Monday, February 27, 2017

Day 57 2/28/17 - Soldier Trail Endurance Hike


This is a well traveled trail with most people carrying a daypack for water.  I carried my large full pack as I will for the backcountry hike.


This hike doesn't look like much on this map, but it is an aggressive hike with 5 miles rising nearly 2000 feet. This hike was done on Monday to build endurance and will be the last endurance hike before the backcountry hike.


The trail quickly rises up from the foothills into the mountains.  Off in the distance is the city of Tucson.


With a bit more elevation the east side of Tucson unfolds.


Back further into the mountains the inner canyon rises on both sides of the trail.


Looking into the canyon the land rises up and up and if you look closely there is a canyon formed with a stream down inside.
 

Up higher now there is high grass and as with many hikes out here, there are interesting rock formations.


Well into the mountains the highest point on this trail is reached and the decent began.

At the top my thighs were getting tired so I was glad to make it this high with my heavy pack.

Going down hill back to the car takes care with the extra weight of the pack and loose sand and rocks on the path that makes it easy to slip.  

As one reader of the blog pointed out to me that I should be using trekking poles and I do want to point out I do use one and it is great to balance the weight coming down.  I only use one pole as I like having one hand free.

Another blog follower asked about snakes on the trails.  I have not seen a snake yet and I have not met a rattlesnake in my 4 years of my travels.

I'm not disappointed not seeing a rattlesnake, but I have seen 3' long black-neck garter snakes twice in prior years.

 Image from Google search

In both cases these snakes were found in my downward decent hiking and were tucked up against the rocks I was stepping over and couldn't be seen until I almost stepped on them.

After these encounters I put my hiking stick over and down in front of the rocks to prevent both the snake and I being startled.

It will soon be time here in the higher desert to see more snakes hiking.  I have gotten word that a number of rattlesnakes have been seen in the lower desert around Quartzsite where it gets hotter sooner.

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com

Day 56 2/27/17 - Starr Pass Conditioning Hike


Since I took Saturday off from hiking, I jumped right back in with a conditioning hike on Sunday Hiking Start Pass with the added loop around a mountain.

6.3 miles at just under 600 feet total elevation gain was just the hike I needed to stay ready for my impending backcountry hike now that I know I can successfully do the 2000 foot elevation gain.


Starr Pass is a lovely place to the west side of Tucson.  In the picture above you can see the notch between the mountains.  This is the pass to the other side.


Here is an up close picture of the pass and the vast expanse beyond.


The day had many morning clouds.  This picture is interesting with the mountains I've walked around and the cactus ends shining in the light.

The desert is starting to bloom with spring flowers.


This was a morning hike taking about 3 hours, leaving the afternoon for a visit to an afternoon movie.

It is the fact that there are any number of hikes around Tucson of all different difficulties and distances that makes Tucson my preference for a place to spend time in the winter.

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com


Saturday, February 25, 2017

Day 55 2/26/17 - Meeting Friends On The Road


Living on the road in my Prius provides me opportunity and time to make new friends and to visit with some friends, and relatives too.

Last September I was taking a friend from England on a two week tour of the southwest.  While in Zion we ran into a couple from the neighboring community.  We knew they were planning to go to Zion but from the itinerary they had originally provided it looked like we would miss them by a day.

The guy had been over picking my brain on where to stay and go on their trip as they had a family thing that their travels was planned around.

He was to pick my brain again before I left but didn't make it to the house for a visit before I left.  I found out that he was traveling solo and was in Tucson this week.

Since I was returning to Tucson from eastern AZ I texted him and we met for dinner after we took respective hikes at either end of Tucson.

Come to find out he flew into Phoenix and rented a car and drove to New Mexico down I25 and across I10.  He is headed to Phoenix for some spring training ball games then to Sedona, Flagstaff, Grand Canyon, before heading back to Phoenix and then off to see his west coast children for a visit.

A number of people are interested in what life is on the road.  I look to this blog to convey the realities of my life on the road and what I do with my time. I don't find it hard to keep busy.  I find it hard to take down time.

