Saturday, October 31, 2009

Busy Morning

Spouse returned from business trip at just past midnight last night. He bought San Francisco sourdough bread - a loaf for him and one for daughter and family. The bread is good but whole grain is more my style.

I slept until 8:30am and then hit the ground rolling, tackling 3 loads of laundry. At least it wasn't as cold this morning. I'm afraid to do laundry on really cold days because the laundry drain has backed up before when it's really cold. The former owners of this housee who made an unheated laundry room were nuts! There is a wall unit space heater in there which I turned on as a precaution.

I turned a frozen bag of vegetable trimmings that I had been collecting into vegetable broth. I'm using the broth to reconstitute bulgur which I'll turn into a bulgur pilaf tonight.

Next door neighbor's daughter needed to borrow eggs. Her husband is making a birthday cake with and for their oldest daughter. We gave them a check to buy their 3 kids a present. I'm glad to hear that when they buy their house, it will be close to where daughter and family live.

Spouse is at the movies - Where the Wild Things Are - with grandson. Grandson no longer needs booster seat - yay!!

While I was making veggie broth, steam somehow shorted out a switch on the back of the oven. I got a mild shock when I flipped the switch to attempt to turn off the timed oven indicator light but the light still seems to be dimly on. The gas oven is almost 19 years old and we really need to buy a new one (for more reasons than the shorted switch). When the burners are first turned on, we are treated to a whiff of gas. We'll look for a new one next soon.

The idea that I would get out on the trail this weekend seems laughable now. I'll walk my 4 miles this evening with all the Halloweeners that will be out and about. Tomorrow, we go shopping in EspaƱola after spouse meets daughter and family for pancake breakfast. Maybe, just maybe, spouse and I will get a walk in tomorrow afternoon.

In view of my limited outdoor activities today, I'm so grateful for yesterday's life affirming, lung huffing, heart pounding, uphill workout on the Quemazon Trail!

I've emailed hiking pal to suggest that because of the time change, we start at 8am this Monday on ambitious hike to Rio.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

A Change in the Weather

Today I felt like a road walk so I went up Camp May Road to the first chain turnout. I studied the Quemazon Trail across Los Alamos Canyon as I walked up and wondered if anyone was on that trail. When I got across from the general area of the fire-destroyed Knapp Trail that climbs out of Los Alamos Canyon to the Quemazon Trail, I studied it also and wondered if anyone would ever try to rehabilitate the destroyed trail. The burnt hillside it went up is now a formidable obstacle course of oak and locust thickets and heavy downed timber. It's not something that anyone can count on the bicycling community to bring back because according to Craig Martin the trail was so steep and erosion such a problem that bicyclists were advised not to use it. As I recall the trail, I always felt in danger of falling off it so steep it was in places and with such a scrabbly tread.

I felt like a road walk for several reasons. The weather is changing - a snowstorm is coming in to the mountains tonight and tomorrow - and also because I needed to get back early to watch our grandson tonight while daughter finishes cleaning up the apartment they've moved out of. Last night grandson enjoyed watching a library DVD about traveling with kids in the Big Island of Hawaii. A couple and their 3 and 5 year old sons produce and star in it. It's a whole series and I checked out all of the ones the library has in its collection. The really entrancing thing about it is the kids seem surprisingly adept on-camera providing spot narration of the tourist attractions the family visits.

The road walk was pleasant. The ski hill cafe is closes and since skiing season has not started yet, traffic was sparse. At Memorial Corner, the winds did not disappoint. I wonder if they are coming from both the low area beneath the heights of Pajarito Mountain and also the Santo Domingo basin. I can clearly see all the way to Albuquerque from that area so it could be a confluence of winds.

On the curve below the Ocean, nasty Siberian elm trees are hanging over the guardrail forcing walkers further into the road's travel lane. I broke some of the offending limbs to prune them back.

I'm listening to a CD from the library - Diana Ross and the Supremes - The Definitive Collection. I like it!

This morning on Terry Gross's Fresh Air, Bob Dylan's Christmas CD was reviewed. All proceeds from it go to charity which is charitable of Bob! His voice is raspier than ever but I think the songs would probably grow on me. I've loved Bob Dylan's music from back when I was in high school. Listening to him as a teenager made me feel like such a rebel!

I'm stewing Black Mission Figs right now. I buy them dried and then decide that they not moist enough. Stewing should solve that! The stemless Turkish figs are much sweeter and moister.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Inside Jobs

We went on the Bayo Canyon Bench Trail hike this morning with the WRSC group. They also went a tiny distance on the Gonzales Road which intersects the bench trail. No one could understand why we could hear gunfire that sounded so close on the Gonzales Road since the Sportsmen's Club was a mesa and canyon north of us.

Afterwards, picked up Vornado space heater at daughter's to exchange in SF tomorrow and stopped at senior center (to exchange magazines) and library (to browse non-return shelves) and then was inside the rest of the day.

Ate lunch, did two loads laundry, fixed massive vegetable soup (froze some), toasted and ground seeds - fennel, coriander, mustard. I've always read that toasting spices brings out their fragrance and flavor. They taste good. Made amaranth to go with the vegetable soup. Tonight's supper was the soup with amaranth and pinto beans. It was delicious!

Haven't heard from car dealer about loose bumper. I'll call next week to check on what's happening.

Tomorrow is SF trip and eating out at La Plazuela. Sunday, I drop spouse off early in SF, then eat breakfast at Whole Foods and come back home.

