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Why must things happen to those who don't want them, while those who would welcome those things are left without. One of lifes great mysteries, and maybe we shall never know the answer to that query, but one must wonder. Feet of snow have fallen hundreds of miles south, where people either don't want it or can't handle the volume dumped upon them. I would give my life savings(not much mind you) and just about everything else I own, except for winter gear, to be blessed with a gift such as 24 inches or more of fresh powder. So please, pray to whomever you care to for those snowy drifts to migrate in a more sensical direction, north that is. So, anyways, on a happier note, Arsenal won today against the liverpool side at home, while Chelsea ate the proverbial poo thanks to Everton. Man. U, unfortunately, snuck by with a tie due to an own goal by Aston Villa. Either way, Arsenal is climbing towards the top again, FANTASTIC! Have a good one.

-Riley

Last Updated (Sunday, 14 February 2010 23:29)

 

Why does this always happen? Rain and dismal weather just rear their ugly heads at the worst times, What is with that? It makes me want to chunder everywhere, Yuck. Anyways, though few there are some beneficial points to this untimely precipitation, my car has been washed clean and the warmer weather is somewhat of a respite, though i still prefer the alternative. Either way, we must survive this warm spell and reach the far side with high hopes for a continually snowy winter, the base will certainly be firmly packed down and should not have any troubles sticking around afterward. Crosscountry skiing will be at a premium and downhill skiing will hopefully be improved as well. Keep your chins up.

-Riley

Last Updated (Monday, 25 January 2010 13:04)

 

Well, the holidays and breaks are coming to an end and the last few people left holding out are finally headed back to the grind.  A sad day that will be, but it is not upon us yet, so don't waste the time you have left. Use the time you have, wisely, and get out and have some fun with friends, one last skiing, snowshoeing or sledding outing, dancing, cracking open a nice cold beverage together (preferrably legally). There are all sorts of fun things to do, pick and choose. Should be an exciting weekend for watching sports as well, though I'm not talking about a bunch of heavy guys running around with the ball in their HANDS, as the Premier league hopefully picks back up again with an action packed game week, including a few double headers, be sure to get rowdy. I'll catch you on the flip side,

-Riley

 

My parents never hiked the Appalachian Trail. They never climbed one the the Seven Summits. They never even ventured away from their home continent. To say that my parents possessed the true qualities of hardened adventurers would be overstating in the extreme.

What they did possess was a deep fondness for nature and a sense of awe for the wonders of the world that lived out our back door, and I followed them, grudgingly at first, into that wondrous place. There were the summertime Saturday rise-at-dawn fishing excursions to Canadarago Lake with my dad (and how I loved waking at 5:00 am on my summer vacation). There were the car camping trips (three or four every summer) to the Thousand Islands or Westcott Beach, where I was introduced, after many long moments tiptoeing along the water's edge, to the wonders of the underwater Lake Ontario shore. There was the day trip one warm fall day when I was nine to Rogers Environmental Center, home to a few miles of nature trails that wound through various forest and wetland ecosystems. Rogers was where I discovered the trail, and by the middle of the afternoon both of my parents were slumped on the lawn outside of the interpretive center munching on a long awaited lunch as I hopped around excitedly asking if we could walk just one more trail. And of course, like so many other families, there were the endless afternoon drives to eagerly awaited destinations only to discover that no, the Adirondack Museum was not open after Columbus Day and Howe Caverns sent the last elevator into the depths no later than 4:00pm. As I grew older, the destination faded into the background on those drives as I became lost in the journey.

Some would say that it wasn't until I went off to college that my real outdoor adventures began. It was there that I kayaked the northern Adirondack rivers and lakes, spent countless days tramping all over the mountains, and ventured to far flung destinations in Canada and Mexico. But as my love for these outdoor adventures grew, I began to realize that my parents' outdoor legacy was one of sharing in the discovery of nature and a love for sharing the wonders of the outside world, however big or small, with others. Their enthusiasm for sharing and discovery clearly rubbed off on me, as a few years after college I took a part-time position teaching backpacking and wilderness skills at a local university. And it was there, with my students, as they looked in awe across the Hudson Valley from some high perch in the Catskills or watched twinkling stars from the comfort of their sleeping bags on a minty fresh fall night in the Adirondacks that I began to attain some small measure of the love that my parents had for sharing the outdoors with me.

My dad passed away in March 1999. Mom still gets out for snowshoeing and the occassional summer hike, but her adventures are more limited now.

My son, Gabriel, was born December 27, 2009.

For me, the sharing continues.

-Matt

 

Last Updated (Friday, 08 January 2010 15:11)

 
Happy New year to all. Make those resolutions and try your best to stick to them. In keeping with that though don't pick anything too dificult, challenge yourself, but keep it within reason. There is no point in making a promise to yourself that you know you cant keep. That being said, though enjoy the new year and have loads of fun with all of the beautiful weather we have been having.

-Riley

Last Updated (Friday, 01 January 2010 11:36)

 
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