week, we had grown to love Ed's cantankerous musings. We got a huge kick out of a line from his essay about The Moon-Eyed Horse in which Ed says to himself:
"But you're not clever, you're stupid, I reminded myself: stick to the plan."
This line especially hit home for us, because it was reflective of our lack of any planning whatsoever. We never found a campsite in advance, we never had a solid plan of future destinations, we never planned out our dinners. This lack of dinner planning combined with the random bits of food we had all brought from our previous trips and our aforementioned stinginess on breakfast and dinner led to some interesting meals. There were a few points on our trip (which for some wild coincidence happened directly before a trip to the grocery store) where we had to really scrounge for dinner in the depths of our food crate. What could we mix together to make an appetizing and filling meal?
The answer came to us in the form of Stick-with-the-plan soup. This soup/stew consisted of anything and everything that could potentially taste good together. Dehydrated peas, hominy, soy sauce, bouillon cubes, month-old cabbage, potatoes, rice, lentils, you name it! Bonus if cooked on a fire and some ingredients fall out into the fire because the pot is so full. We discovered that if you put enough salty ingredients in, it will taste delicious. Hominy not cooked, soup looks like sludge? No matter, it was still hot and filling. And it came about from having no plan.
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Can you spot the soup? |
Anyway, this is all to say that I named my Tumblr site 'Stick-with-the-plan Soup' because it is a smattering of trips and nature shots from my adventures over the last few years. Most pictures are from random wanderings, where there was no plan and yet it all worked out in the end. Just like soup. Ya know?
So check it out! I post pretty regularly with pictures of life at camp and of past adventures. As much as I want to update this blog with stories from camp all the time, it just ain't gonna happen. Until next time!
Saturday, May 17, 2014
A public lands legacy
The summer before my freshman year of college, I spent three weeks on a Student Conservation Association national crew. I was placed in Wind Cave National Park and had a life-changing experience, but that's a different story for another day. Long story short, I fell in love with national parks and over the next few years I grew immensely appreciative of the value of public lands in general.
Fast forward to this year, when I spent the winter living at home in D.C. Now if you live in New York or L.A., being starstruck probably means you saw a famous movie star. In D.C. however, starstruck takes on a political form. 'I-just-saw-someone-famous freak outs' are justified for:
-the V.P. or Presidential motorcade
-any motorcade
-D.C. mayoral candidates
-D.C. mayors
-city council members
-recognizable hill folks
-basically anyone in a position of power in the federal government
-probably a lot more people
This blog post is about my adventures in almost debilitating sightings of D.C.,'s most important peeps. Each time I meet an important person, I revert to being a middle schooler and agonize over if I should go up and say a thing to them, or ask them a question, or just introduce myself and hope that they'll take pity on me and engage me in conversation about something other than the weather. No sighting has been more agonizing than seeing current Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell, and then seeing former S.O.I. Bruce Babbitt only a couple of months later (the shock of the first sighting still hadn't worn off).
I got up the courage to talk with Babbitt after the screening of a film about dams, in which he was an opening speaker. I snuck up to him as he was about to leave, and asked him about his relationship with Floyd Dominy (of the Bureau of Reclamation). I coasted on this conversation for days, let me tell you. Chatting about dams with the former Secretary of the Interior, could things get any better??
Turns out, hearing Babbitt speak at the Ansel Adams Gallery of the Wilderness Society about Obama's public lands legacy was even better. He wrote a op-ed for High Country News after his talk, but in it he didn't include my favorite anecdote from his remarks. Ready for it? Here's the gist of what Babbitt said:
Basically, Obama is in the same place as Clinton was at this point of his second term in office. That is, Obama still has not carved out an environmental legacy for himself whatsoever. Babbitt spoke about the tactic that he used to convince Clinton to create a legacy for himself. Babbitt sat down one day and pulled out two index cards. On one he wrote: 'FDR' and then a list of all the public land reserves he had created in office, and other environmentally conscious acts. He wrote 'Clinton' on the other card, and then wrote a much shorter list of Clinton's environmental accomplishments. Then all Babbitt did was give Clinton those two cards, and that was all the push that was necessary. He spoke of the following months, where Clinton apparently called up Babbitt regularly to ask if he had any other big tracts of land that he could make into a national monument. Because of this small push at the end of Clinton's time in office, we now have protected areas such as Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument-- an almost 2 million acre tract of land in southern Utah-- larger than the land area of any other U.S. national monument. Here is hoping that Obama will get the same idea.