Since leaving home;

- Attended the RTR / met up with old and new friends.
- Met oldest son in Seattle & spent weekend in Victoria, BC
- Met cousins in Victoria
- Spent week in San Diego with youngest son and family.
- Flew home for death in family and got to see some friends while there
- Met up with vandwellers in between and after San Diego
- Met friend from home here in Tucson 
- in between the above I have met and hung out with folks I know along the way 

This has been my routine so far this year.

Still in the wings ahead of me;  
- Visit son and family in San Diego one more time if it fits
- Visit aunt outside Chicago.
- Visit cousins outside Atlanta
- Attend at least one week of the Southeast GTG
- Visit son outside of Baltimore

Along with my future plans I have my backcountry hike and many other things to see and do.

I am not suffering from boredom. 

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com







Friday, February 24, 2017

Day 54 2/25/17 - Back To Back Hikes


I wasn't sure of my ability to hike in and out of the backcountry during my upcoming trip.  This feeling of being a bit inadequate is, I'm part, due to the fact that I'm no longer a young man, but one with  some of the aches and pains that come with age.

Yes, I've done well with my exercise plan that actually started before I left MA, hiking in snow.  Yes, I've been aggressively achieving greater physical results before I even knew I had the reservation for the backcountry hike, but the hike is a bit daunting.  

With a 10 mile hike into the backcountry going down 2300 ft or so and then coming back out rising up that 2000 feet over the last mile.  I wanted to know I would have no problem. 

Ok.  Call me a bit cautious but this is with a full 50 Ltr. packpack carrying tent, sleeping bag, food, water (there is a supply of water once I get there) and all other things necessary for self existence for 3 days and 2 nights. 

Thursday, I hiked 8.6 miles over about a 800 ft rise but it wasn't 2000 feet!  Enter Mt. Wasson and the hike to the peak.

This my Wasson hike has been in my sights, as I have hiked it many times, but not this year, or with a full 50 Ltr. backpack.  

I woke Friday AM and said to myself, I'm going for it today, with only one day between aggressive hikes. I will prove to myself that if I can do the backcountry hike by hiking Wasson Peak today.  This way I will make sure i have no reservations about my 10 mile backcountry hike in March.

The beginning of March is just around the corner. Oh my!

--------

I was the first to arrive at the Mt. Wasson Trailhead, and as I was getting my backpack ready, another guy about my age showed up having never liked the mountain and was interested in hiking together. I was pleased with his request, and come to find out when he asked me why such a large pack, and I told him where I was going, he had been to where I'm going under a company tour hike. 

He booked a backcountry company to get the reservation and supply all the food, and equipment and he just had to carry water and hike in and out.  The company actually passed out sandwiches on the trail.  Their trail guide carried a pack with 80 lbs of supplies for a dozen people.

I know I still haven't told you where I'm going.  Remember that I talk about where I've been or what I've done but not where I am at the time I'm specifically somewhere.



Back to my Wasson Peak hike.  I'm only about 1/4 of the elevation to the peak here in the picture above.  


Mike, who I was hiking with, was nice and friendly and carried a simular pace initially, then I was a bit faster, then I hit a wall about half way, where the saddle is and I took my pack off and took a 5 minute break as he continued on to the peak.  


I eventually caught up to him again before the final assent to the top.  I was worn but not hurting or having any huffing and puffing.  It was the pack and it carried perfectly.  By worn I mean I was just generally tired from the assent.

We stayed there for 10 minutes and then Mike asked if I would like to take the rim trail down with him and although a bit longer I agreed as I have taken it before.

We were doing well and about a 1/4 way down we were both getting tired.  For me the weight and going down hill was worse than going up.  Here I had been concerned about the climb out from my backcountry trip and I should have been thinking about the mussels used to holdback the weight of the pack.

About 3/4 down we both were ready to be at our cars but we trudged on to the end.  We had it and were in a serious need of an hour to recoup.  We parted ways with just a goodbye, wishing each other well.

