Friday, March 9, 2012

Adventures with Shellac: Cork Grip Yumminess!

If you love the rich butterscotch look of shellacked cork grips, but are worried about the DIY factor, fear no more. We gave it a shot, and it really is quite easy. Here we go:

Rodney the vintage Roadster came with these original Raleigh black grips. Although they look nice and we like to keep original parts, neither of us can stand the feel of plastic grips. So we decided to experiment with cork. Rivendell makes it seem so simple and fun!

Well, here is a "naked" cork grip. So far so good! The Co-Habitant secured the grips with strong double-sided tape, but most recommend to glue the grips. He rode the bike with the unshellacked grips for a while to see what this felt like. The unfinished grips feel good, but they get dirty very easily and are not protected from the elements. We wouldn't want ratty, filthy grips. Plus the colour needs some spicing up.

Here comes the shellac. Amber. This is from the hardware store, nothing fancy. Generic 1" paintbrush.

Here the first coat of shellac is being applied. This stuff is fast drying, so the work should be done fairly quickly.

Second coat of shellac. As you apply 2-3 thin coats, you will see the colour gradually grow darker, richer, and warmer. Uneven patches on the surface get smoothed out. Three thin coats should be enough, and you can always touch it up if you notice some unevenness later.

We decided not to add twine or tape to these grips, but to keep things clean and minimalist on the vintage black Roadster. The first photo in this post is the final result!

Cape Hatteras Lighthouse

This past weekend we went to see another lighthouse. This one was the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse. It is the tallest lighthouse in America and the tallest brick lighthouse in the world.



The automated beacon of light from the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse is visible every seven seconds. Over 1 million bricks, baked in kilns along the James River in Virginia, were used during construction between 1868 and 1870.



It is believed that the engineer who was originally assigned to paint North Carolina's lighthouses got his plans mixed up. Apparently, the diamond-shaped figures, which were supposed to warn traffic away from Diamond Shoals, went to Cape Lookout. The Cape Hatteras Lighthouse received spiral striping, thus obtaining the nickname ''The Big Barber Pole.''



We enjoyed the visit very much. We did not grab that many pictures though because of the smoke that was in the air today. There is a fire on the mainland and the smoke was courtesy of that.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Jack Roberts, climber, 1952-

Jack Roberts 1952-



Jack was a friend. In the end a lot of things go through my mind about Jack. Too many stories to remember and tell. I was always impressed with Jack's climbs. How could you not be!? Jack wasn't perfect buthe almost always hada smile to share and he neveruttered a bad word about anyone. Both things I find hard to emulate. Those are also the things I find most importanttoremember about Jack Roberts.



Jack could tellhis own story best I think.



"Life Training"

Thursday, May 12,



By Jack Roberts



Here I am again running up the Mesa Trail in the early morning light with my dog Pisco, training for another South American climbing trip.





Pisco, with a smile on his face as well. Here is why:

http://blog.ospreypacks.com/?tag=jack-roberts-climbing-adventures

I’ve been watching my pulse, feeling my breath, counting the calories, the carbs and especially the fat content of all that I eat. I’m lifting weights on odd numbered days and climbing on all the others. That’s when I’m not guiding for a living as well. I’m trying to do the right things that make me stronger and more successful in the mountains - whatever that means. The training always changes. Sometimes I need to run more for endurance so I can fly like the wind on long, alpine routes. For other climbing trips I need to climb indoors and lift weights so I develop explosive strength for those steep, long free climbs that are always on my hit list. But one thing I do notice is that I am always training for something. What? And more importantly, why?



Mainly I’ve found that training for climbing helps keep my life simple. And in this day and age with instant meals, instant travel, instant information and instant gratification, life gets complicated. It’s not easy living a simple, uncluttered life. It takes work. Effort. Just like running, or climbing, or lifting weights. For me it’s important to not own a TV and to read a lot of books and to write. It’s important to cook my own meals and have friends to share those meals and wine with. It’s important to go outdoors often and return after a day out hungry, dirty, tired and sore. That always puts a smile of my face and makes me feel alive. It’s the simple pleasures that give meaning to my life.



Climbing for over 40 years has instilled values in me that go deep. The lifestyle that has evolved around climbing has now become more important than the actual physical sensation of moving on stone or ice. More important than reaching summits is living an examined life, making every action count.



Climbing has trained me well for life separate from the cliffs and mountains I play on. Climbing has taught me how to overcome fear, hesitation, self-doubt, sickness, hunger, fatigue and more. It has shown me the necessity of being alone occasionally, that being afraid is normal and that being in wild places where no one has gone before is a good thing. Climbing has taught me how to leave security behind in order to lead a more fulfilling life. It has taught me to conserve energy, and save money, time and resources. This lifestyle has given me everything. Whatever I can’t carry on my back has to be left behind, not only in alpine climbing but also in life.



