31 October 2017

BOD San Jose and Bass Lake



18-30 October
C.J. hiking to Fresno Dome
18 Oct, Wed – We left in light rain and chilly temps around 0830. Gas in Covington (2.599). We didn’t run out of the wet until we were almost to Oregon. There was hardly any slowdown as we passed through Portland. We stopped at a couple of rest area and at a McDonalds in Woodland, WA, around 1130 to get me a mocha frappe since I was falling asleep. C.J. did some Google searching and found out that there was a frozen custard shop in Grants Pass. We stopped for gas in Roseburg (2.399) and then found Tommi’s in GP on 4th next to the RR tracks. They have six flavors

freshly made each day, plus coffee. There’s also the scrapings which go into their cheap shakes. I got one of those and Tommi threw in a scoop of coffee so I could try it – that was a lot of frozen custard. C.J. got a scoop of good pumpkin spice frozen custard. Then it was only another 25 miles or so to our hotel, The Ashland Hills, just off the freeway in eastern Ashland. We had dinner at the Luna Café which was quite good, soup and salad for me and a lamb pita with a Luna salad for C.J. Back at the room we caught up on stuff and talked to Chris A about where the profits, if any, from the Chelan events were going.

19 Oct, Thu – Breakfast was at 0700 so I got up at 0630 to shower. Breakfast was quite good; there were a couple of Belgian waffle makers and a vat of sausage patties as well as the usual cereals and oatmeal. There was also, lots of fresh fruit, hard boiled eggs and some mini cinnamon banana muffins. We were on the road before 0745. The fall colors were muted but colorful as we passed over the Siskiyous. A big cloud bank covered most of Shasta although the top and bottom were occasionally visible. Shasta Lake level was down a bit from the last time we saw it but nothing like the lows of past years. Some smoke was noticeable in the northern area of the state but it was not so hazy as we got farther to the south. When I wandered off the lane for the second time, we stopped for another McDuck’s mocha frappe in Willows. After that I didn’t really feel like I needed any lunch. We stopped for gas near Dunnigan at Pilot and got a 5-cent discount using our Good Sam membership card. Then we drove on all the way to San Jose. Strangely, our GPS sent us to the south of SJ to the Wyndham Resort. We had to backtrack up 101 to I-880 before reaching 1350 N 1st St and the Holiday Inn-Silicon Valley. We checked in around 1500 and went to the RRRG presentation by Mark Forbes. Around 1730 we walked a few blocks to Yamadaya, a ramen shop which had so-so ramen but good kar-age chicken. When we got back we went to the Bay Area flying weather presentation by Evan Cohen (and Honza via conference call).











20 Oct, Fri – Up early enough to both shower and get to breakfast. We didn’t think there was any reason to go to the Strategic Planning committee meeting (but it turned out that almost everyone was at that meeting as it was dealing with how to decrease the size of the USHPA board…maybe eventually to seven people). We had vouchers for 50% off the buffet breakfast. It was a really good buffet with made-to-order omelets, bacon, sausage, pastries, fresh fruit, hot chocolate with whipped cream, etc, etc. However, it turned out that we should have received a voucher for free breakfast as guests registering through the USHPA deal. We were able to pick them up at the front desk and the clerk said she would take the breakfast charge off our room tab. C.J. and I went to the Insurance-Finance Committee meeting chaired by Mark Forbes. He was pretty surprised to see so many people trying to fit inside the small room he had chosen. There was a lot of discussion but what we were there for was to find out about the requirement for insurance at an ACE (a non-comp event like a fly-in) event or the landowner would not be covered (even though the club had insured the site for the year. We found out that it was a new requirement based on RRRG rules (and it had
Jayne and Donnita Hall
not been the case that in prior years our landowners were not covered). C.J. had a lunch meeting/interview with Donnita Hall, the retiring Exec Dir of the FFF.  I had had enough food for lunch so just ate a Greek yogurt in the room while getting ready for my Awards Comm. Meeting at 1330. The only attendees were C.J., Jug and Mark F. We quickly chose recipients and changed the IOTY requirements by adding a requirement of a recommendation by a fellow instructor and/or instructor administrator.  We attended some other committee meetings (not too memorable, eh?). Around 1800 we gathered in the lobby and paired up people with cars with those needing a ride to the icebreaker. Jayne DePanfilis and David rode with us to Steins in Cupertino, a busy beerhall/pub. There was some snack-y food laid out on a long table and I got a flight of dark beers. Janneka (?) had name tags to match up for prize bags (My tag said Pot.ter and I found my match in a guy whose tag read “Hairy” and got me a led flashlight and a pair of fuzzy gloves, all item from Daiko Japanese 100 yen store). Later I got a seat at a table next to Russ Locke (still recovering from a paralyzing injury sustained in a crashlanding at Yosemite). And ordered a Stein Burger which C.J. and I shared. We got out of the noisy place around 2100 and the GPS worked fine to get us home to the Holiday Inn.

