Making Trail Movies (or not making trail movies)

Ahhrrg, I have a half-finished short movie on my hike that I put together months ago, but now it lays buried under months of not feeling very creative. Well, I’ve been preoccupied by my new job, I’ll have to dive into that more in another post, but in short, it has been an incredible few months of thinking like a thru-hiker to help take a trail to the next level…EXCITING!

So I’ve neglected my CDT movie for a while. And to be honest I was disappointed with the footage I took. Lots of feeling lazy and holding a shaky camera when I had a light tri-pod in my pack.

Maybe I need to change the background song, I could try another (start over) but I want to work on it again.

And that got me in the mood to watch some of the other movies I’ve made on recent adventures. Here’s the show roll! And maybe the movies are never as interesting to other people as they are to me, but it’s fun, and it really takes me back on those adventures.

Lets see what we got,

Here’s an early one:

Then we went back to the same river a few years later and I made this one:

I wrote about all these trips on my other blog, but there’s nothing like watching the videos again.

ahhhhh, it’s fun! I want to make a movie!

A Hiker’s Resolution

I don’t normally make New Year’s resolutions, but when Oboz asked me to write something from a hiker’s perspective, I was able to come up with a few! See that post below.

This blog has been silent for a while, the biggest reason is that I’m no longer on an epic trip that I’ve been planning for years. In fact, it’s still a bit challenging to be done with the CDT. I have an awesome new job helping to shape the Oregon Desert Trail, like I mentioned before, but I still don’t have the next “big thing” in mind. And now that I hiked the trail “last year” that experience seems farther and farther away every day.

It’s no wonder readjustment is hard. There’s no way you can replicate the energy expended and endorphins released that comes from day after day of hiking. Being in the middle of some of the most incredible wilderness areas on the planet is hard to replicate too when you return to four walls and a stack of bills to pay each month. If anything I should be grateful that I’ve had that experience, so many never know that level of freedom, but it comes with a price. Day to day life has a hard time measuring up to a long distance hike.

That being said Kirk and I have been out a lot. We skied,

12466012_10153842994758887_6974157368095697173_o

rafted & packrafted,

1916884_10153831765993887_7119388366818245312_n

and even ski kayaked.

12316545_10153764813048887_6054100114198508491_n

This winter is the best we have had in years! And we’ve camped. Snow camped, car camped, river camped, and that has been a challenge.

12401663_10153831761078887_3625319127404448369_o

I’m shying away from 15 hours of nighttime in the winter, and the cold! Last weekend we spent New Years Eve trying to sleep in the back of Kirk’s truck in a snow park…brutal with the single digit temperatures. I will still winter camp, but it’s just another level of planning, another level of suffering, and those four walls back home start to look pretty good!

I guess I’ll keep floundering a bit until I have another big goal in front of me. I think working on the ODT is best of all possible things I could be doing right now. I’m immersed in what I love most, and get to draw on all those random outdoor jobs I’ve had over the years. It’s really quite an amazing fit.

In the mean time, here are my hiking resolutions for the New Year. I think I need them this year!

 

It’s been a busy year of hiking! Making time to get outside and put some miles on my Oboz Lunas was easy this year since I was hiking the Continental Divide Trail, but 2016? There is no long hike on tap for the new year, so now what?

Well, since so many years passed between my last long hike (the Arizona Trail in 2009), I know how hiking can take a back seat to life…you know, things like a job, life in a city, and even facing the fact that your significant other might not like hiking as much as you. So here are a few resolutions I’ve made that will help me keep hiking at the forefront of my year.

1Walk to Work I’m lucky enough to call Bend, Oregon home, and we’ve had a great snow year so far. But what I’ve realized after shoveling out my car for the 10th time in just over a month is that it’s easier to just walk to work than dig, defrost, and slide on the slick streets. A walk to and from work is a great way to make sure my legs are moving every day, especially when the weather is more conducive to skiing than hiking. A walk to work helps calm my mind…especially this time of year when I’m so busy that all I want to do is curl up on the couch under a warm blanket until spring. A walk to work is another way of saying urban hike!

Sometimes I even find inspiration in my socks.

2. Keep the Backpack Packed Does your backpacking gear get put away for long periods of the year? Even in Central Oregon we have warm, mild spells in the colder months, and I find I’m much more likely to take advantage of a favorable weather window when my pack is prepped and all I need to do is grab enough food for my hike. Put that headlamp, tent, sleeping pad, water bladder, and warm layers in your pack. Better yet? Keep your pack in the house where you are likely to see it regularly. I bet it will call to you and you’ll end up feeling sorry for your gear if it doesn’t get enough love.

3. Shop for Hiking Foods I bought a big box of Ramen dinners the other day. I don’t think I’ve ever eaten Ramen at home, but I still can’t get enough on the trail. The companion piece to keeping your pack packed for spontaneous adventures is keeping a stock of backpacking foods in your pantry. I like to have bars, instant oatmeal, and a few meals on hand at all times. Also think beyond your traditional hiking foods. Depending on the length of the trip I sometimes hike out salad, chips and salsa, or even burgers. The key is ease. Ease of walking out the door with everything you need, especially if time is short!

