Tag: hiking

Posts for trips focused on hiking

  • Night Photography Adventure at Wrights Lake

    The Milky Way, from Wrights Lake, CA

    It seems like my short trips come in clusters. I got back from my Moss Landing excursion on Tuesday, and here I am, posting about another day (evening actually) trip on Thursday. Anything to stay busy I guess.

    I had signed up for a photography club outing for the 23rd, a nighttime photo shoot of the Milky Way, up in the Sierra. I have never done any serious night time photography – I have tried photographing  a full moon a few times but never seem to get the settings right. I figured with a new camera, and tons of YouTube videos on star photography to browse through, I might want to give it a try again.

    The location the trip organizer had selected was Wrights Lake, which is up a ways in the Sierra, at about 7K elevation. It is only a 90 minute drive from my house, mostly on highway (US-50 on the way to Lake Tahoe), with an 8 mile stretch on a paved mountain road. Narrow, winding, mountain road. There is a state campground along one end of the lake, with private cabins and property around the rest of it. There are a couple of other lakes near it and some nice hiking trails – great place to visit one of these days.

    The night that the organizer selected was a new moon, perfect for a dark sky, and also around the peak time for seeing the center of the Milky Way. But on Thursday, the weather forecast seemed to indicate that there would be a cloud cover on Saturday. Grrrr. Well, I had nothing better to do that evening (I rarely do), so I decided to go it alone. I got my camera gear together, read up on camera settings for my new Sony 7 IV, tossed the GoPro in the bag for the fun of it, and headed off to parts unknown. I did remember to put some warmer clothing in and a couple of blankets. It does get a a bir nippy at night.

    I set off at about 5PM, planning to get there with plenty of time to find a good place to setup for the evening. The trip organizer had never been there either, so I was really winging it. All I knew about the area was what I could see on Google satellite maps or on the state parks Website. The ride up US 50 was uneventful – I had been hiking in that area a few years ago and was familiar with the twists and turns. The turnoff on to the Wrights Lake Road is where the fun begins. The road is well maintained and paved all the way, but is narrow with a lot of hairpin turns. Not a big deal in daylight, but I knew that heading back down at 1AM will be a lot of fun. After a relatively quick ride, I turned into the Wrights Lake campground, which is quite large, and drove around looking for a good place to set up my gear. I wanted a spot that looked out over the lake – adds to the overall composition. The Milky Way stretches SE to NW, so ideally a spot on the NW corner of the lake would be best. Unfortunately, that is all private property reached by a rough dirt road. Not something I wanted to drive on late at night. There were some trails heading off to other lakes, but I was not interested in hiking either, especially in the dark. So I settled in near the small jetty they use to launch kayaks and canoes. Overnight parking was not permitted, but I was not planning on sleeping overnight in my car.

    The view from the little jetty was impressive – it is a beautiful, serene setting with low granite peaks to the North, surrounded by a thick pine forest. 

    So now it was about 7:00PM, not even that close to sunset, and many hours before it was really dark enough to see the stars. Crap – I should have brought a book and a camp chair. And more to eat. Bad planning.

    Talk about being bored…I played with the cameras for a while, took some sunset photos from the jetty, and dozed in the car, listened to the radio. And looked at my watch every 3 minutes. Boring. 

    Finally around 9:30, I looked up through the moon roof and there they were….stars! It was pitch black out there, so I drove the car over to the loading area by the jetty, and carefully carried my gear out to the end. I was not alone – a couple or two were heading there to star gaze as well. They owned a cabin on the lake – I should have gotten to know them.

    And now for a brief interlude of photographic techno babble. Photographing stars can be a challenge for non-experts like myself. First of all, it’s really dark, especially in designated dark sky locations. This was not a designated site, but I could not see anything in front of me without my headlight. For cameras, that means you need 1) a fast lens, meaning it can open up to let a lot of light in 2)a camera that can adjust the ISO to a relatively high number. You lose quality (graininess), but gain light sensitivity for an image. But even then, you are going to be shooting at VERY slow shutter speeds – 8 to 20 seconds. 3)So a good, sturdy tripod is a must. And setting a few second delay on the shutter is a good idea too. And (there’s always one more), cameras have a hard time focusing on stars. They are really far away. So it’s best to do manual focusing as well.  And one more thing to watch for….airplanes and satellites. With a slow speed, you will get streaks across the image. Meteorites are fun though – a bright one flashed across the sky while I was setting up.

    OK, enough on the technical side. I had all of the above. I also brought my GoPro camera along to shoot some video, but it was too dark to fumble around with it. I was afraid I might drop in the lake. I carefully wandered down the jetty to the end, where there was a nice tree stump to sit on, got the camera set up on the tripod (no easy task in the dark), and spent about 2 hours snapping away, pointing at different spots above and around the lake. I was hoping the Milky Way would get brighter as the night moved along, but there were no discernible changes after 2 hours, and I was cold and tired. Time to head home. 

