Showing posts with label hiking VT NH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hiking VT NH. Show all posts

08 October 2011

Mill River

It was such a gorgeous day today that I ignore the cold I have and the leaf peeper crowds and the packing I have to do and the sermons I have to write (tomorrow and funeral Monday) and took off for a short walk on the LT/AT. I haven't been out since I fell in the NH Whites two months ago and gave myself a huge haematoma and banged my ankle so any stamina I had had is long gone.

Clarendon Gorge and the Mill River were altered by Tropical Storm Irene. This leaf is in a dry spot that up until 28 August 2011 was underwater. The river flows with greater volume of water today than three weeks ago but it still is not the river of this summer.

This whale-like rock also was underwater; the force of the river smoothed it out to transform its shape, to soften its edges. It is now covered with fine river silt.

This living water flows far too fast and strong for any nice baptisms. It churns enough to make one dizzy watching it.

I don't know how many more times I will have to return, how long it will take until my presence will be but a shadow of memory.

21 September 2011

Five years...


of blogging and in the past two, my efforts here have greatly fallen off... partly because of wasting so much time on Facebook, partly because of having a more demanding job, partly because of a general state of being distracted.

Four years ago I hiked up Hunger Mountain on a gorgeous September afternoon and came home to take the plunge and create this blog. I miss that hike. We only got out one night this summer. What a change from last year of tromping 166 miles on the Long Trail.

But life being what it is, we don't always get to do the things we want to do.

And once again, my life will be in total upheaval this winter as I leave Trinity and hunt for another congregation somewhere, somehow... that all means packing up again (haven't unpacked everything wondering if I was going to have to move; it was a premonition... I don't have everything to pack up because I lost a good chunk of it in 2009 when the cellar flooded), and more so, trying to figure out where to live in between calls. It is almost hopeless trying to find rentals on the web because in this neck of the woods, all one can dredge up are vacation rentals where the website only allows plugging in $750/week. You've got to be kidding. I am thinking more in terms of $750/month. (Dream on.)

Meanwhile, I think of those who have totally lost their homes in the wake of Irene three weeks ago. Our state of Vermont looks very different now and our streams and rivers have carved out new beds. We'll adapt, once we get through our loss.

So shall I.

05 September 2010

Back to the daily grind


A quick post after three morning eucharists and before a requiem eucharist this afternoon....

This past Thursday evening, we completed the 273-mile Long Trail that starts at the Massachusetts/Vermont border and ends at the US/Canadian border. I am standing in Canada with my hand on the obelisk that marks the border. I will write more later but we have finished our second long-haul hike. It was marvellous, frustrating, tiring, beautiful — all of those things.

22 August 2010

Summertime silence


Once fall kicks back in, I should be a bit more regular in my posting here. Between working with CREDO and the Strength for the Journey Haiti (Kouraj pou Vwayaj la Ayati) initiative, parish work, and finishing off the Long Trail, my time has not been free to putter here. We only have about 65 miles left to walk of the LT and then we will have finished its 273 miles of punishing rock and root-strewn paths.

Cats are fine, missing me. Miss Funky Paws is back from the brink, has put on weight and is fully herself, loud and feisty.

[photo: from the Forehead on Mount Mansfield, Vermont's highest peak, looking south at Camels Hump, the third highest in Vermont]

07 August 2010

Back to basics


So, midst other things, I have been dealing with a grumpy lower back. It has not prevented me from doing my Long Trail walking but it has made things interesting.

This nonsense has been going on since 17 June when I first was aware of discomfort. At the June Executive Council meeting I had been sitting for three days on hard chairs and then went out for a walk during which I felt twinges. The next day I flew to Santo Domingo for the first Kouraj pou Vwayaj la Ayati conference, which meant sitting on more hard chairs. By the end of that week, I could barely move and felt like everything was crunching inside. The flight home was not terribly comfortable. The following week I went home on Monday because I could not sit happily.

Things got better and then I went back down to Santo Domingo for the second conference. Same deal though not as bad. However, when I got back to Vermont, by the end of the day of flying, I could barely get out of the car.

