Rocky Mountain Highs, Midwestern Sensibilities....

Monday, June 22, 2009

Veggies are Here!

The CSA season is for me like a 26 week long culinary Christmas. Each week, I peek inside the CSA box to find out what wonderful produce awaits, my mind immediately scheming ways to chop, steam, grill, and otherwise combine them into deliciousness. I've been known to wake up in the middle of the night with a new recipe in mind, which is, admittedly, a little more neurotic than I'd like to acknowledge. Anyway, this is our second year with Grant Family Farms and promises to be an exciting one. Here is the loot from week one:

First CSA Produce 09
lettuce, spinach, kale, baby beets, cilantro, dill, and eggs

Spinach Washing
washing leafy greens - Doug's most dreaded chore

CSA Veggies Ready for the Fridge
veggies ready for the fridge (will often last well over a week this way)

With a CSA we trade in some time (washing everything seems to take forever) and some predictability (really, would I be buying several bunches of kale every week from a conventional grocery store?), but in return we get incredibly fresh vegetables that have traveled less than 25 miles from the field to our tummies.

Here is my other culinary hobby for the summer - another year of container gardening, hopefully this year more successful than the last. I caved in and bought one beautiful, already flowering tomato plant from the greenhouse but pretty much everything else has been nurtured from seeds on our window sill over the last few months. After last year's efforts were wiped out in one major hail storm, I anxiously waited and waited to put these guys outside. I don't fancy myself a real gardener by any stretch of the imagination, but keep trying in hopes that each year I learn a little more about successfully growing food in preparation for a day when we might actually have a yard and a real garden.

Humble gardeing Attempt 09
lemon cucumbers, thai peppers, basil, rosemary, parsley, two heirloom tomato varietals, and one hybrid tomato insurance plant:)

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Lily Lake Hike June 09

Ashley drives down on her day off to meet us, along with MarKateLiv, for a short hike to Lily Mountain in Roosevelt National Forest. We are all sore from yesterday’s hiking/climbing adventure and whine periodically up the trail (“Is this really only 2 miles?” “Are we there yet?”). But the view from the summit is well worth the short trip, with all of Rocky Mountain National Park sprawling before your eyes. We eat a leisurely lunch and head down just as more rain begins to fall.

Lily Mountain Summit

The weekend ends with a traditional stop at Coopersmith’s for food, then home for showers and a soft bed. Doug and I have lived here for 3 years now and it still sometimes strikes us how lucky we are to live in such a beautiful place with endless possibilities for outdoor adventures. Some people save up all year and vacation in a place where we can head out our front door and spend a weekend all for the price of gas, hotdogs, and beer. Nice.

Married People on Lily Mountain

more pictures here

Climbing at the Monastery June 09

Tired of letting an especially rainy season dictate our weekend activities, we can only think of sleeping outside and climbing rocks. Setting out Friday afternoon, we find our way back to a small, free camping area above the town of Drake in the Big Thompson Canyon. Camping anywhere within a 50 mile radius of Estes Park usually requires you to pay money to sleep on the ground, charging you for things like a swimming pool, shower, and free wifi, which, in my opinion, are all things you avoid while camping. There are a few blessed spots in the nearby national forest where you can camp for free, usually in a much more picturesque setting and without the hum of a giant RV next door. You may have to contend with rowdy locals and a lot of beer cans and debris in your campsite, but I’ll take my chances. We were very lucky this weekend, as it was pretty quiet and the view was even better than I remembered. We clean up our campsite, set up our tent, and start a fire just as Mark and Kate arrive to join us.

Monastery Morning
Our breakfast nook

To the Monastery! We saddle up our gear Saturday morning for the short but steep hike through a gulley and into the Outer Gates of the Monastary. This climbing is all fingers and toes. There are dozens of holds to choose from as you ascent; you just have to find them and trust that you really can stand on a teeny tiny knob protruding from the face of the rock. Climbing for me is almost always as much psychological as it is physical for me, and these tall spires have a way of tricking you into thinking there is nowhere for your next move until you try it. Here’s the rundown:

Going to the Chapel 5.8
Most of the route is hidden from the belayer, so when Doug nervously calls down, “Hey can you look in the book and tell me where the anchors should be?” my blood pressure rises a little. Without a bolt in sight, Doug abandons the route and instead traverses to the anchor for the route next door. I follow him, with just enough fear crossing the traverse to keep me on my toes (literally). Afterwards, Mark leads the route next and eventually finds the original anchors, though they are about 50 feet above the last bolt.

