Friday, July 8, 2011

Something broke...

Well it's been a long time since I've updated this - sort of lost interest and now that apparently google has messed up all the pictures in previous posts I'm even less interested.

Regardless, here's a little bit of what I did this spring:
 
It was a lot of fun and extremely tiring but I learned a lot and was a great experience.  After finishing out the school year, Marisa flew out and we went for a little drive:

We had a ton of fun and took lots and lots of pictures (well for the first half of the trip at least).

Saturday May 14th:  Picked Marisa up in Anchorage from the airport and drove to Alyeska (45min south of Anchorage) for the night.
Sunday May 15th:  Drove down to Seward, AK and went on a Kenai Fjords wildlife boat cruise where we saw tons and tons of wildlife then drove back to Alyeska after a short glacier hike and seeing a moose and a bear.
Monday May 16th:  Drove up to Anchorage to visit the polar bear in the zoo then continued up to Fairbanks to pack my stuff up for the summer.
Tuesday May 17th:  Left Fairbanks for the summer and entered Canada... then drove... very very far.  Slept in the car that night in Teslin due to not being able to find any place open and hit the road extremely early the next day.
Wednesday May 18th:  Drove from Teslin to Prince George and started to get a little sick of the Canadian Rockies (lots of curvy steep roads)
Thursday May 19th:  Made it back into the US with only a slight border crossing mishap (we got in the wrong lane...) and stopped in Seattle for the midnight premiere of Pirates 4
Friday May 20th:  Drove down the Pacific Coast highway into Oregon and then entered California after dark and stayed in Redding
Saturday May 21st:  Got up early to make a wine tour in Napa Valley at Del Dotto Vineyards where we drank really fancy wines straight from the barrels in the caves.  Then crossed the golden gate bridge and into San Francisco where we went out on a sunset cruise on the bay and saw alcatrez!
Sunday May 22nd:  Drove down the coast a little more and made it down to Santa Monica to stay with Will for the night.  Ventured out a little to see the pier and the beaches at night.
Monday May 23rd:  Got free passes into Disneyland and spent most of the day there!  Watched the sunset back in Santa Monica on the beach then sampled In N' Out burger for dinner.
Tuesday May 24th:  After getting the oil changed in Beverly Hills (where they surprised me with complementary wash and vacuum) we headed out (only to get stuck in traffic for a few hours) and make it to Vegas around 9pm where we stayed at New York, NY and went out for the night.
Wednesday May 25th:  All you can eat breakfast buffet followed by the New York, NY roller coaster then back on the road through the dessert, crossing through Arizona and into Utah.  Got in to Salt Lake City and took it easy for the night.
Thursday May 26th:  Stopped by the Salt Lake Olympic center and crossed into Wyoming and finally into Nebraska for the night.
Friday May 27th:  Long haul through Nebraska, Iowa and Illinois where we stayed in Chicago.
Saturday May 28th:  Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and finally New York where we got back into Syracuse around 11pm

Tons of pictures to see from the trip.  It was such an adventure and we had a great time... and managed not to kill each other.

 
Since returning to Syracuse for the summer I've been working a lot but managed to get together with friends in NYC for the weekend, visit Marisa's sister in Albany and go up to the camp on Raquette Lake a few times.  Here's a couple sunset pictures from the weekend of the 4th:
 

Thursday, March 24, 2011

World Ice Championships

Fairbanks has the best ice for ice sculpting in the world.  I don't know the details but I believe it's something about it being so clear and forming in large blocks.  There are three divisions - Single block classic - Multi block classic - Fairbanks open.  The single block 5' x 8' x 3' and weighs 7800 pounds and the multi blocks are 4' x 4' x 3' and they're given 12 of them and can use heavy machinery and some turn out over 20 feet high and weight over 20 tons.

Anyway, we went yesterday - it's pretty much the end of the competition and I took some pictures (there are probably 4 times as many sculptures - I tried not to take too many.  A lot of them had melted or broken too as it's been warming up this past week.

I was pretty shocked - everything is gigantic.  These towers were at least 10 feet tall
There were lots of slides for the kids.  So of course we played too

They also had ice tunnels so we played in those too


 Bigger slides
 Even bigger colored slides!
Fish slide
There was even a big ice maze that we explored
I don't want to make this post too long so I'll just post a few of the competition pieces and the rest of them are in an album


This one was my favorite - more pictures here
http://www.icealaska.com/component/zoo/item/mbsite-14-2.html

 More pictures can be found here

Monday, March 21, 2011

Catch-up IV

Last week I went on a snowshoe trip with the school's Outdoor Adventure club.  It was about a 2 hour drive out to Eagle summit and we hiked around for about 6 hours up in the white mountains.  The views were spectacular.  Here's some pictures.



