The meet time was 9:30 AM at the Federal Triangle station of the DC Metro and even rising at 5:30 AM this was an impossible goal that would require perfect road and rail conditions of which neither materialized.  The drive averaged out to the speed limit between normal highway driving and the imposing menace of orange construction beacons which ended when I reached the Metro Station where I was awash in ebullient whiteness.  “The ticket machine lights just went out, what should I do?” some tweener asked as every other person had no difficulty grasping that the machine display illustrated entered funds, and in that he’d yet to proffer the money his mom gave him there was no response.

The train car filled after the first two stations and then filled again at the third.  I was glad to have a seat but the close quarters and my stature led two children to use my legs as structural supports to anchor them during the starting and stopping of the train.  They had fleece jackets on so I had tiny sentient leg warmers until they got bored and nonchalantly started pulling at each others hair in a space on the floor made by the serendipitous arrangement of Ugg boots in a gaggle of sorority girls.  The train moved in fits and starts while the person to my right vicariously lived my attempt to make meeting arrangements as 9:30 receded with her intent eyes staring at my phone screen.  11 was the new target.  Someone shouted “a monument, a monument” and cheers erupted as if some latter day re-enactment of Xenophon’s Anabasis had just occurred and in under an hour the bolus of passengers was ejected and I tried to make a transfer to another line.  After four full trains passed I walked to the Federal Triangle station pylon and began firing off coordinating messages when I was then met by three of the eventual party.

While waiting I spied a former girlfriend of a friend and shot out this sublime call to the girl whose name I didn’t know

Hey you!  Yeah, you who didn’t turn around, you dated Craig Harris for a bit but then you split up and you don’t like your picture being taken even though you look nice.  You work for a school or something in education and you’re wearing a green coat!

My friend’s wife leaned to me a politely said “next time, lead off with coat color”.

Tocks ticked and sometime before 1 we were all together but opted for lunch over rally.  We consume and depart through a crush of humanity that seems to be moving in the wrong direction when arriving at the mall we realize why, seeing that even with my 400mm lens I couldn’t make out the Jumbotron on which the event was being rebroadcast.  I’m passed by a moan of zombies whose fake bloodsoaked shirts reveal the depth of their convictions when contrasted with the pristine designer jeans.

I give up keeping up and regroup at the Washington monument and one of the three worthwhile moments of the day occurred:

20101030-5060-DC_1-DC_2-DC

Moment Number 1

The shadow of Washington is cold and I depart north finding the leaving far easier than the arriving and tired of having met every progressive Caucasian in the time zone I head back to Ockanickon.  Worthwhile moment 3:  saying “yes, I’ve played some Egyptian Rat Screw, what rules do you use?”  Games 45 and 46 of my winning streak have been logged.

I started driving south for only the second time in two months and kept getting little notes from my GPS that there was ridiculous traffic around the next corner and it remapped me.  I followed these the first two times but after it told me to move from a 6-lane highway to what looked like a suburban development, I assumed it had gone loony and ignored it; a time-consuming mistake.  The drive from Waltham home was supposed to take a little over five hours, but again, the American Recovery and Reconstruction Act destroyed that possibility as large stretches of road were reduced to one lane from three.  My GPS knew something, I should have listened.

I drove south and after forgetting to get off the NJ Turnpike I made it home at around 5:30 AM.

12772 miles

My father was up, he hugged me, and we both went back to sleep.

Pictures from Phone

I took some pictures with my phone rather than my camera and found some neat ones:

From a McDonalds near Great Smokey Mountains national park, good thing they found it.

The wrong digits of pi.

Comic Sans is even more menacing in French.

This is how Harvey's got rid of its excess ice. Also nice after 6 hours in a car.

Stuff Usage

As I unpacked my car I put everything into two piles: what I used, and what I didn’t.  Here’s how the piles stacked up.

Used

  • All shirts, shorts, socks, and pairs of underwear
  • Winter gloves and ushanka (King’s Canyon National Parks)
  • Winter coat (Great Smokey Mountains National Park)
  • Fleece (various high places)
  • Hat (Joshua Tree National Park)
  • All pieces of camping equipment including portable pump
  • Giant portable battery pack
  • Both laptops
  • Sandals, boots, and black slip-ons
  • Every cable in my bag and back-up computer crap box

Not Used

  • Pair of dress pants (you never know)
  • Canon G9 point-and-shoot
  • 15W back-up battery
  • Cooler

Stuff I Picked Up Along the Way

  • Rechargeable air pump
  • 15 foot piece of CAT5 cable

Stuff I Wished I Had Brought

  • My gigapan pano stitcher

I’d probably ditch the cooler if I did it again but would otherwise pack the same after adding in the gigapan.  At the end, I was able to get everything I brought with me to fit in the trunk and the foot space of the front passenger seat.

As many of you associated with my camp life now know, Bill Mischke is stepping down as a Director of Camps and Properties for Bucks County Council on September 30th.  He’s going to Baltimore Area Council to hopefully work his magic again on a larger scale and I wish him the best.

In other news, I worked on doing more after camp clean up and found some documents form the summer that I thought I’d store on Flickr.

whit-imissyouThis is a cry for help I received from Whit during his starting time at Kirby

TomPaintThis is a picture Joe Naylor did of Tom Leitz in paint

IMG_0622This is a picture of the sun setting over Furlong in a day where I drove from camp to home and back four times or so for Nick Gramiccioni.

IMG_0654This is Nick Gramiccioni looking really fat.

IMG_0648This is an absolute pile of food decimated during the staff banquet

IMG_0656This is Mike Spinrad chucking A1

I hope to have more pictures up shortly once I figure out how to make Lightroom cooperate on network drives.