Going to the Chapel, 5.8
Kate and Mark climb Going to the Chapel (the correct/hazardous way)

Simplexity 5.9+

Another pinchy finger shredding good time. Mark’s shoulder makes an excellent foot hold for those who are under 6 feet and can’t do a pull up.

CCD 5.1
Kate leads this earlier in the day and agrees to go back with me so that I can lead and practice setting a top rope. We agree that while being married to virtual rope guns makes for great climbing, it’s a good idea for us ladies to be leading climbs as well.

The Steeple (5.8)
Doug leads up the skinny tower with Mark seconding.

At this point our calves and fingers are aching and the clouds come in, so we head back to the campsite with just a little rain and thunder hovering over us. We get back to the campsite to find that the Access Fund folks who came to do some campsite maintenance left us a 6-pack of New Belgium Mighty Arrow. We cheer and make a mental note to join the Access Fund. Another thunderstorm finds the campsite just as our fajitas are coming off the fire and we have to eat dinner in the car, but the rest of the night is clear and peaceful.

Longs + Sunset
Stormy sunset over Long's Peak

Pictures from the weekend are here, and be sure check out Kate's post and photos as well.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Rolling Green... Wyoming?


I took a small voyage to the Northern Reaches of Wyoming for work this week, and managed to huff enough oil fumes that I never want to work on a oil tank battery again. But, in the mean time, there was a lot of large, rolling green fields to enjoy and the worksite actually was about 30 miles NW of Devil's Tower. I love that seeing 30 miles out beyond the horizon is fairly normal in Wyoming. Some of the other shots are on the flickr page.

Thursday, June 04, 2009

Kill Your Television


Well, don't kill it. That would be rude - but you certainly should stop paying for cable.

2 months ago, for grins, we attached our old bunny ears to the antenna port on the tv and discovered that we were getting all four local network stations over the air in HD. I sat and processed this fact for a few minutes, and then went to look at the most recent invoice that we had received from DirecTv, and blinked at the $83 i had sent them last month.

Hmm.

So, since 1 + 1 = 2, water is wet, and $83 is a ridiculous monthly fee for HD ESPN, i took a spin through the internet to see the state of the Home Theatre Personal Computer (HTPC). Guess what? I discovered it was even easier than ever to complete a homebrew solution to feed TV programming to our little LCD along with a free and functional DVR via the Vista Media Center. We had a desktop PC upstairs running vista (up until this moment, to my discontent) that wasn't getting much use, and already had a hole in the ceiling to run the Ethernet cabling to the living room. One video card and long range wireless keyboard later, (and more RAM, a new Terabyte hard drive, etc etc etc) the 'ol DirecTv receiver has been replaced by our (less sleek) computer.

But this isn't a rant against TV per say, but against the culture required to get that content. Though most of the content is trash (my coworkers all know to not bother bringing up American Idol in my presence. And if you do in the comments, i will fight you.) there are some things that are worth watching - as well as some really good playoff sports. But in order to get it, you have to sign ridiculous contracts for waaay too much money for 90% of the channels you do not ever watch. We watched ESPN, the Food Network and Comedy Central. We had over 250 channels, and that was all we bothered with.

But with the advent of the digital age, all the network channels are moving to a new signal that is more consistent and much sharper. After the 12th, the country's transition will be complete, and we'll all be better for it. Add that to websites like Hulu and most major networks homepages, you do not have to pay the ransom that used to be required to get LOST in HD. In fact, Hulu just launched a new desktop flash based client that can interface via a PC remote instead of using a keyboard or mouse at all! Brilliant!

The one article that is not free, though, is that we have become Netflix people. For $9 a month (roughly 10% of the old cable bill) we get unlimited dvd's in the mail (albeit 1 disc at a time) and unlimited streaming of movies and TV shows through their website. Even better, Netflix has just released a widget that works within the Vista Media Center that allows us to see these streaming movies alongside the same place we watch our live TV. Hopefully this will lead to some more movie-review posts as we actually catch up on all of the movies that we haven't watched for fear of paying $10 per movie ticket.

So, if you're curious about ditching dish, and telling Comcast that you hope they go bankrupt, take a look at the government's DTV website that will tell you what kind of signal from local channels you get. Once you do that, you can very easily turn an old desktop into a DVR, or even build one from scratch relatively on the cheap. There are numerous set-top boxes that are being sold that deliver online content as well, without the need for a full computer. And if you already own an XBOX 360 or PS3, more and more strides are being made to make these useful media extenders to your living room. Like most home projects, it's not as simple as letting the cable companies come in and install in in an hour, but when you think about the $1000 annual budget that you were giving them, suddenly two weekends of time seems worth it. Viva La Revolucion!