First COMEBACK EFFORTS WITH TITANIUM HIP–SPRING in the Wasatch Foothills
A NEW LIFE–TO ACCOMPLISH GOALS!
Previous to that:
SURPRISE…A NEW GLITCH! A New Surgery Monday–April
A million thanks to Drs. RICHEY, JACKSON, and COLLEDGE and all the medical personnel that helped make this miracle happen.
MY “CABIN” IN THE FOOTHILLS–soon to be in the High Uintas
VESTIGES OF 2012
Brilliant green creeping up the mountains–GRAB YOUR KIDS AND GO HIKING.
Seemingly a bit scarce and drab still–but all of a sudden a stunningly green tree appears.
Then look down amidst the developing green at our feet and look for the miniscule.
You’re wrong! There are flowers there, I promise you. See below.
Take along a magnifying glass for the tiny but beautiful little flowers an 1/8th of an inch small.
Help your kids focus on the small incredible beauty most never see. I do my best to zoom in for you.
Many plants are just sprouting. Look for them and their beautiful textures and keep them in mind for your next hike to see how they develop.
Help your kids look down into the heart of the plants and see what it is sprouting, and what it might become by the next time you go hiking.
What will this become? You will likely be surprised how incredibly beautiful it will be. Have them notice the spines–have them be careful with some.
What will this one develop into? Will it have a flower? Make sure and folllow the same trail in a week or so, and later through the summer.
Likely the most common plant of the foothills is what we call “scrub oak,” the real name being “Gambles Oak.” The leaves are beginning to sprout. Notice the orange growths on the rough bark. What is that?
It is one of the most prolific and fascinating life forms in the outdoors, what we call Lichens–at the end of our hike I’ll show them on all the rocks and tell you a bit about them. Hey, you parents, Google the word and tell your kids about this incredible life form. I’ll mention just a bit at the end.
Is the wood good for anything except firewood? After I show the beautiful leaves, I’ll show you a thing or two I do with it.
Did you ever imagine scrub oak leaves could be so beautiful? How will they look in the Fall? Make sure and go on another hike or two then. Now to one beautiful creation I make with Gambles Oak.
Have you ever seen a more beautiful natural, rustic frame? Yes, it’s made from humble scrub oak. A secret: The corners are the tricky part. They don’t have to be square or rectangular as you can see below framing a beautiful Native cutthroat trout from East Red Castle lake .
SPURGE is considered a noxious weed that is spreading along the Wasatch Front. Among many it causes a very serious allergic reaction, so DON’T TOUCH IT! Google it to learn more.
But, there’s no denying that it is beautiful and get’s even better on zooming in.
Probably the most common seen from the outskirts of town.
Brilliant orange catches our eye. What’s it’s name? Maybe a good project would be to take along the Audubon Wildflower Fieldbook and learn the names.
We haven’t got very far up the hill and already seen so much. I confess that I stop so often, especially on my first hike in an area, that I don’t really cover very much distance.
This beautiful flower is everywhere in the early season.
It gets more beautiful the closer you get. How long will it last?
Small, but with beautiful color.
Here’s the same flower in a different, and earlier stage of development.
This is another early season flower that doesn’t last very long.
As is the case with many of these flowers, they can also be seen all around the cities. I’ve seen one home lot with this flower as thick as dandelions. I’ll get a shot of it and insert tomorrow.
This plant doesn’t seem to have what we can call a flower, but just wait…..
Keep an eye on it as the season progresses, and you will see bursting out of each bud a profusion of what is likely the smallest of the wildflowers.
This is one of the Utah varieties of vetch. Next you will see it in another color.
Sorry about the sun-spot. Look past that and see this shrub’s beautiful blossoms.
Get closer–zoom in.
Now to what might be the most fascinating life form of our hills and mountains:
LICHENS. Of course you should have also been helping your kids notice the incredible rocks and minerals of the Wasatch. For more on that see my COMEBACK YouTube Video #15, and use the 70 rocks and minerals shown there to also help your kids appreciate the wonders of our hills and mountains.
The splotches on these rocks, everywhere from dull unattractive ones to brilliant orange and yellows are LICHENS.
Very slowly these living organisms help break down our rocks–don’t stand around and try and notice the changes, unless you plan on being a few million years old!
There are many thousands of varieties of lichens from our deserts, foothills and right up to Kings Peak.
