September 13, Park City

Well the day after the accident, the rest of the crew did Park City resort's chairlift. The trails were excellent, but the chair was awfully slow. Day 5 they did the Mid-Mt. trail riding from Deer Valley out to past The Canyons. Day 6, I made a morning trip to the hospital then made it out for a ride with Mike. Chris shuttled us halfway up Deer Valley and we caught the downhill trail NCS back down. Then we rode Outlook to Spin Cycle, Valley trail and then some. A great ride and I even think Mike was starting to get tired. Today was our last day of riding. Tomorrow we spring Francine from the hospital, put her on a plane, then Mike and I make the 12 hour drive home.

Mike rides the "Barney Rubble" section of the NCS downhill trail at Deer Valley.

September 11, Salt Lake University Hospital

Unfortunately at the very finish of our Wasatch Crest ride, while the boys were waiting at the car, Francine decided to get stung by a bee. Then during a panic stop she put her foot down too early and drove her femur into her tibia, cracking the top of her tibia. The first person to help was an ER doctor, and he was kind enough to drive us to the closest emergency room. That afternoon they cut off Francine's favorite bike shorts, then wheeled her into the operating room to straighten out her leg. The first night they installed an external fixation device. They drilled holes into her femur and shin bone then screwed in long posts that protruded from her leg. These post were connected by square carbon fiber rods that immobilized her leg. The next morning Dr. Kubiak removed the external fixation device and proceeded to install 7 screws and two metal plates to hold the top of her tibia back together.





September 10, Park City

I went to Park City last year, and unfortunately got rained out. The small taste we had last September, convinced us that we should try again for this year. We got a cheap condo in the center of Park City and invited Chris, Corinne, and Mike U. on our adventure. Day one, we tried a new area, Glenwild. Although we enjoyed the area it did not have the trees or great soil like most of the rest of the Park City rides. Day 2 was Deer Valley chair lift assited Mt. biking. Had a great variety of excellent trails! Day 3 was the big ride, we shuttled a car down to Salt Lake City, then started our ride from Park City, over the Wasatch crest and then a 5,000 foot descent to Salt Lake. 31 miles, almost entirely on singletrack.


The crew on top of Wasatch crest.
Francine
Chris and Corinne enjoy the views, Solitude and Brighton ski areas behind them.
Rattlesnake on the trail
Mike

Getting the garage floor ready for Cement.

We were headed to Park City, and Lester the cement guy was ready to pour our basement floor, so we quickly prepped the garage with gravel, plastic, foam, and wire reinforcement.

August 23, Crystal Mt. Loop

Heather and Mike were back from world traveling and were psyched to do a good ride, so we went for the Crystal Mt. loop with Francine, Justin, Mike, Kevin, and Heather. It was a perfect day, and I got a good view of my June ski line on Mt. Rainier. Everybody enjoyed the ride, although Mike's head was a little sore from doing a head plant on the way down.






Garage foundation

Francine and I got busy and banged out the foundation in about 2 weeks. Lots of rebar. Lot of work building the forms to only tear them off. Thanks to dad, Larry, for helping on the pour day along with neigbors Matt, Chris, and then Joel who helped pull the forms off.





Summer Project

Some people, like my ski partner manage to ski every month of the year. Personally I enjoy a respite from skiing over the summer. It gets me even more excited when I do get to start the season back up in October or November. This summer, as usual, I have a house project. This year it is a little bigger than normal and involves a new garage to keep our cars snow free over the winter! Hopefully I will get it finished before ski season. Here is a picture I drew using Google SketchUp, a free 3D program.

June 20, Mt. Rainier via Emmons/Winthrop Glacier

I had never had a real desire to climb Mt. Rainier. Growing up in Seattle, it was one of those goals everybody had at one time or another. It wasn't until skiing off the summits of Mt. Adams and Mt. Baker that I thought, hey, it would be kinda cool to ski off Mt Rainier. Well, last summer due to scheduling conflicts I missed out on skiing the Fuhr Finger with Greg. I did do a spring trip to the interglacier and steamboat prow. The top of Steamboat Prow looks down on Camp Shurman and the climbing route was easily visible to the summit. I thought, hey, that route looks pretty easy. So this year when I had a weather window that meshed up with Greg's schedule, I jumped at the chance to go for the summit.


