Archive for Exploration

Seattle, Twin Falls Trail, and Gold Creek Trail

// January 6th, 2012 // No Comments » // Exploration

In mid-December, Cait and I took a trip to Seattle to do some extreme hiking with her sister Eliza in the Cascade Mountains. While traveling there, we took a flight from Tampa to Dallas, and transferred to another flight to Seattle. In the Dallas airport, while the plane was boarding, I started getting hungry, so I ran to McDonalds and bought a Kid’s Cheeseburger. About 1 hour before the plane touched down, I started getting nauseous. I sat up, stopped reading, and thought, “What the heck is wrong with me?!” I told Cait that I wasn’t feeling well, went to the back of the plane and stood in the middle of the isle, propping myself up with my hands against the headrest of two chairs. When my hands and feet starting going numb, I resigned myself to going into the bathroom before I made a scene by throwing up over someones shoulders. It was that moment that I realized I had food poisoning from that mediocre-tasting cheeseburger.

The following day in Seattle, we stopped by REI to get some last minute outdoor goods and then drove into the mountains.

The Roaring River bed and breakfast was a tranquil (despite it’s name) little place atop a cliff touching the Snoqualmie River.

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View of Snoqualmie River from the Cabin

Upon arriving the sun was setting over the mountains, so we rushed down a steep trail to see the river below.

The Roaring River Bed and Breakfast hike
Driftwood on boulder in Snoqualmie River
Driftwood on boulder in Snoqualmie River 2
Snoqualmie River

The next morning we traveled to a Ranger’s station to inquire about the avalanche conditions of nearby trails. I was still coping with the residual symptoms of food poisoning, and also acquired Cait’s cold, so I knew a summit push was out of the question. We instead opted to hike Twin Falls in Olallie State Park.

Twin Falls Trail
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Twin Falls Trail 2
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One of the Falls at Twin Falls

The next day, we wanted to get some use out of the snowshoes we rented from REI, so we drove higher into the mountains (a short drive) and embarked upon the Gold Creek Pond Trail. Signs around the trailhead state that a “Wilderness Pass” is required to park, but after calling 8 numbers on the sign, talking to the 5 other hikers that were in the area, no one really knew where to acquire these passes. We parked anyway, and thankfully avoided the $120 fine. If you plan on hiking this trail, find more out about the pass by visiting the nearest ranger stations first:

North Bend Office 42404 SE North Bend Way North Bend, WA 98045 Open Monday – Friday 8 am – 4:30 pm (425) 888-1421

Snoqualmie Pass Visitor Center Open Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend Friday – Monday8:30 am – 4:00 pm (425) 434-6111

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Dustin in snowshoes
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We went snowboarding the following day, and then explored the city of Seattle the day after. I didn’t have my Canon 7D on me when I was informed we’d be going down to Seattle’s “Fish Market”, but I wish I did — walking through the merchant shops was a pretty cool experience. After leaving the market, we walked about 3 miles to the Seattle’s Olympic Sculpture Park and Art Museum. Ironically, I realized that the sculptures and man-made objects were not that interesting, but rather I enjoyed what nature could provide to the city.

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Neukom Vivarium is a art-piece by Mark Dion. He took a fallen tree from a forest and brought it into the city. Housed in a greenhouse, with irrigation and ventilation systems, his goal was to show the ever-changing ecosystem with time and symbiotic relationships among organisms, even after the tree’s death.

Neukom Vivarium Greenhouse
Neukom Vivarium sign
Neukom Vivarium greenhouse side
Neukom Vivarium inside

Alas, for those that love the city, and that which is man-made: the iconic Space Needle.

Space Needle

Kayaking in Silver Springs Florida

// September 26th, 2011 // No Comments » // Exploration

School has been a full time gig (maybe two), so I haven’t been able to make any posts.  This should be expected for the next two semesters.  That being said, I can always find time to post pictures.  Last weekend a buddy of mine stopped over after playing GI Joe for the weekend. About 3 months ago, we went Kayaking in Silver Springs. When my buddy stopped by, he brought some pictures that he took while we were on the trip.  The pictures that follow are a mixture of some I took, but mostly many he took.  Also, if you get the chance, check out some images on his website: www.WildAmericanPhotography.com.

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If you would like copies of any images on this site, please send me an email. Additionally, check out the gallary with the link below.

