Our version of retirement: Living a childhood dream

Three inches of snow…
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Thought; well, here we go
Then rain
Warmer
Snow; Gone

A bit of a reprieve
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I’m takin’ it

Keep a fire

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Came through a little north of your area on Saturday the 14th, pushed towards Burns on our way to Utah. My daughter's van had problems & broke down near Riley. We spent the night out on the high desert, damn it was awe inspiring to view the sky, no clouds, the stars were mind boggling. Next morning hooked up our solar panel to her battery after figuring it was the alternator. Made it to Burns found a phone number for an after hours parts store. Changed the alternator in their parking lot. Pushed onto Mountain Home, ID. Spent the night parked behind a restaurant across from the Pilot truck stop. Arrived in Utah around 2 PM safe and sound.

We run onto roadside snow up Santiam Pass. Bend & Sisters were busy with tourists.
 
My daughter's van had problems & broke down near Riley. We spent the night out on the high desert, damn it was awe inspiring to view the sky, no clouds, the stars were mind boggling.

We run onto roadside snow up Santiam Pass. Bend & Sisters were busy with tourists.

Well, sir, in Riley you were approx.50 mi NE of us
Yeah, the stars, when a small moon comes around, are huge, significantly brighter, gleaming their uninhibited radiance

This side of the Cascade Range is like that most evenings.
Now, left of those hills, the coastal influence causes precip so often, the evening sky is seldom gazed upon.
Yes, the doug fir trees are huge
The forest floor full of lush undergrowth
But
The rain
Is incessant
I never minded it, but it drove my woman to the edge

and yes, the Santiam Pass will get you snow

Sisters is a tourist trap
nuthin' else now

Bend
is still doable,
but gotta say, the yuppies have all but ruined that town


Hope you had a nice visit
 
Strolled out to the meadow to take a pee early this morn, my custom.
4:15 AM
The clouds are gone.
Standing there, looking up, scratching my hind end, peeing.
A brilliant sky, chock full of heavenly bodies.
My have had my mouth open.
A wolf wailed.
Not a coyote
I know the difference
We don’t get many
But we get ‘em
Some tagged
Some hybrid
Some wild
Saw one
Last winter
Loping across the meadow
Right where I was standing this morn
The next wail sounded a bit closer

My stroll back to the cabin may have quickened a bit
I wasn’t carrying
 
Strolled out to the meadow to take a pee early this morn, my custom.
4:15 AM
The clouds are gone.
Standing there, looking up, scratching my hind end, peeing.
A brilliant sky, chock full of heavenly bodies.
My have had my mouth open.
A wolf wailed.
Not a coyote
I know the difference
We don’t get many
But we get ‘em
Some tagged
Some hybrid
Some wild
Saw one
Last winter
Loping across the meadow
Right where I was standing this morn
The next wail sounded a bit closer

My stroll back to the cabin may have quickened a bit
I wasn’t carrying

Gary, your "Meadow Run" reminded me of a story about Will Atkins, a legend in Oxbow Maine, and beyond. and how, in 1918, he shot 11 wolves in minutes with 7 shots. The History of Oxbow Lodge.

"He left Oxbow in June of 1918 and went to Edmonton, Alberta, with a supply of traps and equipment. Following the Athabaska and Slave River waters, he traveled to the MacKenzie River country where he worked during the winter. He enjoyed that season on the MacKenzie River, and got along well with the Indians who lived in the area.

That winter he not only accumulated a great number of fine pelts but also collected bounty on twenty two wolves from dumfounded authorities. He was even offered - and refused - an opportunity to work for the Canadian Government and to make wolves a specialty. Eleven of his twenty-two wolves were shot in a matter of minutes - perhaps seconds. He was moving from one camp to another at the time and thus had both his .35 Winchester rifle and .38 pistol with him. He heard a pack of wolves coming his way and hurried into a nearby opening in the woods, where tracks indicated that the wolves were following some caribou that had recently passed through.

He had just taken off his pack and pulled out his pistol when the wolves ran into the clearing. His shouts at the animals slowed their progress towards him only momentarily. He dropped to one knee so that he could put his bullets through more than one wolf at a time, and succeeded in hitting "double" several times. The last of the wolves was shot within a range of a few feet. Altogether, a total of only seven shots were fired. "They thought they were master of their job, but i knew damn well I was master of mine," Will later commented about the wolves. A lifelong experience as a woodsman was doubtless the source of his cool-self confidence".
 
Gary, I haven't spotted any wolves in my travels, but I may have heard some in the distant woods. Coyotes are increasing by me, and the sight of one or more of those close by will hasten my step. :eek:
 
Gary, I haven't spotted any wolves in my travels, but I may have heard some in the distant woods. Coyotes are increasing by me, and the sight of one or more of those close by will hasten my step. :eek:

SB, I saw a critter run out from under our small side porch a good while back. It looked like a coyote...recently while painting the foundation, I found an old dried up, chewed up rib bone of sorts. I love this Don Edwards song.
 