Fast forward to now. I have gone to the doctor, gotten a slew of x-rays taken, and had four visits to a physical therapist. She initially thought the pain came from the sacrailium joint being frozen and my pelvis is tilted forward causing lordosis (which is true) and got me doing exercises to de-freeze it and my hip joints and is working on getting me to sit up straight. But now that the pain still is here and radiating down on both sides below my hips, she is beginning to think that it is an inflamed nerve (she has not mentioned sciatica) or a herniated disk. Oh joy. But that is just her hypothesising. We will know more perhaps when I hear from my doctor with the radiologist's report.

Meanwhile, I will go back to the Long Trail to knock off another 45 miles. Right now I am uncomfortable most when simply standing still (like four hours behind the altar or in the pulpit on Sundays). Walking last week was OK I am having conversations with my back informing it that this is not acceptable behaviour and it is time to shape up. These days, the pain is only about a 1 to 1.5 out of 10. No big deal, just reminding me that I have a lower back.

And I am trying to stand and sit up straighter. So maybe I should not spend as much time reading blogs and puttering on the computer. Ahem.

21 November 2009

Absolutely nailed


David Hiscoe's 'America's Worst Trail: A Love Story,' in the January 2010 Backpacker magazine absolutely nails the Long Trail. Here are some quotes that combined had me laughing so hard I was in tears. I have said the Long Trail exists to beat you up. He goes one further.

'The Long Trail, I swore, is the worst damn recreational path in America.'

He has so injured himself so many times on it (the most recent shattering his ankle) that his office had two pools: 'one on how long I'd actually be gone, one on the type of injury I'd bring back.'

'Hiking this path, above all, is a miserable, dangerous experience.... As a hiking trail, it's the mother of all disasters.... A hike on the Long Trail is like some sort of bizarre vacation in a wooded Bermuda Triangle.'

'It's an eroded, ankle-torquing mess...because the folks who laid it out did not really believe that anyone would actually hike it.'

This next part is so, so true and what I found so funny (yes, my sense of humour is odd):

'On the northern two-thirds of the Long Trail — and I swear against my mother's good name that this is not an exaggeration — the next nine feet forward is as likely as not attained first by dropping down 16 feet vertically. The method of getting there is varied. There's the "Christ almighty, that's a 5.9 stretch of granite and I don't have a rope and besides folks don't usually try to climb down a pitch because gravity really throws your balance off" descent. Or the "If I grab those ragged, much-abused remains of a birch root, and slide over to that muddy place there, then throw my pack into those bushes and maybe step lightly on that wet, mossy pile of crumbling limestone, I'll only fall five or six feet" technique.... You've just knocked off another three yards... I don't remember a total of more than 30 switchbacks on the 200 miles I've covered so far. [A complaint is the descent to Route 9: aren't there any switchbacks?]

'The sons and daughters of unwed parents who constructed the LT have managed to turn the gently sloping Green Mountains into 273 miles of demonic jungle gym.'

Yes, that is the Long Trail of which we have done about 125 miles and have 150 to finish off next year.

[Burnt Rock: I have to go up that way??? Actually not but the route up does leave you awfully exposed and you wouldn't want to fall over backwards. I also realise I never posted photos from our last time out, going up and over Camels Hump... maybe later after I have raked up the leaves.]

08 September 2009

Long Trail Part 3 of 3

Last installment of photos from last week…


We missed sunrise but the early sun (at 7.00) was nonetheless striking as it rose above a fog-filled Mad River Valley looking up toward Waitsfield.


A cup of java, looking out at the valley from the Stark's Nest... life is good.


Then things got a bit challenging. This portion of the LT had two ladders but it could have stood several more...


as in, you go first and figure out how the dickens how to get down this ten-fifteen foot drop.


Another night, another shelter. Entries in the journal in the shelter indicated the strong presence of mice, ants and porcupines so we hung everything — boots, packs, pants, food — from the rafters.


Last day, after breakfast and a short walk, we faced this slope going up (this portion of the trail gets gnarly).


Here's the view from up top with Compa working her way up.


Looking up [Burnt Rock Mountain]: Are we really supposed to go up THIS? (No, not quite.)


Instead, we come up this, which still leaves you pretty exposed and it's not somewhere you want to lose your balance.