My promise to you, dear readers: Next time I write about public lands I will try to be more coherent, and next time I write in general it will be about life at CAMP!
Fast forward to this year, when I spent the winter living at home in D.C. Now if you live in New York or L.A., being starstruck probably means you saw a famous movie star. In D.C. however, starstruck takes on a political form. 'I-just-saw-someone-famous freak outs' are justified for:
-the V.P. or Presidential motorcade
-any motorcade
-D.C. mayoral candidates
-D.C. mayors
-city council members
-recognizable hill folks
-basically anyone in a position of power in the federal government
-probably a lot more people
This blog post is about my adventures in almost debilitating sightings of D.C.,'s most important peeps. Each time I meet an important person, I revert to being a middle schooler and agonize over if I should go up and say a thing to them, or ask them a question, or just introduce myself and hope that they'll take pity on me and engage me in conversation about something other than the weather. No sighting has been more agonizing than seeing current Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell, and then seeing former S.O.I. Bruce Babbitt only a couple of months later (the shock of the first sighting still hadn't worn off).
Here's my friend Caroline actually talking with Jewell. What the what! |
I got up the courage to talk with Babbitt after the screening of a film about dams, in which he was an opening speaker. I snuck up to him as he was about to leave, and asked him about his relationship with Floyd Dominy (of the Bureau of Reclamation). I coasted on this conversation for days, let me tell you. Chatting about dams with the former Secretary of the Interior, could things get any better??
Turns out, hearing Babbitt speak at the Ansel Adams Gallery of the Wilderness Society about Obama's public lands legacy was even better. He wrote a op-ed for High Country News after his talk, but in it he didn't include my favorite anecdote from his remarks. Ready for it? Here's the gist of what Babbitt said:
Basically, Obama is in the same place as Clinton was at this point of his second term in office. That is, Obama still has not carved out an environmental legacy for himself whatsoever. Babbitt spoke about the tactic that he used to convince Clinton to create a legacy for himself. Babbitt sat down one day and pulled out two index cards. On one he wrote: 'FDR' and then a list of all the public land reserves he had created in office, and other environmentally conscious acts. He wrote 'Clinton' on the other card, and then wrote a much shorter list of Clinton's environmental accomplishments. Then all Babbitt did was give Clinton those two cards, and that was all the push that was necessary. He spoke of the following months, where Clinton apparently called up Babbitt regularly to ask if he had any other big tracts of land that he could make into a national monument. Because of this small push at the end of Clinton's time in office, we now have protected areas such as Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument-- an almost 2 million acre tract of land in southern Utah-- larger than the land area of any other U.S. national monument. Here is hoping that Obama will get the same idea.
My promise to you, dear readers: Next time I write about public lands I will try to be more coherent, and next time I write in general it will be about life at CAMP!
Saturday, May 3, 2014
Old dog, new camera
My dog has never looked at me the many hundreds of times I have tried to take her picture. The only reason I've gotten a picture of her looking into the camera is because my dad was standing behind me holding a treat (which actually works rather well sometimes, see below).
But joys of joys... I got a new camera! It's fancy and I don't know how to use it even a little bit (though this aperture thing is pretty fun), but for some reason Honey the dog does not seem to notice that it is also a picture-taking device. Huzzah! For your/my viewing pleasure:
But joys of joys... I got a new camera! It's fancy and I don't know how to use it even a little bit (though this aperture thing is pretty fun), but for some reason Honey the dog does not seem to notice that it is also a picture-taking device. Huzzah! For your/my viewing pleasure:
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