See more pictures here!

Anclote Key State Preserve and Tarpon Springs

// August 11th, 2011 // No Comments » // Exploration, Life

A week late, I’ve decided to follow up on all the events of last weekend. Around Wednesday, I was trying to mentally prepare for the arduous task of fully moving out of my old apartment. Although, Cait and I moved down to Tampa, our old apartment still housed some of our belongings. On Thursday, I made the trip up to Gainesville, and got a little work done. Ok, I’m lying — I laid on the couch. Later that night, I decided to go see Captain America (3.5/5 stars) at the movies. The next morning, I got a call from Cait:

 ”When will you be done today? We’re going to the cabin again this weekend with Michael and Melissa. I think John, Michelle, and Liam will be coming too!”

I guess I really needed to put some “pep in my step.” I’ll say, the call was a necessary reinforcement to get the job done.  I mean, I wasn’t necessarily procrastinating because it was a lot of work, but more because there was this residual feeling of “home” that I was about to leave behind.  Home to me was Cabana Beach. I had lived there for 5 years — the longest I had ever lived at any single location. To Cait, Cabana Beach will be remembered as a place where robberies and late-night block parties were oh-so-common.

When I was a Boy Scout, my dad always said “always leave a campground better than you found it.”  I will admit, it was hard to improve that student-living apartment. However the American Flag can make even the darkest and dustiest places seemingly hospitable (think the moon). So before I left, I staked a small flag into the astroid-looking rock outside of our old home.

Flag in cabana rock
Acura when moving
Cabana checking out

Two hours later, we met up with Michael, Melissa, John, Michelle, and the little one at their families’ cabin in Homasassa. Immediately anxious to get out on the water, we decided to go for a night boat-ride.

Homasassa Springs
night ride

When we got back to the cabin, we sat around and had a couple drinks. Let’s be honest: the phrase “heavy drinking” is very relative to the person saying it, because these days three beers will leave me with a splitting migraine in the morning.

A night of relaxing

Ultimately I did wake-up the next morning with that predicted cranial insult, so I took some Ibuprofen before I started to prep the boat. After all was done, we filled Liam’s pool with water, and went scalloping.

Liam in his pool
Boat leaving cabin
The Stars and Stripes

Immediately upon arriving to the scalloping site, I put on some fins, mask, and a snorkel and attempted this Navy Seal scuba-backflip off the side of the boat, only to hit my head hard on the hull before I landed in the water.  I wasn’t sure if it was the growing knot on my head, the hangover, or a mixture of both, that resulted in the worst 30-minutes of swimming I had ever done. Fortunately it all subsided, and we went on to catch some amazingly big scallops.

Later in the afternoon we went down the road to grab some drinks at the Bayport Inn.

Bayport Inn

Cait noticed some Hurricane flood markers on an electric pole and questioned what they were. Remembering that New Orleans recently put these in the neighborhoods inside the newly build levies, I was able to offer an answer.

Hurricane Flood Markers

Inside Bayport Inn, we ordered drinks…and let me tell you — nothing feels like vacation more than a Piña colada.

Pina Coladas

…and of course, pop tarts.

Liam eating a pop tart

Afterwards we went fishing, and the girls went shopping. I didn’t take any pictures of the shopping, and no, we didn’t catch any fish.

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Sun

But the food at the end of the night was soooo fulfilling.

Salad, Steak, and Scallops

The next day we all woke up with food-babies. Realizing that  we woke up one hour before church starts, and church was more than an hour away, we opted to spend Sunday on the water. Our plan was to make the 50-mile round trip in a boat to eat in Tarpon Springs and relax on the adjacent beach of the Anclote Key State Preserve. Liam and his mom took ground transportation, as the rough water might have been too abrasive for the little one.  The GPS ultimately made it’s way back in the car during the return trip, as you can see from the map below.

Tarpon Springs is a touristy town known for it’s sponge harvesting and docks.  We’ve been there once before (riding by bike via the Pinellas Trail), but it was a lot more welcoming by boat.

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While we were there, we stopped by Captain Jack’s to grab a quick bite to eat, and enjoy another Piña colada.

Captain Jack's

The drinks were considerably better than Bayport Inn’s. Afterward we traveled westward on the Anclote River past Meyers Cove towards Anclote Key State Preserve.
Upon arrival, Michael noticed a group of fiddler crabs fiddling around under the pier.

