Pages

Monday, November 29, 2010

Big Creek to retrieve my game cam in the snow

Snow




First time strapping on snowshoes this season


Sending an Ok message with my spot at lunch time


On last mushroom blast


Big Creek Trail to big rock. I hit the trail at about 10pm; I was later than usual because I had been waiting for my hair to dry a bit before leaving the house. There was snow in the parking area so I decided to pack my snowshoes. The main goal of this hike, other than fun in the snow was to retrieve my game camera. I did not feel the need for snowshoes until I got to the Ellinor connector trail. Even then I did not need them for floatation; I needed them for traction for my bad ankle. It’s hard to sprain your ankle on level ground with snowshoes on. It felt really good to get my heavy snowshoes off my back and onto my feet.

The seasonal stream that I normally depend on for water was dry, but I’ve learned not to trust that stream so I tanked up at a rivulet just past Big Creek instead. I really thought my seasonal stream would be running with all the rain and snow, but I did not take any chances. I think something about that streambed has changed and I am now writing it off as a water source.

I passed my off trail game camera at about 11:30, but left it for the trip back. I made it to the over look by noon. There was a couple of feet of snow on the ground behind the bench but the snow all around the bench was well packed so I was safe taking off my snowshoes for my lunch break. At the over look I brewed tea and ate a turkey sandwich. Just as I settled down to drink my tea, I heard the voices of two hikers headed for the over look so I leashed up Patches the pound dog. But the hikers did not come to the overlook. Later their footprints showed that they had bypassed the over look both on the way up and on the way back.

After I left the over looked I started heading up again. In the winter I like to have my lunch before I have finished my elevation gain. Hiking uphill after lunch warms me up, where hiking downhill after lunch can leave me cold for the rest of the hike. That said, I had two sweaters and arctic gloves that I never put on.

I hiked up to the big rock near the upper Ellinor trail head. There was a nice thick layer of snow up there, it was really beautiful. I had a blast hiking in the snow and breathing in the clean air. I wanted to go all the way to the upper trailhead and I was not worried about hiking out in the dark, until I remembered that I needed to retrieve my game camera on the way down. I did not want to be searching for my camera in the dark so I turned around at the big rock.

I got back down to my camera at about 3:45. When I found my camera I saw that the lens and the sensor were covered with snow and the flash did not seem to be activating. Those made me think that the batteries were dead. But when I got the camera home I found that it was working fine and it had taken 22 pictures of me and my dog and nothing else. Oh well, better luck next time I guess.

I finished my hike at about 4pm and it was getting dark in the woods at that point, even though the sun did not set until 4:30. 9.5 miles with 2,400 feet elevation gain

The inside of my left ankle hurts a little bit, I managed to stress it some with my snow shoes on but I never actually sprained it. Well maybe I sprained it to the inside a bit on unlevel ground. Physical therapy helped a lot but I still think I might need surgery on that ankle.

I had to wear my raingear for the entire hike. It either rained or snowed on me all day long. My hair never got a chance to dry.  I wished I had packed my Seattle Sombrerro.

 I kept my DSLR camera slung around my neck and over my shoulder but under my rain coat for the entire hike. I brought my 18-105 vr lens and kept the UV filter on. I never bothered with the polarizer. I also left my big external flash at home.

The trail was so well packed that I did not need snowshoes but was glad to have them for the extra stability and traction.  

9.5 miles with 2,400 feet elevation gain
travelled about 6 miles with snowshoes on


Pistol butted tree


Snow arch



This nice new bridge STINKS from 1/10th of a mile away

In my element


frozen deer cam lens covered with snow, no good pictures


Fall oyster mushrooms


What a difference a few weeks makes
Two weeks earlier


Snow in the parking area

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Matsutake and the king in the same place??


This was a surprising day. I asked my huband if he wanted to go to the park that we went to early in our relationship and he said yes. This was to be a sentimental trip. I though I could look for mushrooms while there but ddid not really expect to find much. Boy was I surprised, I found Matsutake and a King BBolete! I also found orange earth tounges a witches hat (my first) and lots of dead russula brevipes.

I found the King Bolete first. I was such a surprise to see it there in such a public place. Clearly this place is not frequented by mushroom hunters.



The King??

Matsutake

Matsutake from a different hunt

Dead Duff Pumpers

Matsutake Buttons

Matsutake

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Big Creek Trail




I really wanted to go see the lower big Quilcene trail today, but with the days getting short, I decided to stay closer to home instead. I guess I started my hike at about 9pm and finished at about 4:15. I found a bunch of chanterelles; more then I felt like picking. I also found pigs ears, which I picked some of, because my oldest daughter wanted me to. I think they are far too pretty to pick and they are always filled with maggots.


Pigs Ears


I left a game camera out there today and I hope that I get some wildlife shots. I did not have any luck the last three times I left cameras in the woods. I’ll go back and check it in a couple of weeks.