21 Oct, Sat – Up early enough to get the breakfast buffet again and still get to the USHPA membership meeting at 0800. At 0930 the BOD General Session began. It looked like the
Association’s finances are looking pretty good but our membership has dropped sharply to below 9000. I gave my report after a long report from the AIRS committee. Afterward I found out that I had lost a nomination somewhere for Bill Soderquist from Dan DeWeese. And Chris Santacroce and Paul Murdoch asked me about what we could do for Frank Gillette, the former Reg. 5 Director who recently died. I didn’t have a good solution if they wanted something awarded this spring. Mark gave us a ride to Goodies Ice Cream which had interesting flavors of handmade ice cream – perfect for a decadent, traditional lunch: two sundaes. Back at the general session, I asked the board to amend the awards comm. report by adding Bill Soderquist for a commendation and Frank for a FAI Hang Gliding Diploma. After finishing up the reports, Randy Leggett did a Q and A on the RRRG. The meeting ended early around 1730 and C.J. invited Calef Letourney, a new RD from Vermont to join us for dinner at the Smoking Pig on 4th Ave. He was a good conversationalist and we learned a lot about flying in Vermont (and nearby Quebec). He also has been running trips to Valle and only charges $1100 for 9 days incl. airport pickup, transportation and lodging. Dinner was BBQ pulled pork and brisket, beans, and a corn muffin which C.J. and I shared, plus a beer and cider. Back at the room I wrote in my journal while C.J. did another Spanish lesson.

C.J. at Ed Levin 300-ft Hill
22 Oct, Sun – We slept in a bit and then had another excellent buffet breakfast. I got the hotel to take the charge for the first breakfast off our bill. We checked out and set the GPS for Ed Levin County Park. It took us to somewhere in a light industrial zone nowhere near Ed Levin. Resetting to another option we followed directions to the actual location where Wally was teaching and paid our park entrance fee. C.J. got packed up and we walked across the LZ to the NW corner where Wally was picking up his “critters”. Aaron and Omi were waiting and we all rode up with Wally to the 300-ft hill launch. There were several other instructors (Jeff Greenbaum, Jesse Meyer) both hang and para. I volunteered to drive and made several trips up and down the hill to pick up the students and C.J. By around 1300 the wind had switched to more west and picked up and the lessons were ended. C.J. had gotten in two flights. We drove north on 680, and 580 then east on 140 through Tracy to Manteca where we stopped at Costco to buy a rotisserie chicken, a pineapple and a bag of oranges. We also filled up the gas tank (2.639) (good thing since the gas prices near Bass Lake were all over $3). The last hour of the 3.5 hr trip was on winding mountain roads east of Mariposa through a lot of burned forests. We stopped in Oakhurst to buy some groceries at Vons. The GPS took us right to the Worldmark at Bass Lake and we got checked in to our unit. C.J. made a salad and we had some of the chicken for dinner. I contacted Ron Jones, the site coordinator for the nearby (sort of) Tollhouse launch and got an invitation to come down and fly. It sounded like he would drive us up so Wally would not have to bring his big truck.



