Jun 28 2009

Cliff Creek Falls Trail – June 27, 2009 – Photos

Island
Cliff Creek Falls 20090627
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27-Jun-2009 09:58SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 09:56SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 09:54SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 09:54SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 09:53SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 09:03SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 09:03SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 08:52SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 08:52SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 08:50SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 08:49SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 08:25SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 08:25SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 04:46SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50
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27-Jun-2009 04:46SAMSUNG SCH-i910, 2.8, 4.507mm, ISO 50

This trail was an absolute blast. I wasn’t able to make it all the way to the top because the Cliff Creek crossing was flowing too much water for me to cross, but the trail up to that point was great. I never thought that I’d ride a trail that was rough because of all the deer, elk and moose tracks that were in it, though. Three passable creek crossings, a lot of rocks and roots, and lots of climbs made it fun. Since it rained the day before, I was covered in mud from head to toe when I was finished.


Jun 27 2009

Island’s Twittering For Week Ending 2009-06-27

Island
  • Draw results are in and I have pronghorn, antlered deer, and any elk…all on Little Mountain. Oh yeah!!! Just gonna live there this Fall! #
  • The cap&trade bill passed the house with the help of 8 turncoat RINOs that tipped the balance. Hold on to your wallets! #
  • Boehner is reading the 300+ amendment to the cap&trade bill, fillibustering to give everyone time to call your rep! Do it now! 202-224-3121 #
  • Boehner is on his game today! This bill is scarier with every sentence! #tcot #
  • New Post: The Flume Loop Trail Video: http://bit.ly/EHFWT
    #nofb #
  • Video of mtn biking Mr Toads Wild Ride [embedded] – http://tr.im/pyRZ [direct] – http://tr.im/pyBb #nofb #freecontourhd #mtnbike #
  • Happy Father's Day!!! #
  • Mountain biked the downhill trails at Northstar today. Had a blast! Now we are going to hit the casinos and nightlife of Tahoe! #



Jun 25 2009

The Flume Loop Trail – June 19, 2009 – Video – Photos

Island

[Download]

The Flume – June 19, 2009
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19-Jun-2009 14:103.2, 7.3mm, 0.0008 sec, ISO 600
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19-Jun-2009 14:103.5, 7.3mm, 0.0008 sec, ISO 600
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19-Jun-2009 12:364, 7.3mm, 0.00125 sec, ISO 600
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19-Jun-2009 12:274, 7.3mm, 0.00625 sec, ISO 600
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19-Jun-2009 12:274, 7.3mm, 0.0025 sec, ISO 600
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19-Jun-2009 11:274, 7.3mm, 0.002 sec, ISO 600
 – This ancient square nail has been on the trail for about 100 years. Funny how I am the one who finds it.
– This ancient square nail has been on the trail for about 100 years. Funny how I am the one who finds it.19-Jun-2009 11:274, 7.3mm, 0.005 sec, ISO 600
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19-Jun-2009 11:154, 10.835mm, 0.0008 sec, ISO 600
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19-Jun-2009 11:154, 21.709mm, 0.001 sec, ISO 600
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19-Jun-2009 08:334, 7.3mm, 0.004 sec, ISO 600


Jun 25 2009

Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride – June 18, 2009 – Video – Photos

Island

[Download]

Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride – June 18, 2009
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18-Jun-2009 08:592.8, 4.507mm, -1.0 sec, ISO 50
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18-Jun-2009 09:002.8, 4.507mm, -1.0 sec, ISO 50
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18-Jun-2009 09:002.8, 4.507mm, -1.0 sec, ISO 50
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18-Jun-2009 09:002.8, 4.507mm, -1.0 sec, ISO 50
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18-Jun-2009 09:002.8, 4.507mm, -1.0 sec, ISO 50
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18-Jun-2009 07:444, 7.3mm, 0.0008 sec, ISO 600
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18-Jun-2009 09:094.1, 29.2mm, 0.001 sec, ISO 600
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18-Jun-2009 09:094, 12.565mm, 0.001 sec, ISO 600
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18-Jun-2009 09:114, 9.565mm, 0.001 sec, ISO 600
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18-Jun-2009 09:114, 9.565mm, 0.001 sec, ISO 600
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18-Jun-2009 09:384, 7.3mm, 0.001 sec, ISO 600
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18-Jun-2009 09:384, 7.3mm, 0.0008 sec, ISO 600
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18-Jun-2009 10:134, 7.3mm, 0.00125 sec, ISO 600
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18-Jun-2009 10:134, 7.3mm, 0.0008 sec, ISO 600

What a blast! This has to be one of the funnest trails I’ve ever ridden! The long climb at the start (4.5mi) was quickly forgotten when the downhill started. I will make many special trips to Tahoe again just to ride this trail!