I enjoyed yesterday seeing the inner workings of Los Alamos Canyon where it splits off into Quemazon Canyon. I would like to know that country better - both the vertical as well as horizontal topographic aspects. We live in an amazing place!

Friday, October 16, 2009

Ancho Rapids Hike

I haven't done this hike for years and I'm really glad I found some people willing to do it - one of the WI hikers and her long-time friend. The WI hiker was scouting it to put on her Tuesday group's schedule. They were both good company and good hikers. We had a lot of fun talking and laughing. We all feel lucky to live in northern NM.

On the way out to the turnoff for Ancho Rapids, we were treated to the sight of a tarantula scurrying along the Powerline Road. I rarely see tarantulas so that was exciting!

It's a tough hike - 1000' elevation gain and loss to the Rio Grande and back. It's steep and therefore not a hike you'd want to do in summer unless you're training for Death Valley! I've gone with the LL group in springtime and it's really pretty then. There is a spring that runs year-around and its banks are edged by watercress. This time of year is lovely too because of the autumn colors - red gambel oak and bright yellow cottonwood. I saw small animal tracks in some mud along the creek.

Ancho Rapids was a refreshing sight and I enjoyed closing my eyes to listen to the rapids. The banks of the Rio are lined by basalt boulders blackened by desert varnish and worn very smooth over the aeons. We enjoyed lunch on the riverbank, listening to the rush of the rapids and warmed by the boulders we sat on.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Dilated Pupils

Both spouse and I got eye exams today in Santa Fe. My retina checked out perfectly.

I did 3 miles on the Route. I didn't do 4 miles because I couldn't see well. My pupils were still dilated and I protected them with from the late afternoon sunlight by several layers - clip-on sunglasses, prescription sunglasses and the disposable sunglasses that the eye doctor gives out. The world was blurry and colorless. It made me feel empathetic to people who have eye problems that, while they are not blind, greatly impair their eyesight. The world's visual beauty is so diminished if it's all a muted blur. Plus, it's a hazard trying to walk on uneven ground when you can't see clearly. Be grateful for good eyesight!

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Feeling Better and MVD Overcome!

Today was the WI hike on the Bland-Frijoles Trail 113. There were only 12 of us and no Santa Fe people came along. We parked and started walking about 3 miles in on the north side of Dome Road, FR289, from its intersection with FR36.

Some pre-hike excitement was afforded me when my ride started driving away just as I had opened the back door and was attempting to get into the vehicle but fortunately I was able to step away from the moving car and wasn't hurt. The other passengers warned the driver and she stopped. She thought I was already in the car. I wasn't hurt and didn't dwell on it but it gave me some elevated heart rate when it happened and I was standing still!

Everyone enjoyed photographing the brilliant yellow aspens. The skies were bright New Mexico blue with occasional white clouds floating here and there. It was the quintessential autumn day in northern New Mexico that makes you want to just melt into the landscape and never leave!

We had lunch at the base of Rabbit Hill but didn't go up it. Instead, after lunch, we walked on a ridge between Capulin and Alamo Canyon which gave us good views into Alamo Canyon and of Pajarito Mountain and Cerro Grande. I saw lots of brilliant red barberry bushes on the ridge - very pretty!

On the way back, some of us bushwhacked straight up the ridge but I took the trail and got a ride back to my car with different hikers. It had nothing to do with the earlier mishap but I could see that the hikers who were going off-trail were going to take much longer to get back and I had to meet our daughter at 3:30pm at the Motor Vehicle Division - this time with the notarized gift affidavit in hand - to give her our old car. I got back in plenty of time and the wait was much shorter today and the transaction was successfully done - yippee!!

Today, my muscles felt fine and so did my knee. In the last two weeks, I finished the last two 50,000IU Vitamin D2 capsules and I theorize that they caused the unusual sluggishness.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Frustrating Day Except for "Partying" Coyotes

In the middle of last night, there was a very loud thunderstorm that included one particularly close, booming thunderclap. I don't think a thunderstorm was even predicted and, anyway, what's it doing thunderstorming in October like it's the middle of summer? It should be snowing!

Woke via alarm clock by 8am because I had to get moving to meet daughter at motor vehicle office to give her spouse's old car. After breakfast, went out to insurance company to pick up spouse's proof of insurance for his new car, donated our 22 year old stereo receiver to Casa Mesita Thrift Shop, visited senior center and library and then went to the the Route to exercise.

I parked at the Ocean and started walking from there. I walked all the various logging roads south of Camp May Road and turned around at the bottom of Guardrail Hill. It was one of those days like last Monday when I felt sluggish. My left knee objected to any uphill and my leg muscles were lethargic. It was distressing.

I got back home with about one hour to have lunch before I had to meet daughter at 3:30pm at the motor vehicle office. Then, after we waited an hour, it was our turn. The clerk asked where the bill of sale was and I said it was a gift. He then went to get us a gift affidavit and said to bring it back notarized. I had totally forgotten from when we gave our other car to our son-in-law about the gift affidavit business - grrrrr! I felt like such a nincompoop and so sorry that I had wasted daughter's time. She is so busy now with school, work and moving.

The bright spot of the day was seeing on my walk the beautiful, young aspens with brilliant yellow leaves and hearing coyotes that seemed to be having a joyous time exercising their vocal cords! I didn't see them and don't know how many there were but what an amazing sound it was. I stood and listened until the final yip and then there was complete silence. When I got back to my car, they did it one more time.