Friday, October 29, 2010

Mule grows Pumpkins for Blacksmith’s Imperial Pumpkin Ale!
What do 100 pounds of pumpkins and a 1150 pound mule have in common? The answer is the 2nd annual rendition of Custer’s Imperial Pumpkin Ale from Blacksmith Brewery.
For the past two years, Custer, a mule with a talent for farming and a penchant for good micro brews, has been growing Sugar Pie Pumpkins for Blacksmith’s seasonal ale - a job which sometimes entails protecting his treasures from the occasional black bear, fox, chicken, turkey or sticky-fingered neighbor.

Some of the 200 pumpkins that Custer grew for Blacksmith’s Imperial Pumpkin Ale.This year, with the help of his co-farmer Nick Kaufman, Custer grew almost 200 pumpkins. Mike Howard, Blacksmith’s capable brewer, and Rachel, Nick’s garden-crazed daughter, hand seeded and roasted pumpkins for the ale. Ever the philanthropist, Custer donated his extra pumpkins to the Missoula Alliance Church, whose own fundraising pumpkins had been destroyed by vandals.
When Custer isn’t farming or drinking Mike’s tasty brews, he can be found packing loads in the Bob Marshall and Selway-Bitterroot Wildernesses. Custer hopes that Blacksmith Brewery patrons will enjoy and savor the all-natural blend of his lovingly nurtured pumpkin and spices as much as he does.

Happy trails and happy drinking!

Custer and co-farmer Nick Kaufman pose in front of corn and pumpkin patch

Some of the 200 pumpkins harvested

Roasting pumpkins for Custer's Imperial Ale

Rachel gives the hard-working farmer a greatful kiss

Custer inspects the camera


Groups Collaborate to Accomplish Important Restoration Work on Blodgett Overlook Trail.
By Rachel Kaufman

The Blodgett Overlook trail received a much needed restorative makeover Saturday October 2nd when volunteers with the Selway-Bitterroot Foundation, a non-profit dedicated to connecting the community to wilderness through stewardship projects, closed off environmentally detrimental switchback cutoffs with educational signs, pulaskis, shovels and good clean muscle power.

The Blodgett Overlook trail is a popular 1.5 mile hike west of Hamilton in the Bitterroot Mountains. The trail switchbacks gradually along mostly open hillsides. Unfortunately, recreators eager to shorten their hike, have taken shortcuts between the switchbacks, creating several steep trails that go straight up the mountain side. Cutting switchbacks leads to many negative consequences for wildlife, aquatic health and the ecological integrity of the forests.

Cutting off switchbacks removes existing ground cover which leads to erosion. Erosion of sediments and pollutants into streams and rivers can damage aquatic habitat by covering spawning sites, destroying food sources and reducing water clarity.

Erosion also reduces the amount of nutrients available for native plants. The loss of ground cover, top soil and the soil compaction reduces the amount of nutrients available for plants. It also decreases a soil's infiltration and water holding capacities, as well as permeability for root growth. These conditions reduce native plant’s ability to re-vegetate. In some cases, non-native species may establish and further stress a native plant community.

Wilderness Steward, Rachel Kaufman and volunteers Kelsey McMullen and Alisha Caspary began their restoration work by digging three sign post holes at the beginning and end of two of the most eroded and lengthy cutoffs. They installed temporary signs that implore hikers to stay on the trail. The Forest Service will replace the temporary laminated sign with more permanent routed oak signs in the future.

They rested little in their restoration efforts despite the unusually hot October sun. Alisha used a Pulaski to loosen compacted and gullied soil in a 250 foot long cut off. Kelsey and Rachel scrounged the nearby hill side for downed trees and woody debris to cover the loosened soil. The cover will prevent hikers from walking on the fragile soil as well as shade and shelter germinating seedlings from sun and heavy rainfall. Their efforts will create a more complex surface that will slow water runoff and prevent erosion.

Over time, if hikers stay on the trail, the area will regenerate and a more natural and healthy ecosystem will prevail. “The views are more spectacular from the trail. If you take the established trail instead of the cutoff you may walk a little further at a more moderate incline but you will also be treated with a unique view of the hanging glacial valley of Canyon Creek,” commented Rachel. She also noted that volunteers and committed recreators can make a huge difference on our public lands by spending a day volunteering with the Selway-Bitterroot Foundation. Visit www.selwaybitterroot.org.