Jun 24 2009

The Singletrack Mafia is born!

Island

singletrackmafia1


Jun 21 2009

Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride – June 18, 2009

Island

Me, Aaron, and Derek riding Mr. Toads Wild Ride mountain bike trail in South Lake Tahoe, California on June 18, 2009.

[Direct Link to Video]


Jun 20 2009

Island’s Twittering For Week Ending 2009-06-20

Island
  • Mountain biked 22 mile loop on the flume trail today. Pain. Exhaustion. I'm sure I enjoyed some of it, though. Views were phenomenal! #
  • Mr. Toads Wild Ride mountain bike trail was a blast! Flume tomorrow. Videos to follow when I have broadband again! #mtnbike #
  • In the cabin at Tahoe, enjoying company of good friends. Tomorrow we ride Mr. Toads Wild Ride! Fun? Pain? Both? #
  • HItting the road for what should be a fun filled day of driving. The payoff will be worth it, though! Tahoe, here we come! #
  • Short night of sleep, then it's off to Lake Tahoe in the morning for a week of beer, wine, mountain biking, and mostly, great friends! #
  • My link between Twitter and Facebook is back after the Twitpocalypse! @tweet_sync is back online! in reply to tweet_sync #

Jun 15 2009

The Case Against Community Service

Island

We’ve all seen it. In our schools, our children’s schools, public meetings, television shows, leadership seminars, political speeches, and even in legislation supported by the President, the message is clear: we should all be doing community service. The fact is that the call to service is greater now than at any time in our country’s past, and the pressure to provide it even greater.

logo_vista_blackThe pressure to conform to the growing demand to volunteer your self, in body and bankbook, can be daunting. When confronted with a group of peers, all telling you how much you are needed, it can be difficult to resist. When your child’s teacher tells you how important it is that you volunteer for the school bake sale, how can you say no? When your Mayor asks you to volunteer your time for the citywide cleanup, how can you refuse? And when the girl scout who lives next door asks you to buy cookies, or the soccer player who lives down the street asks you to buy raffle tickets, how can you not open your wallet and hand them the money?

Simple. Say “no.” Unless, that is, you want to do it, and can.

First of all, it’s not so much “community service” that I have a problem with. Serving your community has plenty of merit, and everyone should do it, provided of course that you are willing, and just as important, able. The problem arises when you are expected to give your time and your money to a cause that you don’t want to support. And more problems arise when you are expected to give your time and your money to a cause when you can’t afford it.

None of that matters to the people who are asking for you services, though. It doesn’t matter to them that your boss has cut back on your overtime and money is scarce, and it doesn’t matter to them that you took a second job to cover the bills, making your time even more scarce. What matters to them is their cause. You see, to the people who are promoting them, causes are just like children. Everyone thinks theirs is the most important, and anyone who thinks differently be damned. It doesn’t matter how much time or money you’ve given to any cause, even theirs, in the past, if you don’t see how important their baby is today, you’re dirt. Even if you can’t afford it, they expect your support, and they expect it now.

The important part of this is that giving your time and money to a cause when you can’t afford either hurts everyone in the long run. It hurts you, it hurts your family, and ultimately it even hurts the cause. If you give money that you can’t afford to support your local food bank, it impairs your ability to put food on your own table, and that of your family. If you sacrifice time you can’t spare, whether it’s time you could be working to pay your bills, or time you should have spent playing baseball with your son, to participate in the latest jail and bail fundraiser, you risk putting a strain on your budget, or on your family. Both situations threaten your future security, your attitude, and your willingness and ability to participate in community service in the future.

It is quite common these days to pressure our children to “give back” to their communities, provide volunteer service, and even sign pledges to provide even more service in the future. From their classrooms to their football practices to their leadership conferences, they are bombarded at every turn with the message that it is the responsibility of every able bodied youth to serve their communities. They are told that service will make them better people, and that their duty is to their fellow man. More disturbing, it has become a trend lately to begin making this expectation of service into a requirement.