Down the road I went to McDonalds and got an iced tea after making a sandwich from my compressor fridge at the Trailhead parking lot.

About an hour later I was good and mostly recovered.  No residual aches or pains and no muscle spasms later either.

With back to back hikes of significance out of the way, I knew I was now ready for my backcountry trip, although I have thought of a few things I need to get before I go.

I'm not going to rest on my success of the day, as I will be hiking more times before my great adventure.  Although, I will take Saturday off from hiking.

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com

Day 53 2/24/17 - Sabino Canyon Hike & Water Crossings



I headed back to Tucson from eastern AZ yesterday.  It was a wonderful blue sky day with the temperature in the low 60's.

Just the kind of weather for a hike.  Since I haven't taken a long hike with my full pack, I decided it was the day to do that and that I would hike Sabino Canyon.  

My plan was just for a distance hike with the weight of the pack, so I hiked the tram road that provides an even flat surface.  This is the road that a tram takes people to and from the far end of this beautiful canyon to the visitors center. 


At 8.6 miles this is one of my longest hikes and with a full pack.  The elevation was modest at about 800 feet.  I was gone for 4 hours although my moving time was only 2 hours 40 minutes, spending extra time crossing water.


There are 7 water crossings on this road. All were wet except one.  The highest water level was to my calf, so hiking boots alone will get filled with water.

It was a real pain to stop and take off pack, take off hiking boots and put on water shoes, walk through the water and take off water shoes, then put socks and hiking boots on again.  This took way too much time.  Experienced hikers used white trash bags with drawstrings. 

They put their feet with hikers on and put them in the bags and used the drawstrings to hold the bags up as they walked through the water.  For me I got lots of bending and stooping to take footwear off and on so many times. Not the best use of time.


This was more than enough practice using the water shoes, but I needed some practice for by backcountry hike where I will be crossing the streams.   

I had another problem too.  I forgot my towel to dry my feet between water crossings and putting socks back on, so my socks got very wet when this wasn't my goal.


The tram road is 3.7 miles each way, but I hiked 8.6 as I started my hike and had to return to the car.  I didn't set up the power to fridge in my car as I like to have it run for such a lengthy hike.

My mistake with my fridge was I was charging my LiFePo4 battery as I drove the two hours from eastern AZ to Tucson. While I was doing this I plugged the fridge in the Prius 12 volt battery so the LiFePo4 battery would fully charge without a load on it.  

When I left the car the first time I shut off the LiFePo4 charger but didn't move the power back to the LiFePo4 battery for my hike.

The mistake came to me well away from the car and I walked back and included this distance in my total distance. 

Although I had a a number of mistakes I did find out I need to bring a towel and keep it handy for drying my feet.  I also found that the water shoes hold water and I slid one on each side of the bag where I have my water bottles.  The problem was that the wet shoes leaked through the sides of the bag and got contents wet.  Note to self - don't do that again.  I need clips for the back of the backpack to hang them after use. 

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com



Thursday, February 23, 2017

Day 52 2/23/17 - How Much Clearance Is Enough


Above is the route out of the BLM land I've been camping at for the last 5 days.

I'm often asked about my Vandwelling Prius clearance and where I can't go because of the low clearance.  This picture helps me explain how I deal with clearance issues.


I carry off-road chains for emergencies and if chains are required for snow conditions.  Emergencies are just that, if I  get stuck I will use them.  In my 3 years of Prius travels, I haven't been stuck yet.  I can take out the chains and put them in the tires or just put them under the tire for traction.  I do everything possible not to get stuck.

Take the road above.  It's dried out with a large center ridge.  I knew I wouldn't get stuck in the hardened mud, but I did rub the undercarriage of the Prius when I drove through.

Backup 5 days and this was a slippery silt mess of mud.  A Vandwelling friend had noted their difficulties in getting through this with a Sprinter Van.  If a Sprinter was nearly getting stuck, then a Prius would surely get stuck.

I didn't even trying to get there via this route.  I took the only other route around that added 50 miles and an hour to my travels.