June 5, Beast Adventure Race

This was our second year for the Seattle Beast Adventure Race www.beastrace.com . We returned with the same great team; brother-Kelly, niece- Maddie, and nephew-Jack. Overall we finished 12th out of 35 teams, but we were second in the coed 4 person category. The race started with a canoe section on Lake Washington then restarted by order for the biking/orienteering/running sections.

May 29 - June 2, Panorama, Lake Louise, Banff





The Canadian Rockies is a place I need to ski! My parents were ready to see Lake Louise and invited Francine and I to accompany them on their trip. Thinking of all the Mt. Biking possibilities we loaded up the bikes and headed to Panorama to begin the loop. Then it was up to Lake Louise to watch as the ice receded from the lake surface in amazing warm weather. The scenery is incredible and even though I have skied the ski area I am dying to come back and ski some of the beautiful backcountry ski lines! Truly an inspiring area.

May 22, Anvil Rock - Muir Snowfield

I hadn't made it to Paradise since the floods last fall shut down the park, and with the weatherman predicting only one clear day this week, I decided to convince Greg that he needed to get out of the house and drive me to Paradise 5,400'. We discussed destination options, decided the Nisqually chutes were getting too much sun, didn't really need to visit camp Muir again, how about Anvil Rock 9,500' with a little foray onto the Paradise glacier to jump a crevasse?

May 19, Teanaway Area with Bob




It was Bob's annual camp-out on the Teanaway river. Francine has made it the past few years, but it has been awhile since I have been able to attend. We were scheduled for Friday-Saturday, but Friday was gorgeous and I had some new motorcycle tires for Francine's bike. So at least we made it for one of Bob's rides. We left our house in the rain and drove down to perfect riding in the Teanaway. Our group started out at about 25 people from BBTC, then splintered in half for a longer/shorter ride. All in all, nice to see old friends and meet a few new ones.
http://bbtc.org/

May 8 - 10, Hood River Mountain Biking


Hood River was the destination for the second week of May. Always a favorite for the variety of excellent trails and the great town. Tired of camping, and thinking it was a little cold, we rented a small house just blocks from downtown. We used the rationalization that we could save money by cooking at the house. Unfortunately, Hood River has a great selection of restaurants and we ended up eating out for all three nights. Brian's Pourhouse, for a burger and fish tacos, sweet, HorseFeathers for $1.00 appetizers, and finally 3 Rivers Grill. Actually didn't like the food at 3 Rivers Grill, but they have a great deck. We were able to eat outside all week, since the temps were near 80 degrees. The riding was perfect; day 1 - Whoopee trail, day 2 -Post Canyon, and day 3 -Hospital Hill with a descent on triple bypass.

Francine in the trees on Whoopdee trail

Mt. Adams in the distance

Triple Bypass was good and narrow

May 5-6, Mt. Baker - Coleman/Deming - Close?

It is springtime in the Northwest, and for backcountry skiers, that means it is time to start skiing the volcanos. Knowing that Paradise would be a zoo on opening day, and wanting to minimize drive time, we decide on Mt. Baker via the Coleman and Deming glacier route. Unfortunately due to high winds and bad visibility, we called it a day at 9,100 feet. 1,600 feet shy of the summit. We still got some good turns in, and I even got a good sunburn.

Frank and Greg traverse to base camp at 7,100 feet.
Greg roped up for glacier travel on day 2.
Making a retreat in the clouds

Better visibilty and good turns from base camp down to 3,500 feet

Greg's excellent trip report:
http://www.randosaigai.com/colemandeming050507.html

April 11-16, Sea Otter Classic

Thanks to our friends, Matt and Heidi, we were able to attend the Sea Otter Classic in Monterey, Ca.. Matt does all the marketing for Topeak bicycle products and needed someone to help staff his booth. The Sea Otter is a road and mountain bike festival that typically marks the start of bicycling season.


Francine and Heidi setting up the booth

Singletrack and sheep

Kevin in the hills

Francine in the trees

A stop in Santa Cruz after the festival

April 10, Kendall Peaks

I got off work this morning and checked in with Francine. She said Greg had called last night. I decided to call Greg and see if he wanted to go ski. He was a little groggy, but quickly made up his mind to go. We had heard there was a little new snow, so we were envisioning dust over crust. We were very wrong! The snow was 6-8 inches deep. Nice to get a powder day this late in spring. Today we skied. Tomorrow, we fly to Monterey to work the Topeak booth at the Sea Otter Classic.

Greg makes good turns off Kendall Ridge

Does this look like spring skiing?