Selway-Bitterroot Foundation

2010 Report for the Bitterroot National Forest
Hours:
Staff Hours: 570
Intern Hours: 500
Volunteer Hours: 559

Campsite Monitoring:
Campsites inventoried: 91
Outfitter Campsites Inspected: 11
Campfire rings removed: 91

Campfire ratings:
0: 25
1: 17
2: 15
3: 14
Trash Removed lbs: 100.6

Trail Work:
Downed Trees Removed:
0-6: 606
7-10: 391
11-24: 170
25-36: 20
36+: 1
b
Trail brushed (mi): 39.51
Trail rocked (mi): 39.51
Tread repair (ft): 137.5
Waterbars: 349

Restoration
Mortar: Part of Southern wall of St. Mary Lookout
Paint: Ceiling of St. Mary Lookout.
Switchback cut off: 200 feet on Blodgett Overlook

Signs
Inventoried: 34
Installed: 3 (Blodgett Overlook)

Individual Hitch Reports

May 14 — Blodgett Canyon Trail Brushing with Montana Wilderness Assn. (Blodgett Creek, BNF)

The Montana Wilderness Associations, age 30 and under service group, the Ridgerunners, met with SBF Wilderness Steward, Rachel Kaufman, to clear and brush the first 3.5 miles of Blodgett Canyon trail. The group focused on loping the young lodgepole pine and spruce trees that were crowding the trail corridor.
Comments: There is still regenerating trees in the first mile before and after the bridge at mile 3.5 that could be brushed.

May 19 — Wilderness Skills Trail (Bass Creek, BNF)
The SBF Lead Wilderness Stewards Rachel Kaufman and Eric Melson helped to teach 5th and 6th graders from around the Bitterroot Valley about public lands, wilderness and Leave No Trace ethics with the BNF at The Wilderness Skills Trail.


June 5 — National Trails Day: Rock Creek Trail Repair with Montana Wilderness Assn. (Lake Como, BNF)
The SBF staff and five interns partnered with the Bitterroot National Forest and the Montana Wilderness Association’s Ridge Runners as well as community volunteers for a day of hard work and celebration on one of the Bitterroot’s most popular trails. They completed part of an ongoing turnpike project by constructing over 90 feet of turnpike on the Rock Creek Trail along side Lake Como.

June 10 - Kootenai Creek trail clearing (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF staff and interns cleaned water bars and brushed 4 miles of the Kootenai Creek trail.
Comments: An old stove was found about 1.5 miles past the Wilderness boundary, left side of trail in an old Outfitter camp right before the creek. Large Pipo’s flat spt. Stove is behind big tree on the left.

July 6 to 11 — Indian Ridge to Watchtower Pass Trail Opening (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman, three interns and community volunteer, Anne Marie Scott opened nearly 30 miles of trail extending from Indian Creek Trailhead to Watchtower Pass on the state line.
Comments: The group left about 200 logs down in the area between Cooper Point and point where the trail leaves the eastern side of T29N R15E, Sec 20, NE quarter.

July 7 Baker and Gem Lake campsite clean up (Selway Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF Director Rob Mason and the Montana Wilderness Association’s Ridge Runners’ volunteers spent a day reducing and containing campsites as well as removing campfire rings.

July 12 Boulder Creek Brushing Campsite (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF interns brushed and cleared the first three miles of the Boulder Creek trail.

July 27-28 — Scimitar Ridge Trail Opening (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman joined BNF Wilderness Ranger Charlie Mabbott and his dynamic duo of mules, Reba and Lightening Bug to clean water bars and clear trail on Scimitar Ridge.

August 3-5 Bass Creek campsite inventory and cleanup (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF interns Ben Stein and Stephen Countryman inventoried and cleaned campsites at Bass Lake.