'I can see for miles and miles….' In the background is the ridge we hiked the day before.


this photo makes Ladder Ravine look fairly benign, but it's not a place you want to fall... and getting to the ladder when the rocks are wet looks awfully treacherous.

We've got a lot more sketchy parts of the LT yet to do... just wait for Mount Mansfield and the Nose which has several ladders and drop offs into nothing.

Long Trail Part 2 of 3

OK, here are more of the photos from our recent LT trip.


One of the delights of the LT is meandering on ridges, through forests, being able to look out to either the east or west and seeing views.


And then there's the temptation of lying down in gentle hay at the top of a ski trail on Sugarbush and taking a short nap while letting a sore foot get some fresh air.


This part was almost like being on the Camino de Santiago, probably because we missed the turn-off back into the woods for the LT. We kept on going down the trail and eventually bushwhacked our way back to the LT.


After more meandering through the forest and some up and down terrain, we emerged onto the Antelope trail of Mad River Glen and in a short amount of time, saw the terminus of the famous single chair lift that dates back to the 1930s or 1940s. Having taken it in the winter, it was fun to see it in the summer.


The chair recently was restored completely and various plaques remember those who contributed to the restoration. This view is to the northeast.


The best part of staying up top (not original plan but the shelter 0.7 miles downhill was in major repair process, i.e., they had torn the floor out the day we were planning on staying) was seeing the gorgeous sunset over Lake Champlain...


and almost full moonrise to the east...


with final look at the setting sun over the high peaks of the Adirondacks.

18 August 2009

To the hills


Today it was off to Chittenden Reservoir (after a full day at work) for a swim. The place was hopping with people sitting around drinking beer, smoking (legal stuff), eating, swimming, boating... their dogs milling around. It was fun to swim with a bunch of ducks. I did keep my mouth shut, very shut!

We have canoed several times here. But more important, last summer we walked the Long Trail that goes along the ridgeline you see in the photo. We walked on a similarly hot and sticky day (today it was 91). The LT just goes up and up and up gradually (this photo does not show Telephone Gap), in a rather tedious fashion. There is one point where there is a lookout over the reservoir. Oh, how I wished I had wings to fly me down into the water for a swim and then take me back up to the trail!

Today, from the water, I thought of all those hot, hot hikers. Next week I will be one of them.

Now the sky is greying up which means we may well have a thunderstorm.

08 October 2008

Slacking off

While it may seem as slacking off because I didn't spend most of the day sorting and pitching and packing, my hike this afternoon was for spiritual and mental health, a chance to collect my thoughts now that I have signed off on the covenant between Trinity and me. It is momentous and I needed to hit the mountains of Central Vermont on a warm October day.


The Stowe Pinnacle is a super popular, short (3.2 mile RT) hike that is best done on a weekday because it is a zoo on weekends (and forget this coming one when our state population will double). I am always surprised when I get to the 'vista' which is 0.9 miles up. The trail is fairly steep with some rock stairs so I am always amused that the guidebooks tout this as a good hike for families with children. They have got to have long legs! Anyway, this shot looks west toward Camels Hump; I took it from the vista. The clouds were coming in and, as usual, I was shooting into the sun so quality isn't very good but the fall colours were still resplendent.


After another 0.6 miles around the back of the pinnacle, through a small col and then upwards on a relatively new trail, rerouted because the old one was worn down (the traffic on this hike really erodes the trail), one gets up to the top (even by two new ladders). Across the way is Mount Mansfield with the antennae for Vermont Public Radio and Television and Stowe ski resort (which may be sold soon because it is tied in with the failed AIG).


One can NEVER have too many photos of Camels Hump!


I realise I never put up photos from last week of the fall colours when they were at peak. These are a bit washed out and the trees are losing their leaves but this gives you an idea of what we've been seeing this fall.


Caminante looks wistfully out at her favourite mountains wondering when she will next get up Camels Hump, Hunger Mountain and the Pinnacle. It will take a lot more planning. So in a way, adios.