23 Oct, Mon – After breakfast we decided to go to the local ranger station to get info about local hikes. I thought we might do the Sierra Vista Scenic Byway so I just threw my hiking pack in the car and wore cotton clothes. The ranger station was closed so, after a quick look at the Mono Trail, we drove over the ridge to Oakhurst to go to the TI. We picked up a bunch of brochures and then decided to go to Glacier Point in Yosemite and maybe hike somewhere. On the way we stopped at the Sugar Pine Railroad, a tourist steam engine narrow gauge ride. There was quite a bit of recent fire damage (Railroad Fire) on the way to the park entrance. Once there we had to wait for 15-20 min for a one-lane construction area between the entrance and the (closed for restoration) Mariposa Grove. We drove past Wawona on Rte. 41 and continued to the turnoff to Glacier Point. There was a fire on the right side below the road but fortunately the wind was from the west and was blowing the smoke away. When we reached Sentinel Dome, the parking lot was full and we had to join other people who had parked alongside the road. After a short wait to use the single outhouse we started off on the 1.1 mile trail to the base of Sentinel. The trail then went around to the NE side and steeply up for another 0.1 mi to the summit. We had lunch on the granite slabs looking out at Half
Half Dome from the base of Sentinel Dome

Dome and the High Sierra peaks. Behind us was Yosemite Valley and Yos. Falls and El Capitan. There was a peak identifier on the summit and we were able to pick out all the mountains in the clear air. Having decided to do the whole 4.9-mile loop to Taft Point, we started down and then turned left descending through the woods to Sentinel Creek and Roosevelt Point where there was a different view of El Cap and the valley including the field in which we thought we had landed when we flew from Glacier Point on our hang gliders back in the 80’s. It was a long uphill walk to the next
C.J. at Taft Point, El Cap
intersection where we went right 0.5 mi to Taft Point, all downhill. Taft had several deep (2000’!) fissures, one with chockstones. At the edge was a small metal railing and then a dropoff that seemed to go all the way to the floor of Yosemite Valley. It was dizzying. We started back up to the parking lot around 1630 and made it up the mile by 1700. It seemed a bit faster returning south on 41 and we would have reached WM by 1830 but once we got back in cell phone range we heard from Ginny and Wally who were planning to stop in Oakhurst for pizza. We met them at Raleys Grocery and then went to Me’n’Eds for dinner. It must have been close to 2100 when we got back to the resort and C.J. and I certainly felt ready for a shower.

24 Oct, Tue – Ginny made a scramble for breakfast and there was special bacon, orange juice and C.J.’s pumpkin spice cream cheese muffins. Ginny had some work to do so we didn’t get started on our hike until after noon. Then we drove the short distance to the Willow Creek trail head on the upper road around Bass Lake. We got on the trail about 1300 and almost immediately lost the trail since we figured that it would be along the creek. Instead the trail climbed steeply up a rocky slope while we bushwhacked along the south bank of the stream. Eventually we crossed over to the other side and found a trail there while I mostly walked on the granite slabs on the side of the stream. We reached Angel Falls and had lunch in the shade. There was a large diameter pipe that started above the falls – probably the water source for the community of Bass Lake. [There was a building at the trailhead noted on the map as the Bass Lake Chlorinator.] We continued upstream on the left side and finally climbed up far enough to hit a fire road. A quarter of a mile up the road (or less) we took the right fork to get back to the creek. It was a good place for Ginny and C.J. to soak their feet. A hiker showed up coming along the right bank of the creek, crossed where we were and told us that the main trail was along the south bank. So, when we started back down we followed the well-trod path on the south. We were out of the woods by 1545 having covered 2.5-3 mi. We took the scenic route back going on the lower road through the town of Bass Lake – not much to see except a lakeshore crowded with mansions and one day-use park (USFS?). Back at the condo C.J. and I went over to the pool and hot tub. The pool was much warmer than the creek, but enough to cool us off. Later C.J. made chicken with pesto and served it over angel hair pasta along with a spinach and fruit salad. Ginny gave C.J. an assortment of lotion and creams for her birthday and served an assortment of cheese cake slices for a birthday cake. Later I signed waivers  online and paid our day-use fee to the Central California HP Club online.

25 Oct, Wed – Wally and Ginny went out to breakfast at the Pines (Ducey’s) while we had our usual. Since they had decided to walk, they weren’t back until after 1130. Around 1150, Ron called to say he’d like us to get to the LZ around 1330. We managed to get everyone out the door by 1215 and took the KIA. Ginny had decided that her time was not best spent in long drives and waiting around while we flew so she stayed behind. [Later she drove down the west side of the lake through North Fork and then down to the San Joaquin River Gorge where she had a good walk along the river and returned home just as we arrived back at WM.] Our route took us through North Fork and across the gorge of the San Joaquin River, then up through Auberry (spelled “Au-beary” on their sign perhaps in honor of all the carved bears in the small town) and on to Tollhouse. We were a bit early so had time to get our boots on and gear arranged before Ron arrived promptly at 1330. He took us across the street from the cemetery parking lot to the huge LZ and pointed out where the launch was and how people usually flew the site. Then we loaded our gear onto the back rack of his old Jeep and we headed up the many switchbacks of the old toll road to the summit. There we turned SE onto Burroughs Mountain Road, a rough, 4WD track, and went a couple miles to the launch. It was an excellent launch with shade for set up and a clear, mowed grassy area for takeoff. We got more information about possible house thermals and cross-country routes. I launched at 1600 and immediately climbed above launch, but not too far. I was out of shape with respect to thermal turbulence, so I didn’t get much higher than a bit over the top of the mountain (4200). Wally and C.J. seemed to get somewhat higher but not the thousands of feet above that we thought might be possible. After working the area around launch for a while, I started off to the NW and found quite a bit of sink. It wasn’t until I got almost across to a ridge extending down from where Rte. 168 (“the four-lane”) crossed the Burroughs ridge that I found a nice mellow thermal and was able to core it back up over 4000. Meanwhile Wally had gone out to the LZ and landed. I faded back toward where the old toll road zig-zagged up the mountain below “Squaw Tit”, now called “the bump” or something else innocuous. I was careful to avoid the area to the right which was a deep canyon often with a lot of sink and a headwind when trying to get out. I didn’t find much over the ridge below the four-lane and had to head toward the LZ. I made a wide circle before coming in to land into the light breeze. (0:44) C.J. followed a similar route and landed sometime after me. Ron was already in the LZ to greet us and make sure we got down safely. We packed up and got going around 1730 and retraced our route back to WM Bass Lake arriving around 1835. Wally and Ginny took us out to dinner at Ducey’s, an upscale restaurant in The Pines Resort. The soup, salad, lamb shank, duck breast and my petite filet mignon were all excellent.

26 Oct, Thu – Wally and Ginny were leaving today so we had only the morning to do something. We drove over to the west side of the lake and walked the Trail of the Mono which had information about the Native Americans who lived here before the Europeans arrived. The trail led past a granite outcrop which had depressions that had been ground out by stone pestles for grinding of acorns to flour, the basic food of the Mono people. When we returned to the KIA, we continued south along the lake past Millers Landing Resort and the rock and earthen dam to North Fork.  We checked out the USFS ranger station which was really nice and had lots of things to buy as well as some free Smokey Bear stuff. Then we spent an hour at the Sierra Mono Indian Museum and had a really good docent explain some of the intricacies about the basketmaking and the materials used (like deer grass and bark of the redbud tree). We got back to the condo around noon and Wally and Ginny got packed up and out sometime after 1300. We ate some chips and hummus for lunch and then headed off to have some ice cream at Reimers in Oakhurst. We also browsed through the outdoor sports and souvenir shop next door, Sierra Nevaqda Trading Post. Thinking that might go for a drive up the Sky Ranch Road past the (closed due to cleanup from the Railroad Fire) Nelder (Giant Sequoia) Grove, we stopped at the TI and checked to see if the road was open as far as the Beasore Road so we could make a loop of it. The head counsellor said that it was but that the road was very rough. We went anyway and the pavement did stop near the entrance (2 miles down the road) to the Nelder Grove but it wasn’t all that bad – certainly nothing like the Burroughs Mtn Rd. We stopped at a somewhat obscured view of Fresno Dome, then farther up the road there was a better view. Finally we took a left fork leading to Fresno Dome CG (also closed) and got a really good view of the granite dome (7540’). Backtracking to the Sierra Vista Scenic Byway which we had been following we continued up and over a 7300’ high point and then down another mile (for a total of 20 mi) to the paved Beasore Road. There was a rest area and a 700’ trail to Cold Springs Meadow there. So, we took a break before heading back down the very wind-y road to Bass Lake and our condo at Worldmark (around 1730). We’re down to 5/8 of a tank so we’ll pick up gas in North Fork before doing the rest of the SVSB on Friday. For dinner we had the leftover lamb shank, leftover potatoes from the Newhall’s weekend, and a fresh salad.

27 Oct, Fri – After breakfast we took our hiking gear and drove into North Fork to get gas at Vons (3.299) so that there would be no chance of running low while we were out in the boonies. We stopped at the ranger station to ask about identifying the trees with reddish, deeply-fissured bark, and flattened cedar-like foliage, but they were “busy” so we looked in a guidebook then left. Our plan was to do the whole 100 miles of the Sierra Vista National Scenic Byway. The weather was cooperative – it was another beautiful fall day, if a bit warm, especially in the sunshine. We skipped the chance to see the geographical center of CA a few miles SE of North Fork down Italian Bar Road near Redinger Lake, but we did stop at an overlook to look down at Redinger and the San Joaquin River Gorge. The cycles were blowing up on what looked like a perfect launch (no place to land, of course, but the TO looked great). We stopped several miles farther up the road at a junction with a road that went down to the river and a powerhouse. I got the binoculars and spotting scope out so we could see the many penstocks and waterfalls. Next, we stopped at the Jesse Ross log cabin. It was built in the 1800’s using continental methods so, the logs were all hewed square in x-section. The inner walls were covered with vertical boards and then those were covered with newspaper or wallpaper. We reached about 5300 ft at the Mile High Vista where we ate lunch while looking down at Mammoth Pool, a reservoir which was much lower than usual, and out at the Sierra Crest (Mt Ritter, Minarets, Mammoth, et al.). In the middle distance were several granite domes, Balloon Dome and Fuller Rock. About 20 minutes beyond the turnoff for Mammoth Pool, we stopped at Arch Rock, a small, granite erosion arch. Shortly afterward we ran out of pavement and the road got rough. Thinking that we might do a hike, we drove the 1.5 mi in to Piyau Dome Trailhead. The trail was indistinct, we didn’t know the length or elevation gain of the trail, and it was already 1400 so we drove back to the road. We stopped to walk a short path out to Jackass Meadow, and again at Portugese Overlook to look up at the big granite domes above the road. All along the route we had seen trailers and tents in dispersed camping areas, but we didn’t see any people around, hunters maybe? One of the hits of the trip was the stop at Globe Rock which was a huge granite boulder sitting on a pedestal, appearing to be delicately balanced. The road was paved the rest of the way from Globe Rock. We closed the loop (from yesterday) at Cold Springs Summit and then headed down and down the rest of the way to the upper road at Bass Lake and home to Worldmark. Snacks ensued and then dinner – a casserole with the original rotisserie chicken cooked with onion, corn and beans. Later I paid the remainder of our trip balance online to OAT for the Machu Picchu and Galapagos trip. I also researched the hiking trail to Fresno Dome and found it was only 1.5 mi with an elevation gain of 311 ft. Sounds like a plan for Saturday.