August 6 to 7 — St. Mary’s Lookout Maintenance (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF staff Rachel Kaufman and Rob Mason joined BNF Wilderness Ranger Bill Goslin, Stevensville District Ranger Dan Ritter and BNF Historian Mary Williams to discuss repairs and restoration needs for the lookout. The group painted the ceiling to match the lookout’s historic color scheme and mortared portions of the structure’s fragile foundation.
Comments: The mortar work is not nearly finished. The western wall is complete as is about 1/3 of the southern wall. The eastern and northern wall need to be completed. The interior of the lookout needs a lot of work as well. The walls need to be repainted, the furniture repaired or restored and the stove polished. Most of these latter observations were made my Mary Williams.

August 8-9 –Kootenai Creek campsite inventory and cleaning (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF interns Ben Stein and Stephen Countryman inventoried and cleaned campsites at Kootenai Lakes.

August 8-10 — Kerlee Lake Campsite restoration and inventory (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman inventoried and restored campsites along the Tin Cup Trail and at Goat and Kerlee Lakes.

August 10-11 — Little Rock Creek campsite restoration and inventory (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman inventoried and restored campsites along the Little Rock Creek trail and at Little Rock Creek Lake.

August 18-20 Chaffin Lakes campsite inventory and cleanup (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF interns Ben Stein and Stephen Countryman inventoried and cleaned campsites at Chaffin Lakes. .

August 16-19 --- Indian Creek trail clearing (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF interns Drew Wenderborn and Bart Gutke cleared trail 36 to Shoefield Creek.

August 15 to 21 — Blodgett Projects w/ Sierra Club & Bitter Root BCH (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
In one of the SBF’s first weeklong collaborative stewardship projects, Sierra Club volunteers, Bitter Root Back Country Horsemen and Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman, successfully completed the opening of Blodgett Creek trail from mile 7 to Blodgett Lake and to Blodgett Pass.
Comments: The trail through 7, 9 and 10 mile meadow is very deeply trenched or braided. It would be a good week long volunteer project for a large group in the future.
Blodgett Pass trail was littered with large boulders by a spring avalanche. Detailed pictures and notes were given to Nick Hazelbaker and Bill Goslin.
Two old stoves were found at mile 7 camp. This information was given to Bill Goslin.

August 22-24 Little Clearwater trail clearing (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF interns Ben Stein and Stephen Countryman cleared the beginning of the Little Clearwater trail.

August 22 – Sawtooth Creek Campsite inventories (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF intern Drew Wenderborn inventoried and cleaned campsites up Sawtooth Creek.

August 23-24 – Canyon Creek Campsite inventories (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF intern Drew Wenderborn inventoried and cleaned campsites up Canyon Creek.

September 10-12 — One Horse Lakes Trail Opening with the Montana Wilderness Association Ridgerunners (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF staff Rachel Kaufman and Rob Mason joined MWA Ridgerunners’ volunteers to open the One Horse Lakes trail. The group also cleaned up campsites at Carlton Lake.
Comments: There are well over 500 trees down from Little Carlton Lake to South One Horse Lake. This may be a good place to send interns in 2011 for an 8 day hitch.

September 14 —Two Buck Springs Campsite Inspection (Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness, BNF)
SBF Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman joined BNF’s Marty Almquist to inspect Two Buck Springs Outfitter Camp in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness.

September 20-22 — Eakin Ridge and Harrington Ridge Campsite Inspection (Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness, BNF)
SBF Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman inspected Eakin, Mormon and Harrington Ridge outfitter campsites in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness.

September 28-29 — Salmon River Campsite Inspection (Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness, BNF)
Lead Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman inspected Elkhorn and Snake Creek outfitter campsites in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness.

October 2 — Blodgett Overlook trail restoration with Montana Wilderness Association (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman and Montana Wildereness Association Ridgerunners’ volunteers closed off environmentally detrimental switchback cutoffs with educational signs, pulaskis, shovels and good clean muscle power.
Comments: There is more restoration work to be done on this trail as well as brushing and tread work. This may be a good day project. Also, there are three sign posts installed within the first .5 mile with temporary restoration signs on them. Nick Hazelbaker commented that he would have Dave Lucas make more permanent wooden signs for these posts.

October 13-14 —Storm Ridge Campsite Inspection and waterbar maintenance
(Selway Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)

Steward Rachel Kaufman joined BNF employees to clean waterbars and inspect the Florida and Storm Creek Outfitter campsites in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness.

