Dang sleeping pad. I forgot it on this tour, and what a time to forget it, too. I felt as if I were getting sick both on Sunday and Monday, and sleeping uninsulated in 30 degree weather is unwise if you’re healthy. So I succumbed and am sick. When packing on Sunday I packed my favorite four herbs (cumin, fennel, coriander, and cardamom) and some garlic, ginger, and dried cayenne, and made some tea tonight. Fellow co-workers tasted some and told me it was good. Whether it tastes good or not I don’t really care when I’m sick, but I do like the savor. I tried sleeping curled up on my pack on both Monday and last nights, but gave up and have moved into the back seat of one of the trucks. I’m nice and toasty in my sleeping bag even though I have to sleep with my legs bent a little to keep my head and feet off of the cold doors.
Word has been suggested that we rise around 1am to watch the meteor shower. I asked to be woken without promising I would not just go back to sleep.
All of us traveled to the grove that the half of the crew I’m with found yesterday. Up and down there, and up and down back. (pant, pant, pant.) My legs sure are getting a work-out and (I’d like to think) are learning a bit of mountain goat-ish manuevers. Honestly, my foot coordination is nowhere near that of any mountain creature, including human climbers, but I am learning how to slide down rocky and sandy slopes without crab walking or falling over.
The found Athel site isn’t more than a half-hour walk away from camp, and there are many more athels than just in the grove. When we were walking back yesterday (through the unfamiliar terrain when we weren’t sure if we would have an easy path back to camp — where’s a topo map when you need one?) we hiked through a flat area overgrown with Athels and most likely hybrid Athel. We are going back tomorrow as well.
I’m looking for a small digital camera that I can attach to my belt. I’ve been carrying my $600 digital prosumer SLR-look-alike and am not only quite worried about the dust ruining it but it increases the weight of my pack in a terrain that requires the lighest pack possible. Necessities include at least a gallon of water, rain gear, food, and tools, which on this tour is a hatchet, possibly a saw, and for two lucky people, the Garlon* Chemicals. Chemical carriers don’t carry their own packs, for obvious reasons.
NCC supplied us with two small portable radios for communication on this tour. Co-worker Josh found a small radio at the beginning of our hike yesterday, and with some new batteries, it has become a third radio.
Lunch under a large Athel away from the zone of destruction proved entertaining today as Adam and Melody proceded to play with the radios and attempt to wake up Brian who was sleeping next to the third.
Lunch has proved a bit difficult for me, though not in a hard-difficult sense. Difficult in that I take so long to eat that I have no time to nap before going back to work. Where possible, I’ve taken to reclining against my pack in order to nap and eat at the same time.
Aside from our work day, Boggle has proved entertaining for me at night after dinner. I keep trying to pull tricks that my dad and grandfather use extensively in Scrabble, but I’ve been thwarted because Boggle consults the regular dictionary, not the Scrabble dictionary. Shouldn’t Scrabble words be regular words as well?
Goodnight.