Showing posts with label afternoon hike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label afternoon hike. Show all posts

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Long hike ~ be prepared

Hiking the Kickapoo Valley Reserve is something I do often. My plans this year were to extend my hiking experience by hiking in more distant places with some overnight stays.

I may still do that, but with the current situation with gas prices, I am facing a decision on my budget. Higher prices of fuel will cut into the travel.

The Reserve is 17 miles from my place and has incredible trails that I have hiked for years. For two years in a row, Charlie and I have hiked all of the 69+ miles of trails in one year just to say we did it back to back. We have hiked this area and used to ride mules in it since 1996. I understand this land.

When I hike, I carry a backpack with a map, compass, First Aid kit, a Bivey Bag, water, rations, and means to start a fire. This all sounds like overkill but it isn't.

I've known people to get lost at the Reserve. Once was before it was called the Reserve. Two ladies went morel hunting and got turned around as daylight faded. They were old experienced ladies, they set up a campfire and hiked out the next day with about 7 pounds of morels.

Recently there was a big search for a woman who got lost on the trails. She texted her sister just before dark when her phone was dying saying she was lost.

That brought out the Fire Department and the Sheriff Department. The Fire Dept used a Drone that had Infrared and Thermal ability. They located the woman unharmed but rather shaken.

The Kickapoo Valley Reserve warns people to take a map and don't rely on cellphones to get you around all the trails or to call for help. Some of the valleys are so steep and narrow that cellphones won't get reception. Other areas are dead zones.

I'm always amazed by the amount of people that I've run across that are either on horseback or hiking that don't know where they are and ask me directions. 

Four times in the past two years, I've had to take people to the next trail section and explain to them how to get back to wherever they parked or left their horse trailer. None of them had a map and kept trying to figure it out with a tiny downloaded map.

The land is unforgiving if you get turned around.

My very first time I was there, it happened to me. I was working on a crew that was repairing trails and led our mule Fred to a sight where I had to spread seed. It was hot and humid. When I finished doing my chore I became confused as to where in the heck I was supposed to go to get back to the others.

I sat down and held Fred's reins and cried. I basically panicked but decided not to move or try and find my way back.

Rich found me about 20 minutes later. He was worried. He pointed out that I could have just gotten on Fred and let him take me back to camp. He also showed me the water and supplies that were in Fred's saddlebags.

Rich taught me 'wood smarts'. He took me hunting at night [coon hounds] and taught me how to find my way around. This from a man who was a country boy and had survived jungle missions in Vietnam. 

I listened and learned from the master.

So, yesterday, as the dogs and I were hiking along the Ice Cave trail, we came upon a lady who had a bottle of water she was carrying in one hand and her cellphone and a map in the other.

After greeting the dogs, she asked if I knew where the ice caves were. I did. There was one just a half mile or so from where we were standing.

"This trail just goes on forever and ever and I am looking at the map to see where the next marker is. I was beginning to wonder if I should just turn around."

I shrugged, I told her I'd show her the big cave. I backtracked and showed her the large one.

She looked at me and said, "Gosh, I thought the caves would be above the trails. Not down below like that."

I explained that with the steep valleys, caves or rock shelters were usually located in a draw where the water would run over and seep through the rocks.


"I didn't know that," she commented. Then she looked at her map and said, "I think I'll continue on. I doubt it will be shorter to go back to the car now."

I did some mental math and told her if she turned around it would only be 2 miles back to where she parked but if she continued she'd travel about 6+ miles to do the whole loop.

"Oh I don't think so," she said, "it doesn't look that far on the map." She fluttered the map up and down so I could see it.

"It is," I replied. "I've been doing this trail for 30 years." I did not add that I have been doing this trail for 30 years and it never got any shorter. I thought that would be sarcastic.

I shrugged. 6+ miles or 4 miles, it still could be a long way at 5pm with only 2 1/2 hours or so of daylight left.

On my way back I kept thinking about her and how I felt she wasn't really well prepared. She had a light shirt on over a t-shirt and the temperatures were starting to fall. 

I kept wanting to turn back and make sure she was okay. But I had two dogs to think of and chores waiting for me at home.

Here is a photo of Charlie and then Hannah on the stump I've always stopped at to take photos over the years.



The photos are a bit misleading as to their sizes. Here is another one. Charlie is 7 inches tall at his shoulder. She is just about as tall and long as him, but she is dainty compared to Charlie's muscular build.

When playing, she backs into him with her butt to push him and he returns by pushing her back with his chest.  



We all slept well last night.

I hope that lady found her way back to her car. I'm sure she did. It is wild out there.


6.85 miles. 😀😁

The ephemerals we found were just beginning to come up! More on that later!

So much happening here on Friday that it is crazy!


Thursday, April 02, 2026

Afternoon exploring

Monday turned out to be very nice. 
In the late afternoon, I gathered the pups and took them out to search for any sign of spring.