Yes. The low clearance of the Prius limits when and where I can go to some places.  I may have to adjust my route or timing in going somewhere based on weather, and road conditions.  

I do not go places I know I'm risking getting stuck.  I have a good visual ability to tell when there may be a problem.  When in doubt I will get out of my car and walk the area.


At the RTR the grader was grading the road.  There was a dirt ridge down the center of the road.  I knew I could make it over it but I would rub underneath and I did.  I also found the grader had made the off road access difficult to get to the RTR parking area as the grader created a ridge on the road edges.  Getting over the ridge required me to get out of the car and knock down the loose dirt with my foot to make it easier to enter without scraping the Prius bottom.

There are places I wish I could go on like poorly maintained Forest Service Roads, Roads with large amounts of sand, through washes that are rough or water is too high, or over cattle grates that have a large drop off on the other side.

I could go these places with my 4x4 Tacoma Truck or even a higher clearance SUV/Crossover, but I then trade off stealth, mileage, and my Prius as a generator, air conditioner, and heater for comfort.

There is no perfect vehicle to give you all these things with off road ability, and the Prius mileage, but the Toyota RAV4 Hybrid comes the closest.  The only problem as one of the blog followers sent me a video about is that the hybrid version is no AWD but the non hybrid is.  AWD app rears to give better traction than the hybrid.

Those that have been following me know I don't seem to miss out on much having a Prius, nor do my full-time Prius friends, David and Suanne.


We all get to see the real beauty of nature in our Prius's. 

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com 
 
 

 


Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Day 51 2/22/17 - Dealing With Spare Time


Here I sit in my Prius this am, out of the tent I will be using for my backcountry trip.

This brings up the fact that I've been awake since 4:15 am listening to prerecorded podcasts on my old phone, now used for that purpose.  

After 3 hours of laying in my sleeping bag listening to podcasts it is now warm enough to get out of the tent.

Since it is in the 30's and 40's at night I wait until sunrise at 7:00 am to try to get some thermal heat to warm up.  


When I'm on my backpacking trip I will be ready for bed when it gets cold after dark and in the tent for about 12 hours.

I sleep about 7 hours.  Fires are not allowed where I am going on the hike, so it is not possible to take up time by sitting around a warm fire for a few hours before bed. Therefore, I have about 5 hours of dark and cold to pass the time in my sleeping bag listening to podcasts in addition to the 7 hours of sleep.

I can only hope I get more than 7 hours sleep so I have less time to have to pass by being awake staying warm in my sleeping bag listening to podcasts.

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com 

Monday, February 20, 2017

Day 49 2/20/17 - Testing Out Full Backpack


Today was the day to test my new backpack at full backcountry weight, now that the rain has given way to beautiful blue sky's .  

I don't have a scale to yet weigh my pack full.  I will see if I can get it weighed at REI at one of my stops.


This pack has a zippered pocket on the top for easy access to snacks, etc.  There is another zippered pocket in the bottom for easy access to some supplies.  On either side there is room for water bottles that I can access without taking the pack off.

Hanging on the back is my solar charger that charges batteries that can power USB items.


Heavenly, the technical sales associate at REI in San Diego, worked with me to select a bag that met my needs.  After I selected the bag she set the adjustment system on the pack to sit at the right spot on my hips and back.

The backpack carried the weight exactly as I would want and it wasn't long before I wasn't thinking about it.

I walked 4.6 miles through desert sand that is tough to walk on, and I used muscles that I don't usually use.

Next is to test the tent, sleeping bag, and mattress. 

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com

Day 50 2/21/17 - Sleeping Outside Prius


Those that follow my blog know I don't wish to sleep in a tent, when I have my bed in the Prius. 

I used to carry a 2P (2 Person) tent in my Prius but never used it, so I switched this year to this 1P from Walmart leaving me more space.

On day 37 I reviewed this tent and it is my current choice for my backpacking tent in March at 3 lbs. 5 oz.


The tent fits my new lightweight sleeping bag, lightweight mattress, and there is still room for keeping my backpack inside with me if I don't hang it from a tree.