October 15 —Camus Lake Campsite Inventory and Restoration ( Camus Lake, BNF)
SBF Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman inventoried and cleaned campsites at Camas Lake.

October 18-19 — Blue Hole and Shoefield Campsite Inspection (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBF Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman and volunteer Stacey Miller inspected Blue Hole and Lower Schoefield Outfitter campsites.
Comments: Several trees have fallen down on Scimatar Ridge since it was cleared earlier this summer. The first one is about 35-40” in diameter. The outfitter trail along Schoefield Creek also has about 10 trees down that are causing reroutes. Some of the reroutes are old and well established.

October 21-22 — Boulder Creek Campsite Inspection and Reconnaissance (Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, BNF)
SBW Wilderness Steward Rachel Kaufman and volunteer Stacey Miller inventoried campsites along Boulder Creek, at Pickle’s Puddle and at Boulder Lake. The duo also located and documented two trash caches left by careless hunters around Pickle’s Puddle.
Comments: Details of the caches were given to Amanda. The Boulder Creek trail has had three trees fall since it was cleared earlier this summer. All should be passable to stock but are creating detours nonetheless.



Thursday, July 22, 2010

The Selway Bitterroot Foundation needs your junk!

As you may know, I am working for the Selway Bitterroot Foundation, a non-profit that focuses on connecting the community to Wilderness through stewardship projects. The Foundation recently procured a shop area where we can store and work on our tools. We are in need of many things to outfit our shop, and most of it might be something you or someone you know would consider junk. I would greatly appreciate if you would read through the following list and consider if you or an acquaintance might have an item that you could dust off and donate to us.

work bench,

heavy duty enough to attach a vice

vices

metal or wood free standing shelves

metal lock boxes

peg boards

storage and organizational equiptment i.e. plastic boxes etc.

old free standing kitchen cabinets

tape measure

hand or electric strew drivers

wrenches

hammers

hand saws or electric saws

square

5 gallon buckets

scrap lumber

metal cabinet with locking ability

shop light

hardware, screws, hooks for peg board

plastic bins

old rags

electric heater

power strip

extension cord

saw horses

locking casters

sandpaper

electric sander

trash can

broom

Friday, April 02, 2010

On April 6th, I will embark on my latest adventure to Nepal. I will be there for a month. While there, I will meet up with my good friend Sarah Patrick. We plan to do a 16 day trek to the Annapurna base camp in the Himalayas. We are also planning to volunteer with the Sister's of Charity. Sarah has been to the Everest base camp during a prior trip so when she leaves, I intend to see Mount Everest and learn as much as I can about Hinduism and Buddhism.
Hopefully, I will get the chance to update here while I am there but if not, I will surely update when I get home!
Namaste

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Mom and I in AZ somewhere

Canyonlands

Nicolas Cage in Sedona


Mike and I Christmas Eve

Mike and I at Lost Trail Powder MT

Things that have happened since my last post...
Well, it's hard to say because, I have kept very poor track of my activities in my calendar and have not been very structured in what I do in general. The things that stick out the most in my memory are:

1. Buying a new road bike with some college graduation money. The thing is slicker than snot and weighs about that much too! I have been on some hair raising rides down the old east side highway and some much more relaxed rides around town. Can't wait to do my first half century!

2. New Years Eve: I spent it with my best good friend Katy Jones and her hubby. We did some First Night activities including a masquerade ball where I waltzed with the Mystery Guest. Lator, they revealed the mystery Guest's identity to be the local celebrity weather man Mark Heyka! What fun! We rang in the New Years at the Union Club with Tom Catmull and the Clerics, my favorite local band.

3. Down hill skiing is something that I haven't done in years but Mike's enthusiasm prompted me to dust off the old straight skies from the 90s and hit some runs. I am glad to say that skiing is much like riding a bike and I was plowing down runs and over moguls in now time. We combined one awesome ski day with a stay at Lost Trail Hot Springs...glorious.