Fiddler Crabs

After John picked one up, it was determined that it was safe for baby Liam to go crabbin’ for the first time in his life — only if he pursued the female fiddlers, because the males have a dominant pincher on one side (read about my last experience with another ferocious crab).

Fiddler Crabs
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Liam catching a fiddler crab 3

Anclote Key State Preserve is a truly unique place on the Gulf coast of Florida.  White sands, crabs and birds galore, and seemingly untainted by human presence.

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For me to recommend it would seem hypocritical to my last sentence, but it’s hard to not recommend such a beautiful and relaxing place.

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“It’s not an adventure, until something goes wrong.”

// July 18th, 2011 // 4 Comments » // Exploration, Life


Every Thursday after my Organic Chemistry lab at UF, I drive down to visit Cait in Tampa.  The drives are always boring, but the visits are always eventful, to say the least. Last weekend our friends, Michael and Melissa invited us to stay with them and some other friends at their cabin and go Red fishing in the Gulf.  Although knowing, through experience, that good luck and fortune doesn’t frequently follow me into unfamiliar waters, I was extremely excited about the invitation. Last year during R&R leave from my deployment to Qatar, we ran out of gas several miles offshore. We had to call a company named Sea-Tow, which took more than an hour, to bring some needed fuel.

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This year, it was unfortunate that we didn’t just merely run out of fuel…

We starting the morning by prepping the boat, making sure we actually had a near-full tank of gas, cleaning of the live-well of the crabs caught the night before, rinsing the deck, filling the cooler with water and Gatorade, rigging the fishing poles, etc. Michael sees a crab in the front of the boat that escaped the ice death his buddies were being induced to.  Michael reaches down with a Styrofoam cup to try to get this crab to squirm in a direction that would make it easy to pick him up without a net. After about 5 long minutes of dancing around the boat with this crab, I saw an opening to reach down and grab it from behind.  Unbeknownst to me, this crab had incredible flexibility, which became shockingly apparent when he reached under his own body and grabbed the tip of my index finger with his large claw! YOW! Human “intelligence” once again is inferior to nature’s evolutionary instincts. Seconds later we moved the crab from the boat to the grass using a net. I thought he deserved a different fate than his friends for his valiant effort, but many would (and did) disagree. Laughably, leaving him be was almost reckless, as the crab later almost grabbed the tip of a dog’s nose that was poking around the area.

After my finger was bandaged up, we boarded the plywood flats boat and set off hoping we would bring back some redfish for dinner.

Michael during our redfish expedition that later became rather scary.

We were fishing for about an hour without any luck, so we moved to a shallower location.  At one point the water was so low, Michael jumped out to push the boat through a small opening of vegetation.  When he got back on the boat, he was surprised to find the trolling motor was not working. By inspecting the cables, it was obvious what the problem was: the wires had become exposed through over-use and tension, created a short circuit and melted together. In any normal circumstance, this is a 1 minute fix, but given that we had to fish some excess wire from inside the hull (or claustrophobic storage compartment) of the boat, this was more troublesome than it looked.  I climbed into the 1.5 square foot hole, pulled the cable through, spliced it with a Gerber I had in my backpack (Boy Scout motto: “Be Prepared”), and fed it back to Michael, where he spliced the other ends and duck-taped the wires to keep them separated.

michael fixing trolling motor
trolling-motor

After changing the fuse, the motor immediately cranked up.  We fished for a little longer, trying a couple more spots for trout, but after having no luck and seeing the incoming storm, Michael increased speed, and we started our way home.

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On the way back, we were talking about not catching any fish, dodging the incoming storm, careless boaters, hardcore scallopers (about to get swallowed by the storm), and “Is it normal for the floor of the boat to give this much?” The ride back was rough; the waves got tougher and my back started to hurt, so I moved to the more-forgiving back of the boat with Michael until we returned back at the cabin.

After the storm cleared, we all decided to go out and try our luck at scalloping. We loaded two boats, the plywood boat we were on earlier, and another nicer boat. We told our friends in the nicer boat to lead the way, so we could follow their smooth wake out to the dive spot.