The tent is fine for my trip, as to save a pound, a new lightweight tent would cost $300.00 and that isn't worth it.


I have now slept in my new lightweight sleeping bag for one night.  The temperature got down to 34 deg, and it was warm enough for me with long sleeve tee and pants/socks and fleece cap sleeping in the bag.

Obviously if it was warmer less clothing and colder I would need a liner inside the bag.  

The sleeping bag is lightweight and relatively warm.  It is a comfort level of 30 deg with a lower level of 19 deg.  Don't go by the lower number.  My bag is good for 30 deg.  This should be fine for the backcountry trip.  It is not a winter bag.

For other features to save weight the bag is narrow and not much room in the lower leg area, but it is worth the trade off for weight. 

Being a mummy bag, as the night turned colder, I closed the mummy hole eventually the size of my nose to keep the heat in.




The sleeping bag was so light and as advertised I could blow it up in short order.  It also has a great insulation rating so the cold ground never bothered me.

To get the weight of the pad down it is the size of the mommy bag. Overnight I noticed my leg area of my sleeping bag were off it at the bottom of the pad.  It is also slippery and slides on the tent floor.

I will using the sleeping pad but would like a way to keep the bag on the pad for the night.

I'm trying it a second night but to tell the truth I like sleeping in my Prius.  When morning comes I start the Prius and the heater is set for 72 deg.  

When I wake at 5 or 6 am it's cold in the tent and I try to wait for sunrise.  I would like to have it a bit warmer for the overnight temperatures but it's 2 nights in the backcountry and I will settle for no rain.

To entertain myself in the tent I listen to podcasts I download and often fall asleep to some part of them. There is no cell service where I currently am without using my cell phone amplifier.  I will need to download many podcasts for my backcountry trip before I head out, as there is no cell service there either.


Yes.  Almost tine to head in for the night.


Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com









Sunday, February 19, 2017

Day 48 2/19/17 - Desert Dwelling In My Prius


After leaving Tucson yesterday (Saturday) I stopped at McDonalds for all the downloads I could possibly put on my old phone and then went to a library to work on some things in the internet using a fixed table.

I then stopped at Walmart to restock my fridge and I headed to the higher desert of eastern AZ to organize my new 50 liter backpack and start to do some hikes with the newer larger and heavier pack. 



The goal is to utilize all the equipment and figure out cooking dehydrated food as I have not cooked or eaten it before.  The serving size says 2.5 but if I'm burning calories I probably will need a bag per meal.

The rain I had run away from in San Diego made its way east and I had showers yesterday and today to a less of a degree.  You can see from today's evening picture at the top of the post we still have light showers in the area.

I came to this spot last year for a few days and I have AT&T cell service. If I get on a sand dune I can get a bar or two of service, but where I park my car there is no service unless I'm using my cell phone amplifier.  The cell amplifier takes no signal and is giving me 2 bars of LTE.  This is why I'm able to post while I'm here. The amplifier is working great.

I ate my first dehydrated/rehydrated meal and it was actually very good.  I expect I will carry 4 days of dehydrated food on this hike even though it is a 3 day adventure, to ensure there is enough food.

I won't be eating my daily salad and fruit but where I'm going is worth it.  I can have all that when I get back to civilization. 

After the rain showers pass I will be putting up my tent and sleeping in it with my new sleeping bag and mattress, as I will when I'm on my backcountry hike.

The desert is a great place to test out the equipment for the hike and the Prius is packed to the gills with stuff for this side trip.   

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com

Saturday, February 18, 2017

Day 47 2/18/17 - What's In A Name


Above is the Mc/Mac Aloney, McAlonan, McAlonie Descendants Facebook Page.

I have utilized my travels over the last 4 years to meet many cousins across the United States.  Last November and in January I traveled to Canada to meet cousins as well.

Growing up all I knew about my name was from my grandfather who made sure that we knew were Scottish.  In the 1980's when I had gone to Edinburgh, Scotland to research MacAloney, there was no records of the name.

I knew from my family that my great grandfather was born in Nova Scotia along with his children and then immigrated to northern Massachusetts with his family in the very early 1900's.