A new bridge over the north fork of Big Creek has been built, it is just before the connector trail splits off; it looks like a nice bridge. My usual water source is about a half mile past the bridge and I was shocked to find that it was bone dry. With all the rain we have had, I assumed it would be running. I did not have any water and I wanted to have tea at the overlook, so I followed an old logging road out to the main road and was able to get water without losing too much elevation. Then I walked up the road for about ½ a mile before I took a different old logging road back in to the trail.

View from Lunch Spot



The view was pretty good today except it was misty. The clouds were high, but a low mist blocked some of the view. I got peek-a-boo views of the volcanoes. An old growth mountain hemlock tree at my lunch spot is about to fall down. I drew that tree one time and only when I took the time to draw it, did I notice the bullets that had been shot into it. The tree is breaking right where the bullets went in. I'll miss that tree, but it will open up the view a bit with its demise.

After lunch, I wandered up to the beautiful old growth hemlock forest at the start of the lower Ellinor trail. I really love that forest, that was spared from logging due to being above the Douglas-fir line.


Wonderful Old Growth Forest Fringe on the Ridge

This tree is about to fall

I headed back down towards the car at about 2:30, this gave me 2 hours to hike out the last 4 miles before the sunset. It was nice to be able to complete my hike without feeling rushed and without getting sundowned. I took some advice from another hiker and packed my car keys in with my lunch the night before, that way I could not leave without my lunch.


I’m sorer than I expected to be this morning. Compared to my other recent hikes this was a pretty easy hike, but I’m feeling it today. Perhaps it was the extra weight of my game camera and lock box and chain and my big lens for my DSLR that made this hike harder.


My ankle was good until about 2 miles before the end of the hike and then I tweaked it a couple of times. It really hurts when the joint slides forward. Not much I can do about that other than resign myself to wearing clunky boots for the rest of my hiking days. I don’t know if there is a surgery to fix it. The last time I did this trail my ankle was so bad that I went in for physical therapy. The therapy helped a lot. My ankle is now as good as it has ever been since my bilateral modified Watkins-Jones surgery 20 years ago.

What used to be Potlatch State Park has been logged down to near the shore of the Hood Canal. When I first saw it, while driving on my way to my hike, I surprised myself by screaming a bunch of expletives into my empty car. My poor doggie probably thought I was mad at her, so I consoled her and told her she was a good dog, after I calmed down a bit. It’s going to be awful for me to drive past that area for awhile now. Just like it used to be horrible for me to drive though the clear cut outside of Mcleary.

8.5 miles
1,900 feet elevation gain

Mount Washington


Pretty Purple Mushrooms

Earth Tongues

Coral Mushrooms


Old logging road converted to trail lined with alder trees

Close relative to the store "button mushroom" but mildly poison (based on smell and yellow staining stem)



Morning Sun Backlights the Moss near the Lower Bridge

Chanterelles

Honey Mushrooms growing on "biomass"

My turn around point 4 miles from Big CR. Camp (the sign is wrong)

Puff Balls growing on woody biomass



Elevation Profile



One way track log going up

Water fall with some sort of oyster (?)  mushroom

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

My Chanterelle Spot was Logged this Week



I'm so sad and angry at the same time.  Some of my favorite second growth trees have been cut down and one of my best mushroom hunting spots is now gone.    The forest and trail system next to Potlatch State Park, is gone forever.  They logged it all the way down to within 20 feet of the road and 40 feet of the Hood Canal.  Why is that legal to log nearly to the edge of the southern Hood Canal, with all of its oxygen problems?

On a brighter note, I found a wonderful surprise on my front gate today.  It did not have a card, so I'll have to figure it out by looking at my deer cam source.  Until then, thank you, who ever you are.

These woods are now gone forever



My oldest daugher crawling under the brush and trees (that are now gone) to collect Chanterelles

This Chanterelle mycelium will  never fruit again, with its host tree gone
We did not pick this edible and rare "hawks wing"  mushroom because it was so pretty

This deadly but beautiful aminita will never fruit again with its host tree gone

I'm so glad that we made it out there this year before they destroyed it.   Keep enjoying what is left of nature, before it is all gone.


Saturday, November 13, 2010

Trumpets of Death?

 My daughter found these, we think they are black trumpets or Craterellus cornucopioides



Thursday, November 11, 2010

Spider Lake



I needed to get back out into the woods to clear my head but I was not up for a big hike. I mostly just wanted to enjoy the solitude and devote time to photography. It rained most of the time but I was prepared with an umbrella to protect my camera. I did not find any edible mushrooms. There was a lot of logging activity coming from the high steel bridge direction and lot of piles of burning slash just North of South mountain. I thought they were saving all the "slash" for biomass incinerators. Maybe this is a good sign. But they still should not be burning stuff. Stuff needs to stay in the forest to nourish the forest.  The logs being  hauled out were bigger than usual.

I only walked around the lake one time.

2.5 miles no elevation gain

Conks, moss and hemlock seedlings growing on "biomass"

Hygrophorus bakerensis they smell just like maraschino cherries  I like to carry them around and sniff them

Trees growing on a moss covered nurse log


Artist's Conk

Lacteria sp.

Purple corts

The east side of spider lake sports some old growth