Cait, Mel, and Michael

During the trip out, Michael noticed our friends in front slowing down. He said “I think they’re trying to splash us,” so he slowed down as well to avoid the aquatic assault. Soon after they sped up again to our original speed of around 20-25mph. Not even 5 minutes later, I was sitting on the footlocker (see above) facing the port side of the boat when I felt a huge rush of water come from the bow of the boat.  I immediately thought “they got us wet!”  Then I felt the box under me trying to float, but tipping into the water — the same box that has my Canon 7D and lenses in it.  I looked to the front of the boat, and it was totally submerged. Cait and Melissa were originally sitting near the front facing the bow, when the floor of the boat ripped out from underneath our feet as we were going 25 miles per hour. The sudden halt jolted both of them forward in the boat. Somehow, as one of our friends from the other boat observed and later told us, Melissa was flipped upside down and all they saw were her legs sticking out of the water. Fortunately, after we all gathered our composure, everyone made it out physically unharmed, and so did my camera gear!

Our boat sank

When we all boarded the nicer boat, we appraised the severity of the damage done to the flats boat, and called Sea-Tow. Even with a membership, they said they do not tow sunken boats, but they would attempt for a nominal fee of $4,000. Melissa said, “WOW, I’ll swim the boat out for $4,000.” Hearing the news, we decided that we were better off trying to the tow the boat back in ourselves.

I jumped back into the boat, dove into the 1.5 square foot hull while it was under water, and recovered life jackets, nets, and chairs that were attempting to float inside.

me in the hull

Using the radio on the other boat, we made several attempts at reporting the boat (for liability and environmental sake). Soon, we realized the attempts were futile, and we were better off returning home so we could remove the kids from the boat and come back out to potentially salvage the remains. At the last minute, I remembered that I forgot that my Garmin Oregon 400t GPS was attached to the captain’s chair (which was underwater).  I dove back in to fetch it, believing that it was ruined by being underwater for 30 minutes at this point, but was surprised when it worked perfectly after I retrieved it.

On our way back, Melissa’s Brother-in-law called his friend Zane who had been fishing in the water near our location.  He met us in the channel, where I hopped on to his boat to show him where the wreckage was, while everyone else went back to the cabin on the other boat. Zane and his Father-in-law tied the sunken boat onto their boat and began towing it back.

Zane and His father-in-law
towing the boat home

This was a feat in itself, and after hours of hard work, expert command and maneuvering of his own boat, Zane and his Father-in-law successfully towed the entire boat (except the piece of floor that washed away at 25mph) until we could winch it out of the water. Because of Zane’s successful effort, I figured I’d give his fishing and hunting charter business a plug here: FLTailFeathers.com.

In the end, I rode back to the cabin with some friends, and we enjoyed a feast of sea food that was caught (by them) the night before!

Our ride home
The feast after the fiasco

The Chi-Town low-down

// May 15th, 2011 // No Comments » // Exploration, Life

Here are some recent pictures from our trip to Chicago. The link to the full album is at the end. Please check it out if your curious where the pictures were taken.

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More pictures from our trip!

 

Undergraduate Graduation

// May 1st, 2011 // No Comments » // Animals, Exploration, Life

Finally, after 9 years of being an undergraduate student, I graduated. Funny thing is, I still have 2 more years of undergraduate post-baccalaureate work! There are also some pictures of Paynes Prairie from my parents visit.

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Check out the album for more photos!

Changes to the Site

// March 8th, 2011 // No Comments » // Exploration, Site Maintenance

So there are a lot of changes to the site, most of which I wont go into detail about (because they deal with the coding underneath the appearance), but I will say that it’s a step towards making this site more photo and less text oriented. The idea is that in the next two years, I’ll have more opportunities to travel. Secondly, I just picked up a new hobby (photography), so I figured I’d recode this site to complement those two facts. The new framework of this site has allowed me to add functions I couldn’t use before. Anyway, images are easier to upload and organize, and more importantly, I have the ability to show (on a Google Map) exactly where the photos were taken, in case you’re curious, or perhaps want to travel there yourselves.

I have uploaded two new photo galleries, check them out here: A Taste of Tampa and Payne’s Prairie Preserve State Park.

Finally, here is a little demo of me in action at Payne’s Prairie and the new Geo-tag image function of the site!

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You can scroll, zoom, and click with the map below to find out exactly where these photos were taken: