John & Anne Wiley

2010/08/09

Pleasant Surprise

We planned to fly down the coast from Medford, but not long after leaving I-5 heading southwest we could see a solid low cloud layer completely covering the water. Tomorrow I’ll post some pix of a few clear areas we saw, but before long we headed inland along the 101. We decided to stop at Sonoma for a stretch, lunch, and fuel for Tripp. The landing was fun, with a short (2500 ft.) runway with trees at both ends and strong gusting crosswind, but easier than several of our landings on the Big Adventure flight last Fall. Ron the airport manager loaned us his pickup so we could drive the two miles into town for a sandwich. What a glorious little community!

From there we went southeast to clear the complex airspace over the Bay Area. We’d planned to fly over the Golden Gate and possibly SF, but the whole bay was covered in a blanket of white (another great reason to go along the eastern foothills). Soon we’d dialed in SBA on both GPSs and were headed directly for home. Then our thoughts turned to low clouds and fog. As night fell at about Paso Robles we were high over familiar terrain, and could pick out the lights of SLO and Oceano which was amazingly in the clear. But over Santa Maria hung some low ragged clouds. Once we could pick up the aviation weather radio from Santa Ynez we at least knew it would be possible to camp there if SBA was like most of the coast under the blanket. Then with everything set for maximum range we could dimly hear SBA weather say “landing Runway 25.” Now for anyone who knows this airport that can only mean one thing: clear skies!! 🙂

So thanks to this pleasant surprise we are now sitting amid piles of stuff (amazingly tall, given that they all came from trusty Tripp), breathing stale air with all the fans going, and beginning to enjoy the pleasures that only Home can bring. We gave each other a quick Alexander treatment, and now I’m sipping a glass of pinot. Life is so very sweet. It will take days for us to put things back into some semblance of order, and the rest of our lives to process the magnificent adventure we’ve just had from SBA to Soo to Ketch and back. Even typing those few words my head is brimming with unbelievable images and delightful memories. I may never get over the surprise of our good fortune in finding each other, building a life together that is perfect for us, enjoying the warmth of family and friends, still having good health, and even having access to flight and enough funds remaining to fly off on adventures like this. What a pleasant surprise indeed! My heart is full.

2010/08/08

Anne Won’t Stop

As I finished shaving just now and Anne was still typing feverishly on all her pent up blog posts, she titled this photo for me.

0375 Anne Won't Stop

0375 Anne Won't Stop

When I silently picked up her camera from the table by her right hand, the serious furrowed focus associated with her blizzard of typing instantly transformed into that brilliant giggling girl I love so deeply as she said, “Anne won’t stop.”

In case you’re wondering, I’ve already resolved to buy her a better laptop! I absolutely love that she’s beginning to blog, and she needs a better tool for that. This morning I walked the few steps we were too tired to take last night, and borrowed the cable so she could plug hers in rather than try to use the weak wifi in our room.

All this of course has me thinking about Life, Meaning and Love on this first day of our tenth Official year (we’ve been married by my definition since 1983, but our 18 year “engagement” before 8/7/01 is another and rather long story). One of the things I most enjoy about our time together is Noticing. We’ve helped each other to joyfully notice ourselves, each other, our environment and the relatively small slice of our planet’s billions of people that we’ve had the pleasure to encounter. Not just those like the girl dedicated to her cheerful work cleaning rooms and stocking the free breakfast room here. Nor even just the people we pass once on the street and never see again. Some of the latter leave us with a treasured “snippet” of their conversation, and many a glimpse of an expression that conveys a slice of what was in their consciousness during that few seconds. Beyond those, ever more often we strive to notice everyone and everything, because in that noticing we feel more alive and connected with our world.

So some of this was going on in me when I noticed her typing and tried to capture some essence of Her to preserve for myself, to share with her, and to share with anyone taking the time to read this. May these few words help us to wake up to the incredible beauty within and around us.

Club Medford

Our ninth anniversary began in a foo foo Montana resort that most guests apparently flew to in their private jets where rental cars and limos waited at the airport, and is winding down with us snuggled into a moderately priced (but amazingly well-appointed) room in Medford. While it was a great room and a scenic setting, I was secretly glad to be away from the sometimes  snobby elite who all but ignored us dragging our travelpro along the paved trails as they cruised by in SUVs and golf carts. We did meet some warm and wonderful people there of course, and had a great time. Guess I’m just not cut out to be rich, which I guess is fortunate since I’m not. 🙂

What memories this day has brought us! Our first stop was for fuel in Coeur d’Alene, where we also found one of those truly patient and helpful aircraft mechanics (aka A&P) who will chat as you use their expensive tools to install an inexpensive part – and then give you a discount on the part (a landing light in this case). Tripp happily fueled and vastly more visible to other planes in the sometimes thick smoke (it’s everywhere!), we cruised over town admiring the aquatic setting.

0726 Water World

0726 Water World

Somewhere along the line from there to Bend I saw what is easily the most bizarre looking farm of the trip. It looks very much like a giant landing instruction sign for extra-terrestrials.

0731 Martian Message

0731 Martian Message

Not far away is what I call the Clump Farm, where another enterprising farmer has managed to make use of every last inch of usable land.

0733 Clump Farm

0733 Clump Farm

We were fascinated by the area where the Snake meets the Columbia, as you can see below.

0743 Bewteen States

0743 Between States

0744 Water Worker

0744 Water Worker

0750 River Art

0750 River Art

Just be glad I spared you a few. 🙂

We caught Crater Lake just at sunset, and to our surprise there were quite a few cars driving around the rim. The light was so golden!

0773 Crater Lake Sunset

0773 Crater Lake Sunset

We glided down into Medford just as dusk was settling into the valley, and maybe Anne will share some tales about our adventures on the ground before getting to the hotel. She’s been frustrated by her computer’s weaker wifi, so sometime soon you might see a bunch of “new” posts from her that she’s been saving up. I love the photos she takes and the stories she tells, because her perspective expands my enjoyment of our fun together.

So we celebrate the culmination of another year, and begin anew tomorrow. A woman once asked me what Anne and I do for fun and without pausing to think about it I simply replied truthfully, “Everything.”

2010/08/06

Friends in the East

We flew back toward the East again today, through Jasper again, and landed in Edmonton again, for a wonderful evening with two people we love.

0280 Allie & Joshua

0280 Allie & Joshua

Allie and Joshua gave us a midnight tour of the town after a great meal, and demonstrated yet again that best friends make the best marriages.

Our journey here provided an even better view of Mt. Robson because the clouds parted for a moment during our passage. Too bad there was so much smoke from all the fires, because this could have been a stunning photo. Hope you can imagine how much better it looked in real life for us.

0549 Mt. Robson

0549 Mt. Robson

We climbed fairly high to get closer and above some of the smoke, and for some reason Tripp seemed to run a bit hotter than expected. She cooled down again later, so maybe it was due to having nearly full fuel so she had to work harder. Near the top left of the peak in the photo above you can see the “face” we spotted, and here it is in a closer view.

0542 Rock Face

0542 Rock Face

OK, so it’s not Rushmore but maybe we were tired or it was the altitude. 😉

The views straight down were much clearer than the mountains this time, and the color of the glacial water seemed all the more striking.

0552 Turquoise River

0552 Turquoise River

I also liked the swampy area nearby, with its variety of shapes, textures and colors.

0554 Swamp Snake

0554 Swamp Snake

So tomorrow we’ll see what the weather portends. Could be we’ll head South to begin our journey home, or the skies will cloud up and nudge us to stay and spend some time exploring Edmonton by day. Any advice or suggestions?

2010/08/04

Time Travel

Today was a flight back in time for me. Starting at Burns Lake we had great flying weather to Smithers, where I said hello to an old friend named Hudson Bay Mountain.

0256 Hudson Bay Mtn

0256 Hudson Bay Mtn

I came of age sitting at the feet of this magnificent mountain, playing guitar, writing poetry, and contemplating life as the sun slipped behind the mountain in the early afternoon.

0280 Treehouse

0280 Treehouse

Where my small cabin once stood alone in a clearing, it now serves as the heart of a sprawling home with a minivan parked about where my old VW bus once sat. My farewell poem was named Treehouse, dedicated to new dreamers, so it was a delight to see so much more story there now. Seeing it took me back many years until I could hear again the loons flying between the two small lakes on the outskirts of Smithers, intoning their magical assortment of forlorn calls. I remembered trying to imitate them when I jogged to the larger lake for a swim across, and how they watched in bemusement from halfway out in the lake. Until the day I sang one of my own songs, composed on the porch in the early sunset, and then they swam right up to listen. Such times those were!

0411 Edge Of Wild

0411 Edge Of Wild

Next we flew along the river toward Hazelton, searching for another place I lived briefly, out at the edge of the wilderness North along the Suskwa River. At last we found it, still there but surrounded by many more buildings than the lone farmhouse that was there in my time. Looks like several more families are there now, but the little cluster is still ten miles on a small track from the nearest neighbors. I remember walking to the logging road several times in winter, once sleeping in a disabled pickup and waking to discover a bobcat had slept beneath the cab. This was where I once contemplated “going into the wild,” to live as a hermit away from all contact. Luckily for me, and with considerable influence from a caring soul, I returned to Smithers and eventually to California. Seemed like a close call at the time, but now it’s so far from the warm circle of friends and family that so enrich my life.

All during today’s flight I was watching fuel even more closely than usual, because I’d kept Tripp light for climbing more easily up to Hudson Bay and over all the other mountains along our path. Seven Sisters greeted us after passing Hazelton, and even in the dense smoke from all the fires in the region they still form a beautiful family.

0439 Seven Sisters

0439 Seven Sisters

As we passed Terrace I snapped a photo in case we didn’t pass so close to town on our way back from Ketchikan. The river there is so red, yet just a couple of miles upstream it’s bright turquoise until it mixes with one coming down from a different valley. Though it has a big airport I decided not to stop for fuel, since we’d be on the ground in Prince Rupert jumping customs hoops before the hop to Alaska anyway.

0449 Terrace in Passing

0449 Terrace in Passing

After a few more minutes that Anne may share (photos came out much better on her side of the plane facing away from the afternoon sun), we arrived in Prince Rupert. Flying over the town we made the short hop to the little island nearby (across the top of this photo) where the airport is.

0457 Prince Rupert

0457 Prince Rupert

It was quite a surprise as we were pushing Tripp toward a parking space, when a pilot preparing to depart in a similar Cessna complained about no fuel at Prince Rupert. (!!!) Turns out, they didn’t sell enough gasoline to make it viable so they simply stopped selling it. Though they had lots of Jet A for the airlines, helicopters and small turboprop charter planes, Tripp politely but firmly refuses it. Well, since I’ve been monitoring fuel so closely we have enough to fill up elsewhere. When I “dipped” the tanks, try to imagine my amazement at discovering only forty minutes’ fuel! Yikes! Now we’re not going anywhere until we get Tripp some gas. Sure we could make it back to Terrace, but not with the required half hour of reserve much less my one hour personal minimum. Luckily for us, there are a great number of very helpful people in Prince Rupert. We were able to figure out a way for Tripp to get her dinner after all.

0470 Bruce the Gallant

0470 Bruce the Gallant

Especially helpful was Bruce, who gave us several ideas and great conversation as we waited for the ferry into town for fuel. Waiting for the ferry back to Tripp we found a great little nature walk. Have I mentioned that Anne absolutely loves nature walks? 🙂

0491 Nature Walk

0491 Nature Walk

It was another stroll down memory lane for both of us, from our years in the northwest before we met. We even found a berry patch with some late fruit still ready for the picking.

So trusty Tripp flew us back to Terrace, this time higher and faster in case we could buy fuel to reach Smithers. This gave us an even better view of the disappearing glaciers, like this one I recall from those bygone days when I lived nearby. All that remains now is this peaceful blue lake.

0503 Peaceful Blue Lake

0503 Peaceful Blue Lake

I can hardly wait for the renewable aviation fuel now in trials to replace the petroleum fuel that so transformed this wild place. I’m glad Tripp gets about the same mileage as our Camry in the meantime.

Upon arrival we found that self-serve aviation fuel is not available in Terrace (or perhaps anywhere in Canada), that it would be an extra $75 for the very helpful fuel guy to leave his family to come and feed Tripp more reserve for the short hop to Smithers, and with sunset approaching it became clear that we’d be spending the night here. The same helpful fuel guy told us where we could find hotels, and where we could camp next to Tripp if we prefer.

So we’re sitting in the empty terminal building using the wireless internet before going to set up camp for the night in the place we glanced at in passing toward Prince Rupert a few hours before. Yesterday we were in Jasper, and tonight rather than Ketchikan or Smithers we’re in Terrace. Such is our second Big Adventure unfolding as did the last: the trip we dream, the trip we plan, the trip we take, and increasingly as the miles pass beneath our wings – the trip we remember.

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