Places

Camping in the Shenandoah National Park

This past weekend, close friends of ours and Ligia and I went camping in the Shenandoah National Park. It was a surreal experience. We left a little later than we’d planned, and caught the rush hour traffic heading west on Route 66. We rued our day as we slowly crawled through miles of clogged up highway, but when we got out of the Manassas area, the traffic improved.

At any rate, we’d been slowed down enough that we arrived on Skyline Drive after dark. Then, it started raining as we approached the park. As if that wasn’t enough, fog set in and we could barely see ahead of us. But after all, we were traveling on mountain tops, and it was the start of fall, so the weather can be pretty unpredictable and wet. After trudging around in the dark, we got to the camp, and found one of the few remaining spots for the night. We were shocked to find out that they were booked solid and there was a waiting list. Our friends, who wanted to stay for two nights, couldn’t.

We bought some firewood and headed to our camp site, dreading the experience that would follow: pitching our tents in the dark, in rain, and in strong wind. Fun isn’t the word to describe it. We turned on our headlights and kept them on as we unpacked the tents and raised them. I’ll spare you the muddy details, but you’d be amazed what four pairs of helping hands, working in unison, can accomplish when under pressure.

We got the tents up, then tried to eat. What to eat? We wanted to heat up the food, but we needed a fire. Have you ever tried to start a fire while it’s raining and windy? No copious amounts of lighter fluid and paper will help. It kept dying down, even though the wood was dry. Finally, I gave up and called in the reserves: our friends. They both tried it, persevered, and finally succeeded. We gave up warming the food and ate some cold sandwiches instead, as we sat and warmed ourselves by the fire.

Fireside chats? Not that night! After we got done eating, we went directly to bed, where another surprise awaited us. Our tents were summer tents, and while they held up very nicely in the wind and rain, they were, shall we say, constructed more for the purpose of aeration than insulation. Luckily, we’d brought plenty of covers, but our friends didn’t. Even though they didn’t admit it, methinks they froze their butts off during the night. And what a night! A gale wind blew the whole time, and waves of rain beat down on our tents. It was noisy and lousy, and cold. It took me a while to fall asleep, but thankfully, I stayed asleep till morning after that. We woke up early, with the wind still blowing outside. The rain had stopped, and I managed to get a fire going without help.

We ate our breakfast and had tea, then had two wonderful surprises. One was the Monarch butterflies, in various stages of development, attached to the exterior walls of the bathrooms. Why they picked the bathrooms I don’t know, but that’s where I found them.

Monarch butterfly larva

Monarch butterfly cocoon

Monarch butterfly cocoon

I found the gold lining on their cocoons truly amazing. That’s actually what drew me to them in the first place. If I hadn’t seen the gold spots and crown lining, I’d have passed by them like many of the other people using the bathrooms. It’s no wonder they’re called Monarch butterflies. They sure look regal with those spots of gold, don’t they?

Then Ligia had the second surprise. She found a wild apple tree, and picked a few apples. (They were delicious, by the way.) What do you think she found on one of them? An Eyed Hawk Moth larva, of all things! What was it doing in the Appalachian mountains? It normally lives in Europe. I don’t know, but it was a beautiful thing to behold.

Eyed hawk moth larva

After our breakfast — and this time we could chat around the fire — we took off and went hiking on the Rose River Trail. Our goal: Rose River Falls. The trail was easy and beautiful. Here are a few photos from the hike:

A nonconformist tree

Tree on a rock

Rose River turned out to be a brook in the forest — quite the optimistic name for a brook, isn’t it? 🙂

Rose River

Forest art on display

Rose River Waterfall

After the hike, we had a wonderful late lunch at the Skyland Lounge, then headed out on Skyland Drive, and stopped along the way at overlooks to take photos of the gorgeous vistas. Here are a few of them:

Wide vista

Set against the sunset sky

Mountain tops

Hazy outlines

Fall colors

Was it a wonderful trip? You bet your britches it was, and I’d do it again in a heartbeat, even with all the nightmarish traffic and surreal weather.