This is what I m really training for as I run the trails or solo the Third Flatiron. A better life. It isn’t the physicality of the body that I am training for so much as it is to sharpen and hone the mind’s ability to let go of all the stuff in life that doesn’t matter. It is a constant reminder to keep my life uncluttered, simple and pure."





Name: Jack Roberts

born: May 29, 1952

Height: 5’ 10”

Weight: 170lbs



Best Rock Band: Rolling Stones



Favorite pastime: climbing



Married or single: married



Jack and Pam



Kids: no way! (Jack would have been great with kids as his students and clientsall knew)



Claim to fame: Wearing a Victoria’s Secret dress in a La Sportiva ad (seriously, he did that)







Favorite motto: “You might not find what you want but you might just get what you need”.



Favorite curse word: Piss Off!



Biggest turn-off: Lazy, fat people (I often wondered why we ever got along)



Favorite climbing area: Tuolumne Meadows Why?: Perfect rock, perfect climbs, perfect weather.



How long have you been climbing?: 37 years



Favorite beer: Guinness



Current job: Professional climber/author/guide





Jack guiding in Cham

Nominee for Coolest Song Ever: Marvin Gaye, “What’s Going On”?



Number of US States visited: 38



Most famous person you’ve ever met: Ricardo Cassin



Place of birth: Los Angeles, California



Best movie ever: Apocalypse Now



Who’s #1 on your speed-dial? Tra-Ling’s Asian Café.



Favorite fruit: Banana



Most memorable outdoor accomplishment: Having established 1st ascent SW Face Denali



Something nobody knows about you: I secretly listen to Neil Diamond songs, WAIT, no I don’t!



Dog or cat person?: Dog of course…….Golden Retrievers ROCK!



Most inspiring person in history: Mahatma Gandhi



Most recently-finished book: “Marley and Me”, by John Grogan



Other Sponsors: La Sportiva, Bluewater, Mammut, Osprey, Bibler, GU, Sports Street Marketing



More questions for Jack Roberts:

blog: http://www.jackrobertsclimbing.com



Do you clip bolts, plug cams, stack pads, or crush ice?



Yes, I dominate all forms of rock and ice!!





Jack doing what he hasdone from the beginningand making it look easy.

How long have you been an athlete with La Sportiva?



Approximately 16 years...



What are some of your lifetime climbing goals?



To continue to climb to my maximum potential in rock, ice and alpine climbs. To establish alpine FAs until I drop.



Do you have a claim to fame?



The reputation of the shape and condition of my toes and feet have made me infamous. Even Reinhold Messner wanted to see them! Also, I'm the only male Sportiva athlete to appear in a dress in any ad.



Do you have any vices?



Yes, but too many to list here........





One of thereal pleasures in life...coffee in Cham with Jack

What makes you tick as a climber and in the real world?



Climbing stops the voices in my head from gaining control. If I stopped climbing I'd become dangerous.



What drives you to climb? The money? The groupies? The fame? What?





Alaska in '78http://www.alpinist.com/tcl/email/jr/038.pdf

Definitely the fame. Groupies are over-rated. Money is....what was the question again? Seriously, the freedom of moving in the mountains either solo or with good friends feeds my psyche and makes me feel alive.



What is your favorite movie?



Apocalypse Now.



Do you have any nicknames? Explain:



Many old friends call me JACQUES rather than Jack. These friends felt that I had more style than the name "Jack" . implies.. The nickname stuck.



What’s the longest you’ve gone without sleep? Why?



Four days. On a new route on Denali. Altitude and stress kept both my partner and I awake. We spent that time in a Bibler tent waiting out a big storm.



If you had to be named after one of the 50 states, which would it be?



Alaska. Because I've spent over 20 seasons climbing up there and know those mountains to be the most beautiful.



What did you have for lunch yesterday?



Sushi. A Rainbow roll along with some salmon and tuna sashimi.



If you could hook up a thought monitor to your head, would you see pictures, hear words or would music be playing?



A visual of someone climbing vertical ice to the Rolling Stones song......Fancy Man's Blues....the lyrics appear in a bubble above the climber's head.



What really scares you about climbing?



It's very easy to mistake the sensation of feeling omnipresence for omnipotence and get severely hurt trying to understand the difference.



If your life was made into a movie, what would it be called?



The Unsolved Mystery of Alpine Jacques......in 3D version.



Where would you live if it could be anywhere in the world?



Mexico. Food is tasty, Tequila is the world's best alcohol, Surfing is the perfect compliment to climbing and the beach life down there doesn't get much better...



Have no food or have no gasoline?



Got beer and two sticks to rub together for my fire...... Why ask for more?



Do you wish you had sexier feet?



No one has sexier feet than I have. Didn't we have this discussion earlier?





Jack's feet, while working in the spring of before surgery.