4. Mom and I took a three week road trip south to Tuscon and beyond. We hiked and hiked and hiked and hiked. We hit worse weather in Utah and southern Arizona than we had all winter in Montana. We woke to frozen zippers and frosty sleeping bags more often than we did to nice warm morning sun. We explored some places that we didn't get a chance to explore like the Superstitious mountains and the Chiricuah mountains. The most eventful hike and the highlight of the trip was in Sedona Arizona where we passed the famous Nicolas Cage. We have only a fleeting photograph of him but his image is burned in my minds eye: black leather jacket, cowboy boots, black leather cowboy hat, black jeans and dark sunglasses and a walking stick. He was talking to his young wife about her father. It was his voice that really gave him away. Nicolas Cage! On a hike! In cowboy boots! Need I say more?
We also went to Lowell Peak Observatory and Kitt Peak observatory where we were able to view Mars and the mood and Orion's Nebula. We had some pretty good beers and some pretty bad beers. We had some good margaritas and some bad margaritas. We saw the Phoenix Suns kick the 76ers butt and we made some kick ass guacamole!

5. My foot is great! I have been dancing, hiking and even running with little to no discomfort.

6. I am going to Nepal in two weeks to meet up with my darling good friend Sarah Patrick. We are planning to trek in the Annapurna for two weeks and then volunteer for another. Then I plan to see Mount Everest and do some yoga! Wish me luck!

Monday, December 14, 2009

Steelhead fishing on the Snake with Reed, Stacey and John

Thanksgiving with Mike and Baylea

Rock Candles

Ice fishing on Big Sky Lake

Handmade sock knitted by me!

So last we talked, I was quoting sappy poems and talking about wonderful fall actives with my friends and family. Well, much time has passed and now it is decidedly winter. Yes, winter has settled onto Missoula and onto my mood like a chilly, damp, heavy, suffocating blanket. But don't get me wrong, I love winter...

The biggest factor in my seasonally induced blues is actually not seasonally induced at all. Remember that nasty fall I took at Hot Springs on Mike's birthday? It turns out that I fractured my 5th metatarsal, not badly sprained it, as I had thought. I finally went to a doctor after a month of unceasing pain. So for the past three months, I have been limping and the past two of those, I have been limping in a nice medical boot. I moped and felt sorry for myself for awhile and then I joined the Women's Club and started doing weights, water aerobics, Pilates and yoga. Sometimes, I get really frustrated with the stiff boot but most of the time, it just feels nice to move. I knitted myself a fleece lined toe sock so that my feet will stay cozy in the snowy wetness and borrowed a right high soled clog from a friend to make my hips a little more even. I hope to be rehabbing by January.

Mike's older brother passed last week and, while I didn't know him very well, I still feel his death most acutely, mostly through Mike's pain, but also through the injustice of it all. He was in his thirties, healthy as a horse and happy as can be. Then he was diagnosed with brain cancer. He beat the cancer and went back to wild land fire fighting. Then it came back and his health declined until he was no more. I am confused, angry, sad and scared. How unfair is death...to take a man in his prime, who lived healthily, who loved life and was happy, who had friends and family who loved him, who still had so much to give. I am mad that I didn't get to know him. How many people in this world have been shorted because he was shorted? And how unfair for his brothers...I can't even imagine how horrible it must be to lose a sibling, a sibling who guided you through the death of your mother and who traveled with you and waited for you after you got done with work with a six-pack of beer to sit and chat. I just feel so sad. My dad wrote me some poignant words that almost put things in perspective...

The separation from his human presence is painful and difficult. He will me missed. However, his spirit remains... will always remain. His spirit is woven into thepeople who knew him an into the things he loved, that things that madehim who he is. His parting gift to the rest of us is . . .his spirit. Watch for it in apparent,, yet unexpected places, in a stranger's smile, the hug of a child or the incredible vibrance of energy that is life. His spirit is here and we are all better because of him.

In other news, I went steelhead fishing and reeled in three lovely fish, which I smoked! I crocheted a hat and knitted socks, both firsts in the needle works department for me. I have also been helping mom update her house. We repainted everything, washed the carpets and re-stained the grout in the tiles. It sounds like a short list but it has taken weeks. I made rock candles with my god mother and went ice fishing with my god aunt. I had two thanksgivings; one with Mike's family (highlight being the labeled name tags at each setting and the crazy marshmallow pastry hors d'oeuvres) and one with my family (highlight being when Baylea, the beagle, bit a battery and got acid burns on her tongue and gums). I applied, interviewed for and then declined a job as a teacher's aide at Stevensville. Long story there. I am anxious to be well and to travel and most of all to dance like a know I can.