President Obama’s official transitional website stated that “Obama will call on citizens of all ages to serve America, by developing a plan to require 50 hours of community service in middle school and high school and 100 hours of community service in college every year.”

cncsCongress followed suit with HR 1388 that authorized a committee to study “Whether a workable, fair, and reasonable mandatory service requirement for all able young people could be developed, and how such a requirement could be implemented…” When the language was stripped out of the final version of that bill, it was resurrected again as the still living HR 1444. It seems that our federal government is determined to make “volunteers” out of all our children.

The problem with this, aside from the fact that the 13th amendment of the Constitution clearly prohibits “indentured servitude,” is that if you take our youth, in the prime of their life, and put them on a mandated course of community service, you rob the community of it’s greatest potential producers, both physical and mental.

Can you imagine how different the world would be right now if a young college student named Bill Gates had been cutting weeds in the Boston National Historic Park instead of exploring the operations of computers and developing a BASIC interpreter for MITS? Gates built a fortune after that initial foray, which he later used to enable him to funnel billions of dollars into charitable organizations. He has now retired from the corporate world and donates all of his time to community service. Would the world be a better place if he had been doing community service while he was in college instead? Would have 100 hours of service to his fellow man when he was 20 been a good trade for the tens of billions of dollars that he has been able to raise for charity in his post corporate life?

If two college students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, had been serving dinners at the Palo Alto Opportunity Center instead of spending their evenings writing the code that would later power Google.com, they would have never had a billion dollars to fund the charitable wing of their company, Google.org, which works to fight global poverty, among other causes. Would the world have been better served by them providing community service while they were in school rather than later when they were successful entrepreneurs and wanted to make a difference in the world?

Charity_to_Street_ArabIn reality, Americans are the most generous charitable givers in the world. In 2006, Americans donated a record $295 billion to charitable organizations, the vast majority of which came from individuals. That is in addition to the 61 million Americans who donated time and labor to charitable organizations during that same year.

By allowing and encouraging our budding youth to provide for themselves and their families first, and by empowering them to become responsible and productive members of society, we also put a down payment on their future ability to give back to society when they are more able, ready and willing to do so. Someone who is forced to “donate” their time or money to causes they may not support will likely become bitter and much less likely to support any cause in the future. Additionally, a person who gives willingly, and to causes or charities they believe in, will always give more. If our government moves forward with their plan to require mandatory service from every American, and dictates to what causes that service is given, they will likely guarantee that will be the only community service that person ever provides again.

The underlying motive here is that these people don’t want you to volunteer your time and your money, because that means you are in control. They want to decide how your time and money is used to benefit society as they see fit. They want to decide which charities are worthy of your time and they want to decide which charities are worthy of your money. They don’t care if you miss a day of work, or if you have a hard time paying your bills, and they don’t care that your kids could be spending their afternoons developing cold fusion in the basement lab instead of planting grass on a reclaimed garbage dump, because in the end all they want is control.

How do we fight back? How do we make sure that our time and money is dedicated to causes and charities that we believe in? How do we make sure that our families, and ourselves, don’t go without to provide for charities that we might not believe in? And how do we make sure that our children are given the opportunity to become successful in their own right before they are expected to “give back” to their “fellow man?”

The answer is still simple. Say “no.” Unless, that is, you want to do it, and can.


Jun 13 2009

Island’s Twittering For Week Ending 2009-06-13

Island
  • Just wondering…is it legal to get a Hummer in China? What? Did I say something bad? #
  • I just got a new ContourHD helmetcam! I can't wait to get on the trails to try it out! Mountain Biking vids coming soon! And hunting…and.. #
  • Miranda rights for terrorist! http://tr.im/o4Cy #tcot #
  • Obama Administration moves forward with plan to ban 80% of all pocketknives! [working link.sorry about the bad one] http://tr.im/o4sf #
  • kniferights.org is leading the battle against Obama Administrations planned ban of 80% of all pocket knives http://tr.im/o4nq #
  • Obama administration moves forward with plan to ban 80% of all pocketknives! http://tr.im/o2LS #tcot #
  • Went and rode the mtn. bikes a few miles in the rain today. Refreshing. Ya, that's the word for it. Refreshing. #
  • Got to give Faber props. 3 tough rounds with broken bones, and he still made it an enjoyable fight to watch! Still made Brown earn it! #

Jun 12 2009

Rock Springs Coal Arch. “Welcome!”

Island

A little more serious stab at real art. This is a artistic rendering of an old photograph of the Rock Springs Coal Arch in Rock Springs. I had zero information on the original photograph or the photographer, but if someone has any, please forward it to me so I can provide proper attribution.
Welcome!

Creative Commons License
This work by Island D. Richards is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.