Archive for the ‘outdoors’ Category

Thoughts on when the weather goes bad

Friday, April 29th, 2011

Dark clouds over a ridge in the Sierra Nevada in California

A few Appalachian Trail thru-hikers had a noisy night on the trail amid the killer storms that devastated broad swaths of Alabama and Georgia on Wednesday. It reminded me of some of the harrowing tales of beastly weather I’ve heard over the years.

I recall a guy telling me about “nuclear powered lighting strikes” in the High Sierra of California. Not being a Midwesterner, he wasn’t accustomed that unnerving flash and blast some of us grew up with. For me the worst storms happen when I’m asleep; all those evenings in the basement with the tornado sirens wailing — a fixture of growing up in central Illinois — haunted my slumber for decades to come. I’ve dreamed of a thousand twisters for every one I’ve seen in real life. Yeah, I’m grateful.

I’m also grieving as any person with a conscience would be after the terrible aftermath of Wednesday’s tornadoes. If you know somebody who needs help, do what you can. (More guidance at FEMA‘s page and the Red Cross news page.)

I go out of my way to avoid hiking in bad weather — caution and common sense can eradicate 99 percent of the risk of a day on the trail, but weather trumps it all when the skies go black.

If you’ve got any inspiring weather tales or tips for making the best of a stormy situation, please share in the comments.


Hiking blog review: Meanderthals

Sunday, April 24th, 2011

Screen shot from the Meanderthals hiking blog, based in the mountains of western North Carolina

Blog: Jeff Clark’s Meanderthals

Niche: Hike reports from mainly western North Carolina, with a few diversions to the American West.

Nitty gritty: Clark is a consummate hiker/geek: a retired techie whose Internet Brothers site has gobs of tech-related gems. His operative quote — “If you are gonna be dumb, you better be tough –” defines hiking in North Carolina: The trails are rugged enough, but if you get it into your head to venture off trail, you’ll either a) become rugged or b) become mangled in the attempt.

Stuff I like: Jeff has the blogging form down pat: Clean design, thorough blogroll, well-defined scope of coverage (veering off course only for once-in-a-lifetime outings like attending The Masters golf tournament), and icons linking to Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and his RSS feed.

Jeff’s hike write-ups are utilitarian: an introductory paragraph describing why the hike matters, followed by a box with all the key details of the hike, then a Google map with GPS track, then a write-up of the actual hike, and a photo gallery at the bottom. This, frankly, is the most intuitive, useful format for a hike write-up. (Bear in mind, fellow blogger: most popular hikes have already been covered in such fashion, which is why I don’t fret over whether mine has the most useful/intuitive format. Having a blog is about doing it your way.)

Annoying unsolicited advice: I had a little trouble figuring out where the “blog” portion of Meanderthals lives — the navigation menu across the top is elegant and subtle, but also nearly invisible. And hosting a site with a distinct title underneath top-level domain with a totally different name (internetbrothers.org) is confusing — though understandable in this case; it’s dot-org kin to Jeff’s Internet Brothers dot-com domain.

Jeff has a keen grasp of what needs to be said about a hike — key points of interest, advice on dangers, insight on the biomes he’s hiking in. I want more active verbs and less passive voice in his writing, but I want that from everybody (so badly that I devoted a new business to the concept; I’m just a tad obsessive on this point).

Not the last word: Jeff demonstrates what I wish every blogger did before diving in: spending some time to figure out what must done to make a blog worth reading. It’s about making your blog consumable instead of disposable. If Jeff quits blogging tomorrow, he’s still left the Web a bit better than he found it by posting useful, authoritative descriptions of local hikes. We should all aspire to that.

(Addendum: Jeff took up the “profile a hiking blog challenge” and had his review of Two-Heel Drive posted before I finished this one. I realize this looks like some kinda quid-pro-quo but I can assure you it’s just a coincidence. It’s not like he could’ve known I’d be reviewing his site.)


New North Carolina Outdoors Website

Saturday, December 5th, 2009
I just recently found out about a relatively new website that I thought you might be interested in.

The site, called Carolina Outdoors Guide, is a comprehensive directory of federal and state recreation lands in North Carolina, including national and state parks, national and state forests, TVA and Corps of Engineers sites, wildlife refuges, coastal reserves and more. The links pages have more than 50 federal, state and private resources related to outdoor recreation.

The site is an excellent resource for finding parks, as well hiking and camping opportunities on public lands around the state.

I found out about the site after receiving an email from the website owner, Chris Nelson.

Chris started Carolina Outdoors Guide in 2006. As part of his job with The News & Observer in Raleigh, he was in charge of publishing a printed version, called Discover Carolina Outdoors. However, in 2006, the newspaper discontinued the annual guide due to the inability to sell enough advertising.

So, with all the information he had already compiled, Chris decided to launch his own website. He believes it’s the most comprehensive single-source directory available for state and federal public recreation sites in North Carolina.

Chris also publishes a blog in conjunction with the site, called, This Land, Your Land. It allows people to keep up with news developments at the parks and forests around the state.

The site makes for a great resource if you’re traveling to North Carolina and want to see what kind of outdoor opportunities you’ll be near. Additionally, North Carolinians will find this useful if they’re wishing to find something new to do within their own state.

Please click here to visit the site.




Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com Detailed information on trails in the Smoky Mountains; includes trail descriptions, key features, pictures, video, maps, elevation profiles, news, hiking gear store, and more.