Sunday, November 01, 2009

Brown Penny
William Butler Yeats

I whispered, "I am too young"
And then, "I am old enough "

Wherefore I threw a penny
To find out if I might love.

"Go and love, go and love, young man,
If the lady be young and fair. "

Ah, penny, brown penny, brown penny
I am looped in the loops of her hair.
O love is the crooked thing
There is nobody wise enough
To find out all that is in it
For he would be thinking of love
Till the stars had run away
And the shadows eaten the moon.

Ah, penny, brown penny, brown penny
One cannot begin it too soon.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

pumpkin cookin'
Gogol Bordello
"Start Wearing Purple!"

Gypsy Punks!
Gogol Bordello!

Fall Harvest Bounty

Roasting chilies

Cyser prior to pitching the yeast
Sarah pasturizing the apple juice and heating the honey

1 Ingredients for our cyser!
Tunes being aloof, as always
K.C. enjoying a piece of corn
Sarah and I pressing apples for our cyser
The skull pumpkin that I carved
The PEAS farm hens
The PEAS farm onions
The PEAS farm kale plants
Sarah and my Mom
Sarah and my $7 Thai pepper plant!!
Sarah and I at Farmer's Market

"O Autumn, laden with fruit, and stained
With the blood of the grape, pass not, but sit
Beneath my shady roof; there thou may'st rest,
And tune thy jolly voice to my fresh pipe;
And all the daughters of the year shall dance!
Sing now the lusty song of fruit and flowers."
- William Blake, To Autumn, 1783

“Am I going home to idleness? No, no. My feet and hands may be still, not so the mind--that has its aspirations yet, and it will work, for it has a law unto itself. Idleness is one thing, doing is another." -Lew Wallace.

My life of unemployment began with Mike’s birthday. Actually, it began with picking chilis at Steve’s for market and becoming so ill that I threw up four times, twice on the way to Stevensville from Hamilton. But that was just a small ripple that hardly is worth mentioning. Mike’s birthday began with lunch at his favorite Thai restaurant, Sa Wadee’s. Then we drove to Hot Springs, Montana to meet up with his pal, Billie, soak in the healing waters, and watch the musical entertainment. We checked into the historic Syme’s hotel and they gave us our choice of bathrobes! I got a silky paisley smoking lounge robe and Mike got a plaid old man’s robe. We went straight for the cooler and larger of the two pools and hung out there for awhile. Then we met up with Billie and had dinner. They had a really good hummus plate and a really cool duo for entertainment. She played the accordion and the synthesizer and he played the guitar. We are trying to get them to come and play at Blacksmith sometime. I discreetly asked the waitress to bring us a piece of cake with a candle in it for Mike, which, to his delight, she did. We had another soak and then walked to the nearby bar. I tripped on an uneven piece of cement on the sidewalk and severely twisted my foot. I iced it while playing shuffle board. It got progressively worse throughout the night. I was able to walk down the stairs to get into the claw foot tubs in the late evening. But by morning, I was practically sobbing with pain and had to crawl or hop to get anywhere.

I was in so much pain but decided that I wanted to go the his softball team’s end of the year picnic anyway. I got to meet a lot of his friends and their wives and kids. They are a very nice group of people and they helped me get around, find ice and get drinks. I was sad to not be able to take part in the kickball game. But that was probably for the best. It was precious to watch the daddies help their kids play out on the field!

I spent the next week trying to rest up my foot. It is such a hard thing to stay off of though. I applied for health insurance and unemployment benefits, watched a bunch of movies and planned a visit with Sarah. She came to visit on October 1st and we had a glorious time. First of all, we watched the movie, Twilight. We complained about its poor writing and its discouraging portrayal of the female character. We have both decided to not finish reading the series. What a horrible set of books for little and big girls to read. We washed away the ill feelings by spending the next day gleaning fruit from ally ways. We collected an abundance of apples, pears, prunes and grapes. We strolled about First Friday and capped off the night with a great performance by Tom Catmull at Sean Kelly’s.