It is a partnership form of life in which a fungus combines or cooperates with an algae, or visa versa, to make life possible for both. Scientists call it a “symbiotic relationship.” Google it and learn a few details so you can make this fascinating life form literally come alive for your kids.
Ones, like this brilliant orange, and yellow below, were used by the Indians, or to be politically correct, Native Americans, as dyes and paints.
We got a bit of exercise and a big dose of inspiration from the beauties of the great outdoors.
Now back to our little camp and get all of these shots on the computer, and internet to share with all our friends.
Next up we begin getting stronger going up the mountain a bit, and even up the Little Rock Canyon trail–that last Fall I couldn’t manipulate when I was trying “to fake not being a cripple”– to see what unique shots we can get literally surrounded by the Crags of the Wasatch you see below in the Fall.
A NEW LIFE–TO ACCOMPLISH GOALS!
SURPRISE…A NEW GLITCH! A New Surgery Monday–April 8th
COMPLETE HIP REPLACEMENT SURGERY
SURPRISE…A NEW GLITCH! A New Surgery Monday–April 8th
High Uintas Open–YouTube videos on BACKPACKING PREPARATION — Surgery Recovery
Do you recognize this unique scene? Something wrong with it?
BACK SURGERY SAGA PUTTING ON HOLD 2012 BACKPACKING — The whole story
Photo/Essay: #9-Part 1: BACKPACKING 2012–SCHEDULE and PREPARE OR ELSE…….!
Photo/Essay… #9-Part 2: Overcoming Obstacles with Nutrition/Supplements
YouTube Video #9-Part 3: BACKPACKING… PREPARE or ELSE–Gear and Supplements
This is the earliest opening in my experience
If you are alert you will notice that the High Uintas Project is very alive as during my recovery I will post some interesting historical reports related to the High Uintas that you might not have heard of, and I suspect that I’ll beat the prognosticators in even getting some of my 4 trip schedule done before the snow flies–likely the trip scheduled first: HOT ON THE TRAIL OF THE TIE HACKERS ON THE MIDDLE FORK OF BLACKS FORK and BOB’S LAKE
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We all need to have GOALS and boy have I got them. Make out a list of your’s and work on them.
BACK SURGERY SAGA–Putting on Hold 2012 Backpacking and the High Uintas Project
UPDATE: April 20, 2012 Scroll down to see what the specialists concluded and the treatment that will have me overcoming the “obstacle” and backpacking still in my 77th year.
May 16th UPDATE: “overcoming the obstacle” got a bit more complicated, so it looks like the“backpacking still” will mostly be this old guy doing it in my 78th year! “I’m going under the knife” as there is too much of me still working pretty good TO GIVE IN!
May 17th UPDATE: On May 24th I will undergo surgery for my “degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis.” That translated to High Uinta geezer English is: “I’m a worn out old guy!” Recovery can take as long as 12 months, but knowing me, the Dr. thinks I might be ready to backpack by August 24th. I’ll apparently be in the hospital at least 3 days, then a week or so of bed rest at home, and then gradually get back in shape and hope to at least do what I have listed as my first trip for this summer. I will do my darndest and see how it goes. While I recuperate and recover I’ll be doing all the research I need to put all this together, but before the surgery I’ll do PART 3: GEAR so that it might be in time to help all of you with a suggestion or two.. and then I’ll keep you updated on things like the Mirror Lake Scenic Byway opening, and do some YouTube videos and photo/essays on a few of the fascinating historical aspects of the Uintas you probably don’t know about, etc.
BACK SURGERY June 9th UPDATE:
“Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion L4-L5” was done on May 24th. I returned home on the 26th with instructions to not bend over, twist, or lift anything. By my first post-surgery visit on June 5th I was afraid I had exercised too much and maybe done some damage, but the x-rays showed all was fine. I’ll insert an x-ray below showing the titanium thing-a-ma-jiggs installed in my spine to keep things straight until bone grows up to make me strong again.
In spite of the pain, etc. Dr. Richie still believes I will be able to backpack by late August. I have good days, and bad days, one of my daily walks being to REAMS “where everybody knows my name.” It’s my CHEERS! Yesterday, a painful day with difficulty sleeping, had me finally at midnight seeing a DVD my son David gave me–“127 DAYS,” WOW! Aaron Ralston did everything wrong to get himself into his impossible situation–but what he did to survive will stop me forever from whining about a little pain.
