Tuesday, December 30, 2014

TB3F6AW – Ernie the Elk Hair Caddis


GC34GME, Peacock Protectors #3 - Unknown Alien Activity
Highlands Ranch, CO
GPS: 39.563833, -104.959733

My mission is to carry the Project Healing Waters message to flyfishermen in all 50 states.

Ernie the Elk Hair Caddis

This is the third life for Ernie the Elk Hair Caddis. This time it is a laminated business card with the tracking code displayed prominently on the face of the card and a message on the back. In the first life, this travel bug was a piece of paper inside a film canister, blue body, red top, attached to an actual TB. I launched Ernie the first time in Rexford Beach, MT in August 2010. It disappeared with no log entries. I pulled back the travel bug number and relaunched Ernie in GC34GME -- Peacock Protectors #3 - Unknown Alien Activity in Highlands Ranch, CO on 30 Dec 2014. I guess there is some slim chance that the original might show up.

The Elk Hair Caddis is a dry fly that was invented by the legendary Montana guide and fly tier, Al Troth. Charlie Craven of Charlie's Fly Box in Denver, CO comments:
"I fish the Elk Hair Caddis a few different ways. Dead drifting under bank side vegetation can have great results, and I have found that skittering the fly a bit brings out the predators. It seems as though trout can't resist a bug that is trying to get away and this skittering really rings the dinner bell. One reason caddis are such a staple menu item during the summer months is that trout see so many of them. Caddis fly off to the bushes along the stream bank after hatching and live there for some time. At this point they become, essentially, a terrestrial insect. Breezes blow these bugs into the water and the trout are on the look out for them. There doesn' t have to be an actual hatch in progress to clean up with a caddis. This pattern also has a wide "foot print" on the water. It creates a larger dimple in the surface film that seems to make it more apparent to the fish, so even when they're not looking, the caddis really stands out. For flat water, I often omit the hackle and wire rib on this fly so it will ride lower on the water and create a more realistic silhouette."

Elk Hair Caddis


Ernie is one of twelve characters created by artist Kirk Werner for three books designed to introduce children to fly fishing.

Book Series by Kirk Werner


I have created a Trackable for each character. If you would like to see them all, here are the trackable item numbers: TB3E3X5, TB3E3Y2, TB3E3X7, TB3F6AD, TB3F69B, TB3F6AW, TB3F69V, TB3F69Z, TB3F6AV, TB3F6A3, TB3F6A5, TB3F6A0.


MEET MY FRIENDS

TB3F69V – Andy the Adams

TB3F6AD – Billy the Blue-Wing Olive

TB3F6AW – Ernie the Elk Hair Caddis

TB3F6AV – Gilbert the Gold-Ribbed Hare's Ear

TB3E3X5 – Mr. Muddler the Muddler Minnow

TB3E3X7 – Olive the Woolly Bugger

TB3F69B – Pete the Prince Nymph

TB3F69Z – Polly the Partridge & Orange

TB3F6A3 – Randal the Royal Coachman

TB3F6A5 – Sally the Yellow Sally

TB3F6A0 – Stan the Stimulator

TB3E3Y2 – Zachary the Purple Zonker

Pictures of all of us – just pictures

LINKS TO LEARN MORE ABOUT

Geocaching (and other GPS games)

Project Healing Waters

Miami Valley Fly Fishers

Kirk Werner

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Workamping Seniors


Published in WorKamper News, Jan/Feb 2015, Page 58

In 2010 Michelle and I took an extended vacation across the US pulling a pop-up. After 80 days and 11,000 miles, we did not want to go home. That was the realization that we wanted to become full-time RVers. I was 73 years old; she was 62.

Financially we are OK but sure not rich; so roaming the country and paying commercial camping rates every night is out of the question. While we want to “roam”, we do not want to travel every day or even every week. We want to go to new places and stay there long enough to explore the area, see the sights, and meet the local people. Workamping is the natural answer and it quickly became part of our planning.

It took a couple years to make it happen. We had a house to sell, a lot of stuff to get rid of, and personal affairs to put in order. We also had to move up from a pop-up to something more substantial. Finally, we had a lot to learn about RVing and Workamping.

We chose a Fifth Wheel as our RVing vehicle. I am still satisfied with that choice. However, I wish I had bought a bigger truck. We bought the truck first, with no RV experience. Then we had to fit the 5er to the truck. If I could do it over, I would buy a 250 or 2500 diesel with 4WD.

Attending the Workamper Rendezvous was a very positive learning experience. I should have done that at least one year earlier. If you are reading this and contemplating attending – just do it!

We have been workamping for about four years; volunteering with non-profit organizations, serving as Camp Hosts at a National Park, doing campground work for a private campground. We seek out the unusual. So far that has been dry camping for a week in an industrial parking lot while decorating a Rose Parade float as volunteers.

I think we have succeeded as Workampers. We have gotten every situation we sought. Frankly, I don’t know how we could have done it without the internet. There is so much information within easy reach. Almost every workamping opportunity has a website. There are more websites on RVing than you can count and there are an increasing number of sites on Workamping. Workamper News is the best but not the only one. I do extensive research or “data mining” for opportunities.