28 Oct. Sat – Up at just after 0700 and out on the road by shortly after 0900. We re-traced our Thursday drive up Sky Ranch Road and then along FS 10 to Fresno Dome CG and another couple of miles to the unexpected and impressively-signed trailhead for Fresno Dome. No one else was parked there and a pickup pulled out through a puddle of indeterminate depth just as we arrived. Knowing that there was a solid bottom to the puddle we pulled in and parked near the start of the trail. It was nice and cool so we could wear long sleeve shirts all the way to the summit, about 1.5 mi and 350 ft elev gain, at 7540 ft. The trail through the pines was well-trodden and pines themselves were aglow with bright green lichen as the sun struck them. The back of the granite dome was easy to ascend since it was much less steep than the south face which is where the climbers go (although we never found a climbers path leading from the road). After we had enjoyed the summit for a half-hour or so, more people started to arrive. The first party of six from Montana knew two old hang glider pilots that we also knew: Steve Aden and Ron Enck, a real coincidence. Another party of four and a couple more followed them up as we started back down. I had used my spotting scope with the very light tripod I usually carry for my camera, and it wasn’t very stable. But, I could look out into the valley and also off to the NW to a fire tower on a high ridge. At the parking lot I considered continuing around to the Sierra Vista National Scenic Byway on FS 10, but we wanted to stop in Oakhurst so we returned the way we had come. There were quite a few vehicles on the road now that it was the weekend and we saw some of the people in the dispersed camps as we went by (unlike the previous day when we saw almost no one). Also on the way in we saw our first large mammals when three deer crossed the road ahead of us. One of the people we met on the trail told us that this weekend was the end of the hunting season (but I might have gotten that wrong). In Oakhurst we stopped at the Sierra Nevada Trading Post and C.J. got a Yosemite coloring book and a black bear coaster. Then we hit Reimers again and C.J. got a scoop of pomegranate blueberry gelato and I got a coffee-chocolate shake. We headed right back to Worldmark and were there in time for the annual party thrown by the management for the staff and guests. We got free burritos from the Sonora Taco Truck, a drink and plenty of fruit and desserts. The kids were having a good time in the inflatable bouncy house and later when they smashed a large piñata filled with candy. We got caught up on our journals and started to organize stuff for packing up later when we could move the car nearer to the condo unit. Once I got the car under the parking area covered with solar panels, we loaded our wings and some miscellaneous stuff. We had dinner, salad and the left over burritos, around 1900. After that we watched “Sully”, a film about Chesley Sullenberger; much of it was about the NTRB investigation of the water landing in the Hudson in January of 2009.

29 Oct, Sun – Up at 0630 and on the road shortly after 0800. Another beautiful day. We drove through the foothills on 47 and 120, followed freeway 99 through the flatlands of the San Joaquin Valley and continued north to Sacramento where we got gas at Costco (2.499). We hooked up with I-5 and soon enough we were at Dunnigan and back on our usual route. We stopped again in Redding to get a Costco frozen mocha for me and after that I was much more alert, but that may have been because we were leaving the Sacramento Valley and heading up into the hills leading to Shasta. Great views of an almost-bare Shasta in the clear air although we could see occasional tendrils of smoke in the valley to the west. We reached Ashland right around 1700 and checked into The Ashland Hills for the night. After asking at the desk and looking at Yelp, we decided to eat at the Luna Café again. I even had the same chili and Caesar salad while C.J. had the Special, a Chef’s Burger, with a bowl of seasonal vegetables. We shared a pear cider.
30 Oct, Mon – Got an early enough start that we didn’t run into any traffic slowdowns even in the usual places like Portland and near Olympia. We stopped for gas in Roseburg and Covington. I was supposed to be on a low-fiber diet in prep for the colonoscopy on Wednesday. We got home around 1630, early enough to pick up our mail at the post office. There were lots of leaves covering the lawn and driveway, nice and dry, but there were still more remaining on the trees. The house seemed cold, but that may have been due to having been in sunny California for so long. Apparently we missed some serious rainy weather while we were gone. It was going to be hard to adjust to the normal rainy-cold Northwest autumn.

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