Thanks for the stories and song, folks



The one I saw last winter was a fleeting glimpse
Thought maybe I was seeing things
Then traipsed out to the meadow atop 4 ft of snow/ice pack and examined the prints.
No doubt

Not sure if native, but wolf
not coyote
not coywolf

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my tracks back to the cabin
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(jus' kiddin'...I mean who'd be takin' the pic? Wolves don't have cell phones....probably)


Shared this with an old (real) 83 yr old cowboy
Said there was a wolf lady years ago about 50 mi outa K Falls
Raised ‘em
Then got in trouble
Let ‘em all go
Odd lady
He did some logging for her
She tried to jump on his skidder
Naked


Anyway
thanks for the stories

I so love a good story

Puts me to sleep most nights
Bukowski keeps me up
a rough read
but worth it
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cheers
 
Prolly last of a clear sky for some days
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The forecast is snow
Snow
Light snow
More snow


kinda pretty....the first few months

our tinsel
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the stillness is calming to one's soul
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I didn’t pay much attention to the avian fauna when we first came out here
Maybe due to staying on task with the build schedule
Whenever I’d sit to rest and hear some strange noise in the trees I’d just go ‘whuzzat?’ then back to work
Now? Proud to say I’ve got a handle on some of my new friends

…and their seasons

Nutcrackers appear in winter
Have yet to see ‘em this fall

The nuthatches (now my favs) have come back
Their little minion like ‘beeps’ give me a smile
They are the only bird that commonly walks down a tree, or so says my avid friend up the path
Seems true
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The chickadees are always with ‘em
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Some pics

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heh, my buddy up north thinks he's funny

...I owe him
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Y’all keep a fire
 
Thoreau inspired many

However, I think Heimo said it best 'spend to much time alone, you go nuts'


I do love the stillness of a heavy snow
First few days of that are spent shoeing thru deep paths, camera in hand

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month later
shotgun in hand
needing some noise
any

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What beautiful photos, Gary, Thanks. I loved the magazine cover! :)

I don't know if I could get through a winter like that without going a bit stir crazy or claustrophobic though. I think one must be comfortable with one's self to a great degree, which is an admirable quality.
 
Amazing photos Gary, love to see them and happy you have the camera with you and share them with us! A real treat for folks like me who love the outdoors! Like your shotgun bug-eyes! :p
 
hey, pard, thought I'd dust the webs off this thread, to show you a simple trick to split firewood: "The Splitinator"!Note:( use chain 3/4 of log diam and shorter bungie)
 
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hey, pard, thought I'd dust the webs off this thread, to show you a simple trick to split firewood: "The Splitinator"! Note:(use chain 3/4 of log diam and shorter bungie)

saw that

thing is, I'm done splitting several rounds in the time it takes to fiddle with that chain

but, thank you

heh, a friend down the path asked if I wanted to borrow his fancy hydraulic splitter
....then he watched me go thru a half cord of wood

Gimmee a few minutes to add an update to this thread
thanks for the wake up
 
Rare wetness here
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I’m takin’ it

However
Snow’s a comin’

the shield mountain (named Mt North Wind by the natives) is a strong precursor
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Preparing to brace for the cold

I've battened down everthing I can think of for our third winter here
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Cold itself ain’t so bad, but the wind
At 30-40 below a slight breeze’ll rip yer face off

No complaints about the summer
‘cept it’s duration

We bought more land
20 acres higher in the mountains
A getaway’s getaway
Possibly 5 yrs from now we’ll sell this and move up there

But, for now, just gonna build a little hunter’s cabin (I’ll be the hunter)
I’ve got wood butcher’s withdrawal

…and writer’s block

The little things, like a hanging peg for my over/under just ain’t cuttin' it
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my Lady does appreciate not having to sweep around it, however
and it's handier from the bed

keep a fire
 
Love your photos and stories, makes me feel like I'm there. The first one with the wet needles is a nice shot. Cool you have another piece of property you can visit or live on in the future. :cool:
 
Two words: "starting over"....brings joy or something else. 'course your joy seems in the planning & building. Im glad you have another dream, waitin' up the path...sounds like a GEM! I like your gun holder peg.

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Got a nice dusting last night
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....and a visitor a few paces from the cabin
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mornings are always special
sipping coffee, observing it's evolution

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the Jacob's ladder didn't hurt
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The trip to town was entertaining
Upper Klamath Lake
With the cascading cumulus surfing the hills

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keep a fire
 

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