I will claim an almost perfect resume. It has been refined over and over. It is packed tight with relevant information. There are no superfluous words, and no spelling or grammar errors. The font is clearly readable. No superlatives and no back slapping about how great we are. I update it frequently to keep it at the top of the pile.

While our resume tells who we are, the cover letter tells what we can do for the employer. I restrict it to one page and pack it as tight as the resume. I concentrate on the cover letter, tailoring each one to the situation. Again – no spelling or grammar errors and a clearly readable font.

I believe our age is a positive factor in workamping. Our behavior and attitude is tempered with maturity and an abundance of life experience. We’ve had our careers. We are comfortable with ourselves – no longer striving to prove something, or to climb the corporate ladder, or get that next promotion. We have achieved some level of financial independence, so we don’t have to chase the almighty dollar. Kids are grown and gone and so are all those obligations.

Our motto is: “Don’t do the same thing twice until you have done everything once”. RVing and Workamping has made that possible beyond our wildest dreams. We love the travel and variety of experiences and people. When “Hitch Itch” strikes we move on.

The one down side to the lifestyle is lack of “hobby space”. Michelle is a quilter and I am a flytyer. Both hobbies require space and equipment that is hard to fit into the RV lifestyle.

We’ll continue our roaming as long as health permits or until our rig gives out. We winter in Florida and roam the country during the rest of the year. I do not expect to replace our current rig and I do expect to have another stix and brix house at the end of this adventure. Right now, I don’t want to think about that.

Daily Chores at Panhandle Pioneer Settlement


Dressed for Pioneer Day at Panhandle Pioneer Settlement


Feeding Wild(?) Horses at Black Hills Wild Horse Sanctuary


Dry Camping at Fiesta Parade Floats


Decorating a Rose Parade Float


Michelle and Park Manager Becky at Yogi at Shangri-La Campground


Dressed for work on The Haunted Trail at Yogi at Shangri-La Campground

Sunday, December 14, 2014

TB3E3Y2 – Zachary the Purple Zonker



GC4652A,The Camo Bug Inn
Titusville, FL
GPS: 28.552499, -080.854722

My mission is to carry the Project Healing Waters message to flyfishermen in all 50 states.

Zachary the Purple Zonker


This is a second life for Zachary the Purple Zonker. This time it is a laminated business card with the tracking code displayed prominently on the face of the card and a message on the back. In the first life, this travel bug was a piece of paper inside a film canister, yellow body, blue top, attached to an actual TB. I launched Zachary the first time in Myrtle Beach, SC in June 2010. It disappeared sometime in 2012 after having logged 4,736 miles and 215 posts. I pulled back the travel bug number and relaunched Zachary in GC4652A, The Camo Bug Inn, in Titusville, FL on 14 Dec 2014. I guess there is some slim chance that the original might show up.

Dan Byford of Colorado came up with the design for the Purple Zonker in 1974. It is one of the modern American Rabbit-lure patterns taken from the original Rabbit flies introduced from New Zealand. The Zonker is used for all species of trout as well as large and small-mouth Bass. It can be used in either lakes or streams.

The Purple Zonker


Zachary is one of twelve characters created by artist Kirk Werner for three books designed to introduce children to fly fishing.

Book Series by Kirk Werner


I have created a Trackable for each character. If you would like to see them all, here are the Geocaching Travel Bug Numbers: TB3E3X5, TB3E3Y2, TB3E3X7, TB3F6AD, TB3F69B, TB3F6AW, TB3F69V, TB3F69Z, TB3F6AV, TB3F6A3, TB3F6A5, TB3F6A0.



MEET MY FRIENDS

TB3F69V – Andy the Adams

TB3F6AD – Billy the Blue-Wing Olive

TB3F6AW – Ernie the Elk Hair Caddis

TB3F6AV – Gilbert the Gold-Ribbed Hare's Ear

TB3E3X5 – Mr. Muddler the Muddler Minnow

TB3E3X7 – Olive the Woolly Bugger

TB3F69B – Pete the Prince Nymph

TB3F69Z – Polly the Partridge & Orange

TB3F6A3 – Randal the Royal Coachman

TB3F6A5 – Sally the Yellow Sally

TB3F6A0 – Stan the Stimulator

TB3E3Y2 – Zachary the Purple Zonker

Pictures of all of us – just pictures

LINKS TO LEARN MORE ABOUT

Geocaching (and other GPS games)

Project Healing Waters

Miami Valley Fly Fishers

Kirk Werner

Friday, December 12, 2014

The Wolf Pack is in Florida


N. Apollo Blvd & Sarno Rd
Melbourne, FL
GPS: 28.121442, -080.638535

Today we went to Melbourne, FL (about 45 miles south of The Great Outdoors RV Park) to visit with Burt and Dori Staman at the christmas tree lot they operate between Thanksgiving and Christmas. We met Burt and Dori during our 2014 summer workamping job at Yogi at Shangri La Campground in Milton, PA. We resolved to meet up while we were all in Florida this winter.