 Found some cool formations from the wind and cold







 We crossed over the Yukon Trail and saw some trail markers

A bush plane kept flying back and forth over us - periodically dropping what looked like florescent orange spikes that stuck into the ground in what seemed to be a grid.  We didn't go see what they were but probably some survey of some sort of the terrain.

We stopped at an interesting tavern on the way back down the Steese Highway for some hot chocolate then headed back to Fairbanks.

Hopefully I'll have time to update a few more times this semester before my trip back in May

Curling!

I went curling...  Actually I went twice.  If you're not familiar with curling by name, it's that game in the winter olympics where you slide big rocks down the ice and there are peopling sweeping the ice in front of it.  If you're not familiar with that at all, it's a game created in Scotland and is actually a lot of fun (and surprisingly a really good workout).  The Fairbanks Curling Club had a rookie tournament so Steve and I found ourselves on a team.

The games are very long - each team has 8 rocks and 4 players and you alternate throwing rocks down the sheet with the other team for a total of 6 rounds (so a total of 96 rocks are thrown in a game total).  The scoring is a little strange and there are a ton of crazy rules but the idea is to slide the 40 lb stone while balancing on a Teflon sole down the 150 foot sheet and try and get it as close to the center as possible while blocking or taking out other stones.

The sport is based on good sportsmanship... and drinking/socializing.  There is a bar right in the curling club with a very nice lounge overlooking the sheets.  The whole sport is based on sportsmanship - players call their own fouls (if you touch the stone with the broom or body part) and the wining team cleans up the ice after the game and buys the losing team drinks.  If you get a stone directly on the center (the button) you buy your team a pitcher.  And my favorite part, if you believe you have no chance in winning the match, you can concede the match and offer the winning team congratulatory handshakes before all rounds are completed to allow more time for drinking and socializing and does not carry the same stigma as quitting or forfeiting.

 Pretty much everywhere in Fairbanks has an ice sculpture out in front



This is how to determine if rocks are closer to the center or not.  The scoring is a bit strange, but only one team can score per round.  At the end of the round, the team with the rock closest to the center gets a point for each rock inside the house (orange circle) but only if each rock is closer than all the opponent's rocks.  It's hard to explain but it makes sense I swear.

Anyway it was a ton of fun even though we lost both games, we had drinks after and it was a good time.

Pictures of the Aurora

 There were a few days in February that had some increased sun activity.  I drove over to a friends apartment one night and when I got there everyone was out in the parking lot.  After I parked I realized they were all looking off into the sky and very faintly you could see some green haze above the trees.  We were in a parking lot with streetlamps on a brightly lit campus so to be honest my first Aurora sighting wasn't really that great.  But later that night once I got away from campus they were much brighter.

About a week after that the skies were clear again and we decided to drive up Murphy's dome around midnight.  By the time we got up there the lights were starting to fade but I had borrowed a friend's tripod and brought my camera so I decided to try and get some pictures.  I had never photographed aurora before but my first exposure was the best one I took.  After that I think it was a combination of the lights fading and my playing with different exposure times and I never got anything better.  Hopefully eventually I'll get another shot.
The first exposure - 20 seconds f/5.6 ISO500

 A little hard to tell but I did a handstand here and fired the flash at the beginning of the exposure


 I'm not sure if it's just the way the photo came out or if the Aurora was really a little red but I like this one a lot

Winter Adventures

So I haven't updated much this semester but I'll try to put some pictures up of what I've been up to.  It might take a few posts though.

It took three tries to get back to Fairbanks.  The first day my flight to Chicago was canceled and the second day the same flight was canceled for bad weather.  Finally made it to Chicago the third day but had to sit there for 5 hours because my next flight was delayed and I missed my connection in Seattle.  They put me on a later flight and I finally made it back.

There was a nice warm (above zero) day in January so we decided to go Ice Fishing.  We rented a little hut from the state and drove about a hour from Fairbanks to meet some guys from the fisheries department.
We drove right out onto the ice which was pretty cool
 Our hut had a little wood stove so we managed to build a fire and it kept pretty warm in there.  The huts had corners with holes in the ice but the holes were frozen over and the auger the guys we met had was too big for those holes so we had to fish outside.

The ice was about 5 to 6 feet thick so they use motorized augers
Inside the tent they had where it was darker you could see right down into the hole





 Later in the day the temperature dropped off pretty fast and our beers froze shut before you could finish them

I decided to do a handstand over the hole


Our plans also included snowshoeing that day but we got off to a late start so we ended up going the next day.  Jason, Steve and I had rented snowshoes so we took them out to some trails about a half hour from town.







I made tracks

 Most of the snowshoe was on packed trails from snow machines (snowmobiles)
We found the summit with a bit of a view and ate our lunch.  It was another nice day around 10 degrees above
Afterward Jason let Steve and I shoot off a round with his .44 magnum into some snow.  Our ears were ringing for a few hours at least.

There are more pictures on Steve and Jason's cameras but they're just as bad as me at uploading them.