We went to the Farmer’s Market, the Good Food Store’s local harvest festival and to the Peas Farm for their Bhutanese Chilies and Happiness Festival. There, we met up with several friends from the bar the night before. It was a blustery windy evening so we decided to watch movies, pop popcorn and make brownies together at Lisa’s place. Lisa has been living in a tent in the yard all summer. That evening, the tent was rent into pieces by the wind. We tried to duct tape it back together but the canvas had been so compromised by the beating sun, that it disintegrated in our fingers. We moved as much of her stuff as we could into the kitchen and she has been sleeping in the computer room until she goes to New Zealand.

Sunday we had brunch with my family and relaxed. We did some cooking. But mostly, we chatted. Eventually, we made our way to Stevensville where Mike and his buddies were having a Chargers versus Steelers potluck party at the bar. We brought apple tartlets and hummus with pita. The game was pretty good and the Chargers started playing well in the last half. Unfortunately they lost. Mike wasn’t too shaken though and he took us over to Blacksmith for a beer tasting. Sarah was enamored with the brewery and ended up buying a shirt. We spent the next day touring the Bitterroot. We went to Life Line Diary and saw the cutest baby pigs and cows. Sarah and I are both interested in spinning wool and making goat cheese and yogurt. Sarah has actually successfully made cheese and yogurt from pasteurized cow milk. We are hoping to find unpasteurized milk, if possible, in the future. We also went to the Lifeline outlet where they make cheese. We toured Steve’s place and picked a bunch of chilies. We ended up cooking dinner at Mikes and carving pumpkins. Or at least, I carved a pumpkin and Mike and Sarah watched.

On Tuesday, the day before Sarah’s departure, we pressed the apples that we gleaned at Dad’s. Then we brewed a cyser, a spiced apple mead. While transferring the hot wort to the glass carboy we broke it. Fortunately, we didn’t loose a lot of the precious liquid. But we couldn’t pitch the yeast before Sarah left. We were both disappointed because one of the most exciting and gratifying parts of brewing is watching the krausening take place. Krausening is what happens when the yeasties convert the sugars into alcohol and let of gas. It manifests in jocular bubbling of the airlock and roiling liquid in the carboy. All the gas blowoff really lets you know that action is happening and that good work is being done. After Sarah left, I bough a plastic carboy and pitched the yeast. I took the cyser to Blacksmith’s, hoping that it would be a more consistent and warmer temperature in the brew house for the little yeasties. The cyser’s original gravity was 1.1 and it has been bubbling away for the past two weeks! This was the approximate recipe that we used:

Spiced Cyser
4-5 gallons apple juice
7-8 lbs honey
10 cinnimon sticks
1 cup clove, allspice, nutmeg, lemon and orange zest, star anise and fenugreek mulling spice
4 tbsps acid blend
6 tsps yeast nutrient
6 campden tablets
white wine yeast

After Sarah left, I embarked on a week of music. I began by seeing my favorite local artist, Tom Catmull at Blacksmith. I followed that up with the Clumsy Lovers at the Top Hat. They come to Missoula about twice a year and I rarely miss them. They play alt-country-rock-bluegrass and are always a blast. The drummer does a great cover of Folsom Prison! Then Mike and I went to see Gogol Bordello. They are a multi-national gypsy punk, pirate band. They have accordions, fiddles, drums, buckets and other interesting instruments that they use to put on the most energetic and rocking show that I have ever seen. Mike and I had a great time. We visited two different breweries before hand so we were pretty giddy. I had printed “Start Wearing Purple,” the name of one of their songs, on my purple tie dye shirt and I was wearing purple underwear. They actually played the song during the concert and I was so excited that I flashed my purple undies at the band!! After the concert, I was so high energy that I screamed song lyrics all the way down the sidewalk to my car. I wasn’t the only one by any means. Mike and many of the other concert goers were also gadding about on the streets. It was certainly the most memorable musical experience yet!