4. Tell Stories and Cultivate those Hiking Friends  Since coming back from the Continental Divide Trail this fall I’ve been telling a lot of stories. The result is folks that I didn’t know were interested in backpacking suddenly had an interest. While I enjoy the solitary experience on the trail, it’s awesome to hit the trail with friends, so in the new year I resolve to keep telling stories and make some trips happen with friends. I can’t think of anything better than helping someone discover their love of backpacking.

5. Stay Inspired I like to have a goal in front of me to look forward to. Even though I don’t know when my next long hike will happen, I have a folder on my computer filled with links to other long trails I’d love to hike. I like to say that my favorite trail is the one I haven’t hiked yet, and perusing those websites and planning materials helps to get me through the darker days of winter and long spells between backpacking trips. Stay inspired!

When your beer tells you to go for a hike, listen.

6. Live for the Weekends I used to think “weekend warrior” meant I was a sad desk-bound worker bee, but if I’m smart about it, the weekend can offer the perfect bite-sized trip that could turn my year into a series of adventures. To get the most out of my weekend I often like to get packed up on a Thursday, so when 5 o’clock on Friday hits, all I have to do is pack the car and drive. Your ability to wring the meat out of the weekend is greatly enhanced if you can wake up Saturday morning and simply go. Having an entire day in the wilderness makes the weekend feel much more substantial.

These are just a few ways that I resolve to keep hiking a priority in 2016. The key is making it easy and convenient so you can spend more time outside.

Friends of Burkina Faso

As I’m writing this the votes from the first “open” election in decades in the West African country of Burkina Faso are being counted. I was a Peace Corps Volunteer there from 1999-2001, and know what a huge deal this is. Until about a year ago the “dictator-president” Blaze Compaore was overthrown from his 27 year seat of power.

Tides are changing in Burkina, and was especially reminded of my time in the country when I saw the latest newsletter from the Friends of Burkina Faso.

I wrote about my CDT trip for the newsletter…and the act of sitting down to reflect on my hike helped me remember how my backpacking journey all started with those long dusty days in Burkina Faso.

2015-2-burkina-connection 9

Oregon Desert Trail

Oregon Desert Trail

I have an exciting development to share with you all…I’ve accepted a position as the Oregon Desert Trail Coordinator here in Bend! The 800 mile Oregon Desert Trail is one of the newest long distance trails in the country, and begins right outside of Bend  and connects a series of remote mountain ranges in the high desert of south eastern Oregon.

This is an incredible opportunity to combine everything I love doing to help shape a long trail. Ever since my friend Sage Clegg was the first to hike the ODT in 2013, I have watched with envy as other friends and hikers jump on the trail. Before I even heard about the new position I wanted to hike the ODT next. It’s exciting to be on the other side of the trail community and really be able to dive into something I am passionate about.

It will be fun to keep this blog going and share my experiences on the other side of the hike, and yes, take you with me as I hike it as well.

 

Limbo

20150908_080950

How have I been home for 2 1/2 weeks already? Good news is that my list of things to do is getting shorter even though I continue to add to it.

I’ve been playing the hermit since getting home, probably a direct result of spending most of the last 6 months alone…I find it’s sometimes hard to make small talk, hard to sum up my 160 days in a few bite-sized snippets, hard to go right back to being the extroverted well-socialized and excitable hiker. I know that side of me will emerge again, probably once I have more of a direction with what I’m going to be doing now that I’m off the trail.

As for work I have a few irons in the fire, some exciting opportunities that I’ll be happy to share once confirmed, so really, this time can be devoted to relaxing, easing back into the fast-paced whirlwind of off-trail life, and just being. Except that’s hard to do…I find myself gravitating towards the more existential questions of life…and perhaps that’s because when I’m busy I never really give myself time to meditate on the deeper subjects.

Ok, that probably sounds a little doom and gloom, but that, folks, is post-trail readjustment.

A few of you have asked about my gear list…I’ve put together a page here...I need to get my hands on a scale to weigh all the miscellaneous things that don’t have listed weights on the product website. I never weighed my gear, so it’s kind of funny to be doing so now after the fact.

Time to keep on keeping on…

A look at Skiing the CDT

I have been sifting through the thousands of photos and hundreds of video clips I took on the trail this year and found these two from my time on the skis.

The shoe-bindings worked extremely well on the light-weight touring skis. I ended up skiing about 40 miles in the Southern San Juans…then I found steep avalanche-prone slopes were too risky for the late May-early June time I was there. Never fear, I’ll be working on putting some short films together this fall, should be a lot of fun!

So… home.

There is almost too much to do, so I choose to do nothing. It’s as if I were preparing to hike a long distance trail, and the thought of 2,000 miles makes the first mile unimaginable. That is what getting home after an almost 6 month absence is like.

I want to look at my 6,000+ photos and hundreds of little videos and make movies. I need to unpack from our 2 week road trip. I want to see friends. I need to go through all my mail. I want to go to yoga. I want to read all the magazines I missed. I want to veg in front of netflix. I want to go for a walk. I need to work. I want to write lots of blogs and reviews. I want to packraft. I want to make things.

So I don’t do any of it, or I do it slowly and distractedly.

Did I just hike across the country? Man, seems like years ago now.