    The ride down to US-50 was a little scary, but not too bad – I just drove slow and carefully, especially around the curves. I made it home by 1:30AM. Not too bad. Now I have a ton of photos to work on with Photoshop – that will keep me busy for a while. And are a few that I have started working on which desperately need some editing.

    Finally, hard to believe, but I may be going back again this weekend with the club group. I’d like to try a few different things, like a lower ISO so the images will be sharper. And I’ll bring a chair and food this time.

    And if you are interested in visiting this place:
    https://www.recreation.gov/camping/campgrounds/231954

  • MacGyver, Forest Gump and hiking – Huh?

    This is going to be one of those very strange posts….just a heads up. I need to vent about something which is marginally related to travel. Strap in, here goes. It will all make sense at the end.

    Dictionary

    Definitions from Oxford Languages · Learn more

    verbINFORMAL•US

    verb: MacGyver; 3rd person present: MacGyvers; past tense: MacGyvered; past participle: MacGyvered; gerund or present participle: MacGyvering; verb: McGyver; 3rd person present: McGyvers; past tense: McGyvered; past participle: McGyvered; gerund or present participle: McGyvering

    1. make or repair (an object) in an improvised or inventive way, making use of whatever items are at hand.
      “he MacGyvered a makeshift jack with a log”


    When my wife and I first moved into our house in Gold River, it had a 25 year old heat pump. For those of you who have never had the pleasure of owning one of these wonderful HVAC units, a heat pump is basically an A/C unit that also blows out slightly warm air in the winter. Sort of like having a large hair dryer heating your house. But I digress as usual. The compressor unit vibrated violently when running, and you could hear it from a few blocks away. We were given one of those useless home warranty deals when we bought the house and after reporting the problem, the company sent out one of their technicians who spent hours trying to balance the fan. No matter what he tried, the unit continued to vibrate. So he had a great idea. He pulled up one of the large landscape rocks in my yard and placed it on top of the unit. A miracle – it stopped vibrating. For about an hour or two, when the rock vibrated off the unit. He said he would talk to the managers once he got back to the office. Then I received notice that the case was closed – problem solved! 

    An outdoor air conditioning unit with a large rock resting on top, situated beside a house with a wooden exterior and visible window.
    Problem Solved!

    This is what my wife called a MacGyver solution (I never watched that TV show). Sort of like fixing a broken muffler or a leaking pipe with Duct Tape. It’s ugly, but works for a while. 

    So what’s this got to do with anything related to my travels? Earlier this summer, I decided to try and do something about an annoying medical issue – drop foot. Walking is a complex mechanical process, with a lot of moving parts. As you step forward, a small muscle in the shin keep the foot pointing up so that you step onto your heel first, and roll forward on to the ball of your foot. If the nerve controlling that muscle is not firing correctly, your foot flops forward, making a loud slapping noise on the ground. Aside from the sound, this is also a potential tripping problem for walking on uneven surfaces – hiking for example. Something I like to do on my trips.  

    After a couple of years living with this, I finally went for help, and wound up with an appointment with the UC Davis Neurology Department. This did not go well:

    1. They put me through an EMG test, where they stick acupuncture needles, hooked up to monitors, into the leg and shock you with a small cattle prod. Results confirmed that I had distal neuropathy. No kidding. I already knew that from prior tests.  
    2. Then they ordered all kinds of obscure blood tests to see if there were any underlying issues. Oops. One test was way out of bounds and was an indicator of multiple myeloma – blood cancer. Kind of ruined this summer.
    3. Next I was referred to another department, Hematology, to deal with what was likely myeloma. I was not overly thrilled about having to visit the UC Davis Cancer Center again. That was where my wife was treated for 11 months. No thanks.
    4. Fortunately the blood test was a lab mistake – I had them take another sample and it came out normal. Phew! Bad news for whoever they mixed up the test results with.

    So the end result of this exciting sequence of events was that I still have drop foot, which is what I wanted to solve in the first place. The neurologists had kicked the can down the road, and I have to wait a few more months to meet with another doctor to talk about the neuropathy and drop foot. Grrrrrrr.

    A climbing shoe displayed on a stand with a unique black lamp above it. The shoe features a patterned design in earthy tones and is placed on a decorative stained glass table.

    Now for the MacGyver solution. I had done some research (Google of course) on this condition, and found references to a brace designed specifically for drop foot. I spoke to my primary care physician who scheduled a reference to the orthotics department. I now have a carbon-graphite contraption that fits in my shoe, wraps almost comfortably on my calf, and keeps my foot from flopping. MacGyver rules! It would be perfect if it used Duct Tape to stick to my leg. This hopefully will not be a long term solution, but for now I can take long walks, workout on a treadmill without that annoying slapping sound, and hike (already tried it out) without worrying about tripping. Maybe I’ll use it as an excuse for early boarding on flights….you poor old man. Nah. Not my style. 

    And who cares if I look like Forest Gump wearing a leg brace. 

    Close-up of a person's lower leg with a black ankle brace and a supportive shoe, resting on a light-colored surface.

    Bring on the Manitou Incline!! 2700 steps, here I come. See, I told you I would tie this all together.