Skunk Cabbage!
One of the very first flowers of spring. The plant does smell when disturbed but that is how it gets pollinated by insects.

The plant is found in land near streams and rivers.

The flower looks like this:


What really surprised me was that a few Hepatica showed up here and there along the trail I followed. Most of them were near some of the ice caves I've explored this winter.






We found a lot of these flowers along the Wintergreen Trial.


The dogs had a lot of leftover energy so we hiked around the the blind that is set up for watching birds on the ponds.

Our pleasant surprise was that a pair of Swans that returned. I don't know if they are the very same ones from other years, but for the past 4 years, I've found them in late March at this pond.




The dogs were so good. Both sat quietly with me behind the blind while I watched birds for about 30 minutes. It felt so peaceful to not have a time line.


Hannah's face...it doesn't have a white strip in it, that was a ray of sunlight coming through the blind.


Bird Blind:



Sunday, February 15, 2026

Longer Days, Friday the 13th

Here is Charlie giving me a good morning yawn. Yes, he does have his very own kitchen chair that he sits on anytime I am having coffee or eating. 


 

When it starting getting light out we bundled up and headed out for a walk. It was in the teens when we left the house and headed for the ridge.

We are back to doing our dawn walks as the days are a bit longer and when weather was nice. 


This is what we saw in a rather cloudless sunrise.


When we walked to the top of the ridge and looked down across the ridge towards the valley. I saw this.


It was a golden morning.

And it was mesmerizing.




It was a day of activity.  I did CrossFit at the gym with alternating doing 2 minutes of jumping rope and two minutes of deadlifts. 

On my way home I saw Olive and her hubby trying to move a round bale. I stopped and helped out. Three humans acting together can move about 900 lbs of hay.

Charlie and I took off for an afternoon hike. The weather was just too pleasant to stay cooped up in the house.

You guessed it, we went to hunt ice.

Cell phone shot


My Oly Camera



I counted 6 ice flows while walking this trail. I knew of two but over the years I've missed the others. I suspect the melt, the freezing at night, and warming during the day helped create them.

I also know that I couldn't have seen them under the blanket of snow the last time I hiked this trail.

Below is where two ice flows empty into the Kickapoo River.




Little Charlie thought he could just walk up the ice flows. 
He kept trying, he is persistent! Must be the Dachshund in him.

I went above him and when he tried again I assisted by grabbing him by the scruff. 

He was so proud of himself after that. 

Cellphone shot



This was an insanely difficult light to photograph in.  The bright white shiny ice, deep shadows, and brilliant skies make for interesting contrasts but hard to 'get' right in camera. It often confuses the sensors.

I've only hiked this trail in the morning hours and this was the first time with the afternoon sun.

My cellphone actually handled it a bit better than I did. But I guess that is the fun of it all.


Cellphone shot of the area I explored.
It is very steep.

Climbing in and out of there demands the use of saplings, bushes, and trees and a keen sense of balance.


We made it safely to the end of the trail and enjoyed a break from hiking on 'our' log. Dog Cookies, water, and pretzels for me.


The end of the day was as beautiful. I don't think we've seen such a pretty sunset in ages here.


We decided to skip Saturday doings for obvious reasons.

With the nice weather, I worked at raking up pine cones and picking up sticks. I had 3 large wheelbarrows full by mid afternoon. 

When spring does arrive, perhaps I'll have a bit less to rake up.

Onward.





Tuesday, February 04, 2025

Stunned...

 Below is a place we call PeeWee's Dump. I thought it would be a great place to explore with some of my characters. 

Yeah...
that didn't work out well....


That gaping hole in the earth that is surrounded by metal, plastic, old bottles and shredded unidentifiable things made Charlie very nervous.
It is a perfect place for 'possum and perhaps other critters to hang out. 

However, it is close to home and it is a perfect spot for some toy shots that would include the MiniBots and perhaps some evil Lego characters or other nefarious toys.




I've used the partial milk can more than once in some photo 'shoots'. Getting to this spot in the summer is really difficult because of the brush. I always seem attracted to junk piles when the forest is resting itself..


Last January I fell in love with this spot.



Well, that was a wash, so I moved on and followed Charlie down the gravel road.

That lead me to these shots...



I had a productive walk. I went in by the fire number for this land and discovered another tennis shoe, barbed wire, bent t-posts, and a rusted bucket. 

I couldn't help but investigate the possibilities of the rusted bucket.


The day was heavily overcast and rather dull looking, but the air was fresh and felt nice. We walked out onto the cropland and looked over the ridge. I hope Linda [the farmer that rents this land] will plant soybeans on this field this spring. It is easier to enjoy all year long when walking out to watch the sun come up.

When I got home I was floored by more dreadful news. 
Who let Musk into the Treasury and what are they stealing? This should strike fear into everyone.