It wasn't until I learned about my cousin Sandra, in Nova Scotia, who was documenting the Mc/Mac Aloney families in Nova Scotia, who my ancestors were back to Northern Ireland.

That right, Northern Ireland not Scotland.   

Sandra also had found that the Mc/Mac Aloney's were McAlonan's in Northern Ireland and changed their name back to McAloney upon arrival to Nova Scotia.  We have theories but no conclusive reason for this.  There are 11 independent Mc/Mac Aloney families that came to Nova Scotia, but there are no records to positively tie them together through revords but we all believe we are all one ancestry of the family.

To make this more confusing is that in the late 1800's all the families spelled their name Mc Aloney, not MacAloney.  In the late 1800's religion caused a split in families with Catholic families using Mc and Protestant using Mac. Some families had splits in their families with some using Mc and others using Mac.  My family used Mac, but regardless of spelling we are all one family heritage. 

Enter Graeme Macaloney who's family didn't go to Nova Scotia from Northern Ireland to Scotland.  Yes, Graeme's family spells the name with the second a uncapitalized.

I was always told growing up that Mac and Aloney are separate words and this is how my family writes it.  Where Mac = son of and then Aloney.  A two word last name causes problems within our digital world so I use MacAloney often to prevent confusion when digitized forms are used.

Graeme has been researching the MacAloney's in Scotland and our connection to the Cameron Clan.  He initiated the Family Tree Y-111 DNA testing that matched us as of the same ancestry although it is about 200 years ago most likely in Northrrn Ireland.

We have now a female McAloney who is carrying her father's Y DNA that also matches with Graeme and me.  We are each seperated by only two DNA markers each, which is out of 111 markers.  2 markers being different is expected, with one marker separation for each 100 years.  This means we have 3 different lines of MacAloney's with no exact ancestor tie are now tied by DNA.  We are hoping that all MacAloney and various spellings to be tested to prove our theory.

In the meantime Graeme is continuing his study of MacAloney's in Scotland and what he has found is that our name was spelled differently over time due to the Scottish brogue that wasn't a written language and anglification of what was heard.  It also has to do with how Scottish names were formed.

Here is Graeme's comments on this.

Maelanfaid is an ancient, early medieval Irish and Scottish name that first appears in the annals and manuscript genealogies around 700 AD. It is Gaelic for Prince or Chief of the Storm. There was also a Saint Maelandfaid circa 600 AD at Molana-Dairinis abbey, Ireland. The Scottish names Macaloney, MacAloney, McAlonie, MacGillonie are anglifications of Mac-Maelanfaid. The Irish names Malanaphy, Malamphy, Molamphy, Mellamphy, Mullamphy, Melaniphy, Molanphy are anglifications of Maelanfaid.Other Irish Maelanfaid names are O'Lemon, O'Lemmon, O'Dugain, Doogan, Duggan (but not Duignan, Deignan or Dignan), O’Conliagain, Cunnigan, O’Cuineagan. The ancestors of many modern-day Scottish, Canadian & U.S., Aussie / NZ., Macaloney's, McAloney's, McAlonie's changed their name from McAlonan, McAlonen when they left Northern Ireland in the 1800's, where they had been 'Ulster-Scot planters'. It is believed these people 'Irished' their name from Macaloney etc to McAlonan etc., after they moved from Lochaber, Scotland (some via Islay) to Northern Ireland, and then back to Macaloney etc when they left Northern Ireland. Therefore, many McAlonan's / McAlonen's are also Maelanfaid. The McMartin, MacMartin, McPhail, MacPhail names originating from Lochaber in the Scottish Highlands are recorded in the Scottish Gaelic Manuscript dated 1467 AD as being of the blood-line of Clan Maelanfaid, and therefore are also Maelanfaid

I started out with "What's in a name?"

From what we know is that at one point in history there were no MacAloney's as they had changed their names to McAlonan.  Something also caused these same MacAloney's to remember their roots and bring the name back.  We hope through DNA testing we can pull more pieces of the MacAloney's together and our tie to the Cameron Clan.