Mike and I had a great fall weekend! We road our bikes to the Farmer’s Market and stocked up on jalapeƱos, eggplants and carrots. Then we went to the Grizzly football game. Actually, we tailgated first. One of Blacksmith’s bartenders also works at Advanced Imaging and she got us a great deal on tickets and we got to take part in their free tailgate party. They had an amazing array of food including, veggie burgers, meat burgers, chili, chips, cake, cookies and all you can drink Big Sky Brewing beer. We ate and drank our fill before going into the game. We had awesome seats in the Northwest wedge. The Grizzlies played horribly for the first half. Mike explained that they were much like his precious Chargers in that they were a late blooming team. He was right. After we tailgated during halftime, the Griz really stepped up and put on a great game. I was on the edge of my seat and was really relieved when they won. It was a pretty close game towards the end and the last two minutes on the clock seemed to drag on for hours. After the game, we went to the new Kettlehouse taproom. It was our first time there. We both liked the place though I felt as though it could use some more tables or couches. We discussed the potential for a homebrew shop in the extra room with the bar manager. They might also have beer-university classes there. I like the idea of going back to their roots. They began as a you-brew-on-premises after all! I need a you-brew location so that I can do an all grain beer soon! Then we went to the Good Food Store to pick up ingredients for Mike’s newest beer, pumpkin ale! We picked up allspice, ginger, cinnamon sticks, cloves and nutmeg. We were going to see Tom Catmull at the Union Club but ended up going back to Stevensville and Blacksmith. Cellar Door was jamming and Trisha got us all dancing! Afterward, Mike and I cooked a kick-ass eggplant pizza!

I pressed apples with Isabella and dad on Sunday. Then we made bear sausage with the meat from a black bear that dad shot in Idaho awhile back. After making venison sausage with him last fall, I wanted to devise my own sausage recipe for the bear. I combined a couple different recipes that I found online and in books. This is the recipe I ended up using:

Red Wine Bear Sausauge
4 lbs Bear Meat
1 lb beef fat
2.5 tsps salt
2 tsp black pepper
1 tsp celery seed
.5 tsp thyme
.5 tsp savory
2 tsp garlic powder
.5 cups dry red wine

I adapted the recipe for 21 lbs of bear. We used about half the amount of beef fat. While dad was butchering the bear, I cubed the fat and rendered it in a cast iron Dutch oven at about 200 degrees. We did a coarse grind on the bear meat and beef fat first. Then Isabella and I mixed the spices and wine. We mixed it into the coarse ground meat and fat. Then we did a fine grind. I put the meat into the grinder and dad filled the plastic casing. Isabella marked the casing with the year. After the sausage was finished, I strained the rendered bear fat through cheese cloth into a mason jar. Rendered bear fat is supposed to be great for pastries, frying doughnuts and waterproofing leather. I put it on my hiking boots and it made them super soft and pliable. The water beads up on them right away.

I spent all day Monday cooking 30 pounds of my dad’s pumpkins for Mike’s pumpkin ale. It was quite the endeavor. I threw the pumpkins down on the sidewalk to break them. Then I gutted them. After they had cooled from cooking, I peeled off the skins. There was pumpkin everywhere! Mike saved a couple pumpkins worth of seeds and soaked them in water with jalapeƱos. The seeds weren’t as spicy as we had expected but the occasional piece of jalapenos made up for the lack of spice in the seeds.

My unemployment period only lasted a brief couple of months. I started substitute teaching for the Stevensville School District. I have worked in the learning center with special needs kids in the middle school a couple of days. I also substituted for a second grade teacher. Next week I will be substituting for a Title One reading tutor for a couple days. That should be fun. I am about to embark on a weekend of beer. Mike is taking me to Bozeman with him for the Montana Brewers Association beer festival and Saturday is Blacksmith’s one year anniversary. Come on down to Stevensville if you get the opportunity! There will be 9 different styles of beer, free root beer floats, food and music by Mudslide Charlie!

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Steps and check dams on Big Creek

Gabions up Big Creek

Mom and Baylea came to visit


Me in the gabions

Mike and I
Peace flags atop St. Mary's Peak

Rosie the mule
Impoved tread up Halloway
Loading up the pack train

Kayaking the Blackfoot for my 25 birthday
Little Rock Creek trail and Lake Como
Kristin, Mark, Jenna and I at Little Rock Creek Lake

Taylor and I after tubing on a very cold day
Pitch on the lips up Canyon Creek