20 September 2008

Back to the mountains

The days of being able to jump in the car and drive 35 minutes to get to the bottom of Hunger Mountain in Waterbury are fast drawing to a close. Since I got off to such a late start, I decided to do the harder but shorter hike that is on the west side of the mountain (i.e., more daylight) rather than the east side that has all the slabs. I realise that my second posting in this blog was done on the fall solstice in 2006 about my hike up Hunger Mountain so it was fitting to go up there once again. The photos aren't too good because I was shooting straight into the sun to the west and it was overall hazy. But here they are for memory's sake.


The little red arrow over the bump to the left probably won't show because the photo resolution is too low but that is what I went up. Note the bullet-looking hole in the windshield — that is from a rock that hit my car the day after we smacked into the moose in May. My inspection sticker expires next month so I will have to get it fixed finally.


An hour and 40 minutes later (about normal for me), I arrive up top and face due south. If it had been clearer, you'd be able to see Killington-Pico where we hiked three weeks ago. Instead, you get a general view south, which is where I will be moving.


I have far better photos of Camels Hump from up top here but this is what I saw today.


And this is what others saw, eek, a scowly, squinty Caminante.


Down on the road heading back to the highway, I pulled over to catch the beginnings of a sunset (with mares' tails).


My reward for hiking up Hunger Mountain beyond the views? A wonderful home-made salsa with a huge heirloom yellow tomato and Roma tomato from my garden along with hot peppers from the huerto, too.

19 September 2008

Quick walk


We have had a string of absolutely GORGEOUS days when it is clear, dry and not too hot. I have been cooped up inside working (as I should be), unable to hit a mountain. Hiking up somewhere becomes all the more essential as I will soon be losing my base of operations in north Central Vermont and will be striking out from a place 65 miles to the south in south Central Vermont (aïe, I am moving south — it's all relative; I am still in Vermont which is pretty far up there).

I didn't have time to do anything serious today but knew I could take a quick walk up to Cheney field that overlooks the town. It's a 15 minute walk straight uphill to the highest point from where I took this photo looking NW to the Worcester Range beyond Montpelier. Tomorrow if I can swing it, I will go up Hunger Mountain (the highest bump to the left of the range); I haven't been up there yet this year and my time is running out to do it. It's so, so hard.

02 September 2008

Too much going on

There's too much going on to put up a decent posting. Suffice to say that I am back from three days and two nights on the Long Trail, escaping all the work that is here. We have now walked 65 miles of the LT, about 22% of it.


A photo to whet your appetite: Chittenden Reservoir from up on high as we saw it through the trees on the Long Trail. It's a great place to canoe.


This is the Rolston Rest shelter, 5 miles from Route 4, northbound, built in 2004 to replace an older one. It's a nice post-and-beam but even with it being the LT, people have written all over it and carved in their initials. Cheez.


Bed time in the shelter (at 8.30 PM) — I am reading the log book that had gotten chewed somewhere along the line by porcupines. The mice in the shelter were audacious, too. We had the whole place to ourselves whereas a few nights prior there were 10 people there.


Don't ask why there is a chewed-on moose antler at the Bloodroot Gap sign but there is. It gives you something to write home about.

After this marker, the LT levels out and is easy to walk on all the way to Brandon Gap where, once you've crossed the road, it goes back up again... but that's for another hike.

Next posting will be on Thursday.

28 August 2008

Back to the mountains

After such a wet July, we've had a stretch of dry August weather.

Even though I have piles of work to do, I couldn't resist going up a local peak I've never gone up, a simple 3700 footer, Shrewsbury Peak. We saw it last week when we went up around Little Killington. So Compa and I took off and did the 3.8 mile RT in just over two hours. It's a lot easier when you're not schlepping a 30 pound pack on your back.


Looking east, one sees Mount Ascutney (if one goes up I-91, one will see it to the west). Beyond it dimly are the NH Whites. And in the foreground behind a ridge is our house somewhere (near the open fields to the left).


Shrewsbury Peak does not have a 360-degree view, just one to the east and south (that is disappearing as the trees grow). So south one sees Okemo (to the left). If one were truly able to see to the west, one could see Mount Equinox down by Manchester.

So, for a quick hike, one is satisfied.

I was trying out new boots. They have more space in the toe box so my toes aren't screaming at me on the downhills but I need to figure out better the lacing because I think I bruised my ankle. I hope it's just lacing and not the boot itself since I now own them.