SURGERY COMPLICATIONS July 18th Update
I was doing fine with my recovery for about 2-3 weeks when I had increased my daily walking, twice a day, to a total of as much as 6 miles. But then left leg pain and weakness took over and the Dr. suspected that my persistence at continuing to work with pain for 3-4 months possibly caused nerve damage. He told me to back off on the exercise and re-evaluate at my July 17th visit. I was in tough shape for that visit, and today as I report. I did go through a couple of weeks of hell to get off the narcotic pain killer and sleep aid prescribed by the Dr. and am struggling to get along with over the counter pain killers.
The next step is for the Dr. to try and learn what the heck’s going on by having me undergo a
“CT Myelogram L Spine” scan in a week after somehow going through 7 days without Excedrin, Ibuprofen or Noxaprene (pain killing blood thinners). Last night was the first with basically not being able to sleep. I will find a way to get through it, and do my darndest to finish what I started and avoid being “JUST A BUNCH OF HOT AIR! I always have in mind:
GRANDADDY OF UTAH HIKING SLIDE SHOWSl!
Salt Lake Tribune article on High Uintas Project–KSL Podcast–links to Comments and Survival
Click on the link below to go to the article, and then come back to see the photo album with detailed captions, Comments, and Survival discussion.
Click here for COMMENTS and CONTROVERSY from the article
NOW FOR THE REST OF THE STORY
NOTE: Click on the photos to enlarge
Before continuing my review of the photos from the online Tribune article, let’s insert something else to set the stage for those who aren’t sure where the High Uinta Mountains are and how extensive. First a Google Earth view showing the Uintas in relation to the Wasatch front/Salt Lake City, Wyoming on the north, and Colorado to the east–this is impressive even for those of us who know the Uintas.
Below we zoom in on just the Uinta Mountain Range–actually the Wilderness Area, the light portions indicating the above timberline/arctic tundra areas which you can see are very extensive–only beat by the San Juan Mountains of Colorado.
Now to the Tribune’s photo album of my photographs.
.Let me tell you the rest of the story. This alpine lake is near 11,769 ft. Trail Rider Pass, 20 miles from the nearest trailhead, between the Lake Atwood Area and the Painter Basin–all part of the Uinta River drainage. Above it is a no-name 13,247 ft. peak I call Beard Peak. To our right are the slopes of the 13,387 ft. mountain I have named Mount Jedediah which I’ll get to in a moment. Here, in what some maps designate as lake U-74, a giant hooked jawed Eastern Brook trout you see below grabbed my Thomas Cyclone.
This is a little different version of the same picture in the Tribune album, composed and used by the High Desert Museum of Bend, Oregon for one of its displays.
In the center of the image is Explorer Peak and in a glacial cirque at its foot is found Crater Lake you see below.
Here I’m viewing at sunset Utah’s highest mountain, 13,528 ft. high Kings Peak. One of my captions for this scene is:
KINGS PEAK as the setting sun turned it to gold, so far the only gold I have found in the High Uintas.
This photograph was taken on the “survival backpack” as explained a bit further along and in the BACKPACK LIGHT and SURVIVAL segment where the image of my bivouac camp is also featured.
Down the ridge south of Kings Peak we come to Mt. Jedediah that guards no-name U-75 lake where on my 27 day expedition I caught the large brook trout seen below. The 13,387 ft. high mountain, 5th highest in Utah, was (unofficially) named by me for who I think was the most outstanding of the explorers and mountain men of the west, Jedediah Smith. In my Crow Basin trip report I added about him: Smiths Fork, born in the Red Castle area on the North Slope, is also named in honor of Jedediah Smith, who along with his men first trapped the North Slope in the 1820’s. “Diah” as he was sometimes affectionately called was a giant among those early explorers different in that he carried (and read) his Bible, did not swear, nor drink and refused to have to do with women of ill repute.
Here I insert another image related to no-name U-75. This fat brookie was 17 inches long and from 5-6 lbs. To arrive at that estimate I based the calculation on an 8 lb. cutthroat that was 21 inches long. Click on that and then the following to see the math logic involved.
11,130 ft. high East Red Castle Lake guarded by the multiple Red Castle Peaks was also another of those remote lakes that produced larger than normal native cutthoroat trout as you see below.
An unforgettable dawn.