What is your family's name story? 

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com

Friday, February 17, 2017

Day 46 1/17/17 - San Diego to Tucson - Leaving Before The Storm


Today I leave San Diego for AZ to resume my Prius Vandwelling.  I will be leaving by noon and will be ahead of the impending large CA storm with heavy rain and high winds.


It's Friday before President's Day weekend and the granddaughters do not have school.  I also signed up to be available for the company my son hired to put gutters on his house.

Above is one of the games I played with the granddaughters this morning before leaving.  I enjoy the time with them and they enjoy the time with me, asking me to stay longer.


The gutter company did come a few minutes early and started work.  By the time they showed up at 10:30 the wind was already gusty but no rain.

As I drove away, heading to AZ, they had extruded the seamless gutter for the back of the house, but it was so long and unsupported all the way, that the wind took the end and wrapped it on itself. Distorting the gutter making it unusable. 

My son later texted me that the gutter company will be back to finish the back of the house.  They did complete the front of the house where it was protected from the strong wind. 


I ran into traffic associated with construction and weather. Above is on I8 just east of Yuma, AZ.  The stop and go traffic for miles had me thinking that it was construction, but it wasn't.  The stalled traffic was caused by the border control station built on I8.  Holiday traffic had overloaded the check station.  A boarder control truck came down the side of the highway with lights on and closed the checking station to open up the miles of backed up traffic to pass just as I was approaching it. 


Later I checked the radar for the San Diego area and the heavy rain was just starting.

It looks like I got out of San Diego just in time.

The following is from NBC7 San Diego

Gov. Jerry Brown has declared a State of Emergency for San Diego County and other counties across California following yet another day of dangerous winds, bands of rain, heavy snow and colder temperatures.

Brown's declaration will allow the County to help secure funding for communities to respond and recover from severe winter storms. 

In Pine Valley, east of San Diego, California Highway Patrol (CHP) officials shut down eastbound Interstate 8 at Crestwood Avenue due to jack-knifed big rig.

One lane of I-8 east of Kitchen Creek remains closed due to a rock slide.


I will be heading to a location in the desert to check out my new lightweight backpacking equipment and dehydrated food that I have never used.

I may be out of cell range to post every day but I will be capturing my findings and preliminary hikes with the new pack loaded to prepare for the backcountry hike in March.  If you don't see a day post for a few days don't worry I'll be back.

Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com




Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Day 45 1/16/17 - Boston to San Diego via Chicago


Here my CA son and I are waiting for our United flight from Boston to Chicago.  I like Southwest Airlines better, as too many people are trying to be the first in their group.

Staying overnight in Boston was the right decision considering our flight is at 6am and I live an hour and fifteen minutes away. This would have meant leaving the house at 3:00 to ensure we got here in time.


We arrived in Chicago a couple hours later and had about 2 hours of layover time to get something to eat.

I was in group 5 birding again as I don't have a status to get a lower group on United.

I got to sleep on both flight segments making the time go by faster. I was listening to podcasts and I had to restart a few after sleeping through them.

We got to my son's house in the early afternoon and he was going to go in his crawl space to put some foam insulation on his hot water pipes, so I crawled in with him and passed him things.

He had a jumpsuit on and me just my clothing so I got very dirty.  We ran out of foam by two pieces so it was a trip to Home Depot for more and it was back in the crawl space to finish up.


We all went out to eat as a family st Red Robin and we came out stuffed.  


It was 8:00 pm when we finished dinner and got back to the house, when I decided to go to REI to buy some dehydrated food to try out for my backcountry hike in March.

I leave San Diego tomorrow (Friday) for AZ and testing of the lightweight backpacking equipment I have purchased while here in San Diego, and to hike with a full pack.  This will be my primary focus for the next couple of weeks.

I will be covering all the details about what I plan on bringing and the impact of those decisions on the weight of my loaded pack.

I am prepared to make some changes as I start to use the equipment.


Brent

macaloney@hotmail.com