It's amazing what I manage to think through on these hikes. Today was no different... I needed the hike.

24 August 2008

Proper 15A


Over the years I have spent an awful amount of time considering rocks and their placement. I know all the rocks that I have dug up and not dug up, and the ones that turned out to be ledge. I have climbed up the biggest rock pile around, Mount Washington. I have marvelled at car-sized boulders scattered down a slope, boulders that are surrounded by gaping holes into which a hapless hiker can fall. I have delighted in seeing our mountains always there for millennia. Basically, if you live in the Greens or Whites, you know rocks and assume they are solid.

But speak to the residents of China, whose ground has been anything but solid, whose ground moved to the terrifying force of a powerful earthquake this past May. Earthquakes, those moments in the earth’s life when the earth must realign itself and refind its equilibrium, shifting two plates one against another, cause massive upheaval. An editorial in the New York Times from several years back about the earthquake in Turkey stated that as the earth finds its balance, ‘it radically unbalances humans. In a tornado or hurricane, there is something roaring and visceral out there, something embodied, something approaching, a force acting on a human scale of time and amenable to a human sense of narrative. An earthquake is simply too swift, too impersonal. It offers no sense of sequence, just a dramatically compressed time scale, before and after. That is especially true in this earthquake, when everyone awoke only to the sequel. Restoring the survivors to a sense of living continuity, a sense of Earth’s stability, will be as hard as rescuing the missing.’ (1)

The scope of this calamity surpasses our understanding. The numbers are numbing. The earth is anything but solid and that thought unsettles even those of us thousands of miles away. We prayed and continue for the thousands of dead and missing as well as the survivors and we reached out to them as best we could with a special offering to ERD. And, most likely, deep down inside, we gave thanks that such an earthquake did not happen to us.

+

Without belittling the terrible earthquake in China and others, I want to turn to another seismic event that has shaken some over the past half century. And that what has happened to the church, the rock that was supposedly as stable as the earth. But, as we have seen, the earth is hardly stable but able to move with great force. And the church, as an institution, has not remained stable either. Unlike an earthquake, however, where massive destruction and death result, the changes that have taken place in the church have brought new life and fresh air into an institution that was not only a rock but a rock getting covered by moss. Nonetheless, the changes have been unsettling for many and, as a community, we need to respect those feelings.

What earthquakes have transpired to the church? In my lifetime of 51 years, all spent in The Episcopal Church, I can point to some shifts… I remember as a kindergartner, going to Morning Prayer in the parish hall, segregated from the adults. No child under ten was allowed in the church where they had communion the first, third and fifth Sundays of the month. The minister, as we called them, celebrated the service in cassock and surplice, not alb, his back to the congregation. Women and girls wore white gloves (o, how I hated them!); female choir members wore little beanies. Boys could be acolytes, girls couldn’t. You couldn’t receive communion until you had been confirmed. Confirmation class, a rite of passage, was reserved primarily for sixth and seventh graders who sorely tested the patience of the rector. Baptisms were private affairs, done at the convenience of the family. Vestries were composed of men (though I know historically that Saint Mary’s broke the mold on this point!).

And then in the mid-nineteen sixties, all this began to change. Away with the gloves and skull caps, the altars were pulled out from the walls. We had several versions of the prayer book enter our lives. By the mid-nineteen seventies, depending on where you were, girls could acolyte, women could join the vestry, the words of the 1928 Holy Communion service were replaced with the words we use at the 10.00 liturgy. By the early nineteen eighties, there were women priests, a new prayer book, and a new hymnal. Baptism now was celebrated in the middle of the eucharist on Sunday morning. By the early nineties, there were women rectors and bishops, inclusive language and the idea that the ministers of the church are all the baptised, not just the ordained.

The revolution, or earthquake, is still going on but on a larger scale. The Anglican Communion is no longer composed of white northern colonialists. With these changes has come much conflict over how we look at authority, interpret the bible, understand human sexuality and understand the role of the bishop in relationship to the people and clergy. Some say we are going through another reformation.