In my 3 visits to the area I’ve never seen another human being and always had a truly wonderful wilderness experience.
Click here for COMMENTS & CONTROVERSY from the online Tribune article.
Click here for related SPOT TRACER DEMO and SURVIVAL issues from the article.
Comments and Controversy from the Salt Lake Tribune article
From the Salt Lake Tribune article
“I want to be like this guy when I grow up.”
“Im so proud to be part of his family and I hope one day his grandchildren can love the
Uintas Mountains as much as he does!”
Diana
“Love it. Utah is certainly host to some magnificent and humbling vistas. I know a few people that traverse the high Uintas on a regular basis. That terrain and isolation is for only the most experienced. Not only does it work out the body – it works out the mind. 1500 miles. Great story !! “
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and Basinboy
Some incredible photos of some of the ‘secret’ spots I have been to over the years. I have long thought Reconnaissance Lake was one of the most spectacular sites in this country. It literally brought me to tears when I first saw it. Red Castle (East Fork of Smiths Fork), is my preferred access to Kings. Even a picture of the rarely seen east peaks of Red Castle. Love this article.”
I’ll let you know if i make it.”
Doug
Julie Andersen-Versteeg “SOOO cool Dad…you’re an inspiration to us all!!!”
Jolene Andersen “Great article!!! My son-in-law, Jared, saw it and forwarded. I’m so proud of your accomplishments!!”
Breea Duerden Dunn “Way to go Grandpa!”
“I’m proud of you Gramps!” Bronson Duerden
Connie Ann
Brynn Duerden from Australia said: “CONGRATS, GRANDPA!!! Y R AWESOME!”
“Read about your travels in this morning’s Tribune, and went immediately to your website. A wonderful story and beautiful photographs. At my young age of 77, which I will celebrate on the 7th of October (with those numbers I should celebrate it in a casino), it is unlikely that I can prep myself to follow in your trailblazing footsteps, so will be somewhat satisfied with reading stories like yours, and enjoying the photos of things I have only imagined but not yet seen. I have been an architect most of my life, and have survived and surveyed four high peaks. Thanks for your story. Respectfully,
Ray Kingston (one of the few Kingston Monogamists)
Teri Antti wrote:
“Yes Uncle Cordell,very inspirational. Since I turned 48 yesterday and can’t believe I am that age! I haven’t hardly got started in life, so please keep inspiring me!”
“Hi Cordell. Im glad that you are reconsidering your ‘Forest Gump Moment.’ We enjoyed your reports over the years and look forward to the next summer to do it all over again at KSL Outdoors Radio.
Your SatPhone Buddy,
Russ Smith”
Crow Basin-Dry Gulch REPORT — NEVER GIVE UP!
Made it back from Jackson Park/Crow Basin. Within a day or two I’ll have up and running a fascinating YouTube video slide show, and a post here following the same outline, but with links that will be very beneficial to all. It will be entitled something like:
WOW…JACKSON PARK/CROW CANYON..SAW IT! SURVIVED IT! NEXT?
Also another one entitled:
ALMOST “SPOT 911” … Prepare to Beat the Odds!
In the meantime you can see what I did on SPOT TRACK Trip #7 clicking on Hybrid and zeroing in to see all the details.
CONCERNING THE LAST TRIP (#6):
WERE YOU SUPER-OBSERVANT?–Following SPOT Tracking?
In an afternoon of hiking I made around 4.5 miles, but felt like it was much more. From there the next morning I made my report via sat phone to KSL Outdoors (at the 6:35 point). Afterwards, seeing where I thought I had to go still, I wondered if this old 76 year old mountain man could do it. I should have had a GPS to know exactly where I was, but did hit my SPOT tracker–so later at home I knew where I had been, and that I had been closer than imagined.
Upper Whiterocks Drainage panorama showing on left Fox/Queant Pass, then in center, North Pole Pass and on far right the Chepeta Lake area.
Vernal and that high country area, the brakes got worse and so in wisdom I turned around and headed for my Springville home and the wonderful Johnson family repair shop.
Click on SPOT TRACK to follow me in this exploration.
Remember you can rent sat phones and SPOT Trackers from our good friend Russ Smith at SKYCALL SATELLITE
It’s not Skycall Communications anymore, rather SKYCALL SATELLITE, but the phone numbers all work still as do the highlighted links.