More about Jack here:



http://c498469.r69.cf2.rackcdn.com/1997/80_roberts_arctic_aaj1997.pdf#search=%22jack%20roberts%22



http://coldthistle.blogspot.com//02/you-dont-know-jack.html



http://www.climbing.com/exclusive/basecamp_blog/jack_roberts_a_tribute/



God's speed my friend. I wish I could do more.



Canadian ice in

"Yesterday, January 15, Jack Roberts was climbing Bridalveil Falls, an almost 400-foot-high (150-meters) Grade 5 ice route up one of Colorado's biggest waterfalls. Jack, in his guidebook Colorado Ice, which details most of the state's ice climbs, calls Bridalveil Falls, "A climb of legendary stature and beauty" and "A Colorado and indeed an American classic."



Jack was leading the second pitch, a long steep pitch up a pillar on the right side of the falls, when he fell 60 feet about 12:20 p.m. His belayer was able to signal hikers below, who summoned the San Miguel County Search and Rescue group. While waiting for rescue, Jack suffered a cardiac arrest and died. The 18 rescuers were able to evacuate Jack, who had a broken hip, off the falls but their CPR efforts were unable to resuscitate him."







Photographs and quoted content are courtesy of Jack and a number of known and unknown Internet sources not credited directly. I hope no one minds.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Mystery Photo #8

This is the seventh post (and 8th photo) in a series of unidentified photographs from the Charles Wiseman Family Bible. See this post for background information. Click on the "Mystery Photo" label at the bottom of the post to see all of the photographs in this series. As always, you can click on the pictures to enlarge them.



Paper photograph on card stock. 2 3/8 x 4 1/16. Printed on back: Frank A. Place, Photographer, Warsaw, Ind. Also, perhaps, another of those "hidden mother" photos? Looks to me like the background has been retouched.

Okay, even though we all know what can happen when you assume something, an assumption is going to be made that this is a photograph of one of the grandchildren of Charles and Susanna Bray Wiseman. In the previous post I suggested that the baby in that picture was Nathaniel Howard Wiseman, born July 18, 1884. He was the 2nd grandchild of Charles and Susanna. The first was Ethol Walter Scott, born April 7, 1884 in Vevay, Switzerland County, Indiana and the son of Susanna Wiseman and James Scott. I don't think the previous picture was of Ethol because they lived in Vevay, in the southeastern part of Indiana. It's my opinion that the above photograph is of the 3rd grandchild who was Charles Wilson Wiseman, born September 20, 1886 and the son of Amanda Alexander and Samuel Bray Wiseman though it could be Smith Wiseman, born February 27, 1888 and also the son of Sam and Amanda.

The pictures below are from my father and were identified (from left to right) as Ethol Scott, Howard Wiseman, Smith and Charles Wiseman.

Mirabelle's second camping trip ..

In a stroke of luck, Jennifer and I were both not working. So we took Mirabelle on another camping trip. This time, like the previous out to the warmer, sunnier side of the mountains.



We drove out Wednesday morning and did pretty good timing the drive with Mirabelle's nap schedule. We opted to check out the Aplets and Cotlets (Liberty Orchards) store in Cashmere as our first stop on the warm side. It wasn't really that interesting. And after a few samples, we continued east to the Mission Ridge ski area for a short hike. Unfortunately, this was not well timed with naps, and Mirabelle was a bit over tired when we placed her into the new back pack for the hike. She whined most of the twenty minutes or so we went uphill, and then we took her out for a snack and to see if she would calm down.







No luck with the calming, and we headed back down the hill where she fell asleep moments before returning to the car. Since it was chilly, we just headed back to Leavenworth after a stop at a market on Highway 2.







After playing in town a bit, we headed to Eight Mile Campground for the night. Where we ate dinner, and then had a good night's sleep before being waken up by the camp host. We drove into town and hiked the Nordic trails at the ski area before leaving to come back home. One stop up at Stevens Pass for Mirabelle to stretch her legs, and we were in the final leg of our journey.


















One Way to Lower Your Bike's Gearing

AT's Refurbished Jeunet
overheard in a bike shop



Customer, returning from a test ride: "I love the bike! But it feels like there are not enough low gears? What is the best way to get easier gears?"



Salesperson: "Oh, well you need to ride the bike for several weeks for the gears to wear in. They should feel lower after that than they do now. If not, you can bring the bike back and we'll get you lower gears. But they usually wear in."



I almost laughed out loud, but I have to say I agree. The gearing on all of my bikes feels lower now than it did when I first got them. The gears have worn in so nicely! If you opt for this method though, be mindful that if you neglect the bike and stop riding it for a while, the gears will stiffen up and feel higher again the next time you get in the saddle. The fun facts of bike ownership.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Lazy Days and Nature Walks

We are definitely enjoying the nature walks and lazy days. Especially down by the river. I really loved the seven months we traveled and saw all new things. And I'm really loving being back in a place that feels like "home" to us because we spent so much time here last winter.







Living the life in warm and sunny Florida!