All of this is to say that the church is changing, growing into less of a solid, stuck rock. And while these changes have been painful — someone used to remind me still that one of her first conversations with me in 1983 was how I found the new words of the prayer book unfamiliar — I believe they really are for the best.

+

What, then, do we make of Jesus’ statement to Peter, ‘upon this rock I will build my church’? We know what the Roman Catholic Church did — they based the primacy of the papacy upon this statement. Tradition and history have borne out the understanding that Jesus founded the church on Peter. But did Jesus mean only upon Peter (Petros in Greek), on a rock (petra in Greek) or upon his teachings? One’s bias determines the answer.

The gospel of Matthew takes the story of Peter’s confession of Jesus, as found in Mark, and expands upon it. Three verses — 17-19 — are not found in Mark’s or Luke’s version of the same story. These three verses seem to make all the difference.

After Peter exclaims that Jesus is ‘the Messiah, the Son of the living God,’ Jesus blesses him. His blessing confirms Peter’s insight about Jesus as coming from divine revelation. Peter is the only individual disciple named as a recipient of Jesus’ blessing. Jesus then goes on to speak of the church, and Peter’s role in it.

Those who interpret Jesus’ statement to mean that Peter is the rock upon which he will build his church have to deal with the inherent irony that Peter is more like sandstone or shale in his ability to falter, lose faith and deny Jesus. Peter, the rock, is too much like us, too fallible.

Another way of looking at Jesus’ claim, ‘upon this rock I will build my church,’ is to understand ‘rock’ as God’s revelation to Peter that Jesus was the Christ. Indeed, belief in Christ is what Matthew narrates. And so, in this interpretation, the church is based on this revelation, not on a person.

If, then, we go with the understanding that the rock of which Jesus speaks is his teachings of God’s love and mercy, then we can find in him a rock that will remain solid. If we go only with the understanding that the rock is the church, we are bound to find that over time, it too, will experience shifts.

The seventh-century Latin words of Hymn 518, translated in 1861 and included in Hymns Ancient and Modern, state:

Christ is made the sure foundation,
Christ the head and cornerstone.
Chosen of the Lord and precious,
binding all the Church in one:
holy Zion’s help forever,
and her confidence alone.

The rock, then, is not only Peter, but Christ. It is Christ who unites us into one Body. That one body of inclusion where all are welcome forms a rock far stronger than any building or human. Let us then root ourselves in the confession of Jesus as Messiah, Son of God. That confession is solid, rock solid. That confession will help us weather any earthquakes of change in the church that will come our way.

As the words to hymn 779 (in Wonder, Love and Praise) say: ‘The church of Christ in every age, beset by change but spirit led, must claim and test its heritage and keep on rising from the dead.’ All will be well; it really will be. The church, that wonderful and sacred mystery will continue to change and be alright.

(1) Beneath the Rubble,’ The New York Times, Wednesday, 18 August 1999, A24.

23 August 2008

Off the trail

Three photos with little commentary since it's a work night, I have yet to print out my sermon and for the past three nights I was asleep by 9.00, not 11.00 p.m.... I didn't take too many photos this time anyway because it's all green stuff out there in the woods.


The Shrewsbury Peak trail comes into the Appalachian/Long Trail on the side of Little Killington. It's actually a gentle ascent from there because it's very gradual, walking through trees (always), a fair amount of mud, but it's not straight uphill for which I was most grateful.


We didn't stay in this shelter (Tucker Johnson) but did spend the night on a tent site right by it. This morning as we were making breakfast, a Belgian couple came by. Since the euro is so strong and the dollar so weak, they decided to walk the Long Trail (not the Appalachian Trail). They are somehow managing to do bread-and-breakfasts along the way!


What a charmer, not. This is what I look like after three days of schlepping through the mud, getting bitten by mosquitos, doing a head dive into moss because of tripping on a rock or root (I don't know which and the bandanna saved my forehead). I am standing by the Maine Junction sign — the intersection where the Long Trail veers off the to left and the Appalachian Trail goes to the right. Canada is something like 165 miles away on the LT and Maine 495 miles on the AT. Daunting.

We passed a lot of sobos, south-bound hikers. They've got a ways to go!

It's always so hard to leave the world of the camino. It's so utterly different.