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Thoughts

Intersection in India

Here is the link to a video of a busy traffic intersection in India. Notice the lack of traffic signals, and how everyone finds their own way to do things. Very disconcerting for someone used to order on the streets.

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Thoughts

Woman, 82, gets ticket for slow crossing

In LA, an old woman got a $118 ticket for crossing the street too slowly. She was cited for being an obstruction to traffic. Reporters observed that crossing and said even high school students had to run across the street in order to make it to the other side in time. Hey, let’s give a hand to Officer Kelly of the LAPD, for being such a caring fellow… See link for details.

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Thoughts

How I use FeedBurner

I think FeedBurner is one of the coolest sites out there today, and I wanted to share how I use it with the world. My life is a lot easier because of it – I can manage my feeds in ways I couldn’t even imagine before. I love it. Here’s why:

I was able to move the location of my feeds from one domain to another, one directory to another and one web host to another without any interruption in service or problems accesing my feed items. Now that’s cool! Portability, here I come to enthuse about you! 🙂

I’ve been able to splice my feed with my del.icio.us bookmarks, and that’s been wonderful! Not only is that a “nice to have” item for me, but it’s saving me lots of time! You see, I put out the ComeAcross Podcast. It’s a quick summary of interesting stuff I stumble on. Well, along with it, I provide the audience with a collection of detailed info about the things I mention in the show. For the 1st three episodes, I did it with zipped PDFs – but you know, publishers aren’t too keen on reproduction of their content – so I decided to drop that before one of their lawyers contacted me…

Next I switched to coding a summary of links to each of the articles or websites I talked about, but that was getting bothersome. I’d have to copy shortcuts to those websites to my hard drive when I found the articles, then when I put the show together, open them up again, and write the summary in Dreamweaver. Well, I thought, why couldn’t I do away with that step? When I discovered the Link Splicing feature in FeedBurner and realized I could use that to distribute the links, I jumped up for joy! Yes, less headaches! Now for my next show, my 8th, I’ll simply tell my subscribers to check my FeedBurner feed for the del.icio.us links mentioned in the podcast! Cool!

Here’s more good news about Link Splicing: with the help of support folks at FeedBurner, I was pointed to a hack which allows me to use only specially tagged items from my del.icio.us bookmarks for my feeds. So, for example, I use items tagged Dignoscentia on my three Dignoscentia feeds (The Dignoscentia Blog, Dignoscentia Bible Podcast and Dignoscentia Podcast Biblic). And I use only items tagged for the podcast on the ComeAcross Podcast feed.

Of course, I love the FeedFlare option as well. Boy, does that come in handy to make it easy for people to add various blog or podcast items to del.icio.us! That’s like a guaranteed traffic increase right there! The easier it is for people to share things with others, the easier it is for me to get my content out there!

I am enamored with BuzzBoost and Headline Animator. I use them to promote my content. I use the Chicklet Chooser a lot. I post the Feed icon on all my sites to let visitors know they can browse my feeds directly. And it’s also on the FeedBurner Support Forums that I found out how to advertise my feed to crawlers by posting the links in my code. Check out the source code for my home page to see what I mean. All of my feeds are present there! 🙂 Cool!

The stats are really, really cool! FeedBurner breaks down my readers by app used to access the feed, and also gives me stats about which feed items get accessed. Last, but not least, I love PingShot! It’s instant gratification. Everyone (about 10 or so of the biggest blog or podcast locators) knows about a new item on my feeds as soon as I ping FeedBurner.

The FeedBurner support folks are the quickest in the biz, and for a free service, that’s saying a LOT. They’re right on the money, they’re friendly, and they understand English! They’re not outsourced! Yes! 🙂

Thanks, FeedBurner, for making my geeky life easier and more fun!

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