Last summer Burt gave me the address. I used Google Maps to pinpoint the intersection and get the GPS coordinates which I included in my contact list as part of the address. When we reached the intersection there was no mistaking their location. Wolf Pack (the name of their Fifth Wheel) is always easy to spot.

Wolf Pack is always a prominent landmark


Operating a tree lot is a 24/7 job, but most of the traffic comes in the afternoon and evening. The job at night is to protect the inventory. Their dog Pepe is in charge of that. They advised us to come in the morning and join them for an early lunch. We did.

About noon, customers start showing up

Hauling the tree to the car
is part of the job


The tree lot is owned by a North Carolina tree grower and the supply of trees is refreshed every couple days.


Tree prices range from $20 to $350. $350!!!!! Yep – and they sell. People with really big houses and businesses such as auto dealers and banks buy the big trees for their lobby and don't even blink at the price.

The Stamans operate the tree lot from Thanksgiving to Christmas eve. They spend January to March at their home in Lake Placid, FL before heading back to Yogi at Shangri La Campground in Milton, PA for their summer job.

Dori made a delicious chili for lunch. Michelle brought a really good cherry filled Rugula pastry that she picked up at the Farmers Market in The Villages yesterday. Since Burt and Dori were "on duty" we ate outside amid the aroma of freshly cut Christmas trees. It was cold.

Chili, Cornbread, Rugula, and good company
makes a cold damp day feel just fine


It was good to see Burt and Dori again. We had a nice visit.

Dori, Burt, Michelle
A thorn between two roses


Sunday, December 7, 2014

A Wonderful Christmas Tradition


Fayetteville, NC

Do something that will make thousands of people stand up and cheer ...
... 100 years after you are dead

Every Christmas I realize that Peter Tchaikovsky is one of very few people to achieve such stature. He is hands down my favorite composer. No one else even comes close.

Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840 -- 1893) was a Russian composer whose works included symphonies, concertos, operas, ballets, chamber music, and a choral setting of the Russian Orthodox Divine Liturgy. Some of these are among the most popular theatrical music in the classical repertoire. He was the first Russian composer whose music made a lasting impression internationally Wikipedia. His piano concertos and ballet music are known world wide. Even those who don't know his name or his work recognize the tune to such pieces as the 1812 Overture and of course the Nutcracker.

Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky


The complete Nutcracker has enjoyed enormous popularity since the late 1960s and is now performed by countless ballet companies, primarily during the Christmas season, especially in the U.S. Major American ballet companies generate around 40 percent of their annual ticket revenues from performances of The Nutcracker. Amateur ballet companies and dance studios do the production as a fund raiser and as their major event in celebration of the Christmas season.Wikipedia

More than a few youngsters begin dance lessons after marveling at the ballet's swirling snowflakes and flowers, mischievous mice and regal Sugar Plum Fairy. Generations of dancers have emerged from the ranks of these students to play the ballet's children and then, as professionals, principal and character roles. Kids who will never become dancers will carry that music in their brain for the rest of their life.

Our annual reconnect with this wonderful music happens in Fayetteville, NC where our granddaughter's ballet studio joins with two other studios to become The Dance Theatre of Fayetteville to put on their annual performance. We have this event carved in stone on our calendar and happily look forward to the visit and her performance each year. Ava, our granddaughter, has been at this for four years – each year growing in the number and complexity of the roles she dances.

This was an important year for Ava. She reached the age, size, weight, and strength to get her "Toe Shoes". I did not realize how big a deal this is in the world of ballet. She is very proud and we could see an obvious increase in motivation as the year progressed.

Getting toe shoes is important


All the kids start as one of the children guests at the party


Some start as one of the mice


This year Ava had four parts

Act 1, Scene I, Christmas Party



Act 1, Scene VII - the Battle Between the Nutcracker & the Mouse King


Act2, Scene X - the Magic Castle on Candy Mountain


Act2, Scene XII - Divertissement, Mother Ginger & the Clowns


Our daughter Tricia, Ava's mom, has been a closet Thespian (pronounce carefully and check the definition) since high school. She has been supporting this annual production as Costume Mistress (Chief Seamstress) for the last couple years. When she told the boss (Miss Leslie) that Mother Ginger needed a new costume, Miss Leslie agreed to buy it if Tricia would wear it. Oh my, a star is born!

The Costume Mistress morphs into Mother Ginger


Peter does it again. All three performances got standing applause during the curtain call.


and this year the Costume Mistress got special recognition.


After the performance was time for staged photos ...


... some fooling around ...

Performance tensions evaporate and everyone relaxes


... and parental pride.

Dad's job is to be proud. Tony does it well.


Thank you Mr. Tchaikovsky for another chance to stand up and cheer.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

A Day of Geocaching and Letterboxing


Titusville, FL

Linda and Michelle were off on a girl's adventure, so Jim Leibold and I took advantage of the day to get him started Geocaching and Letterboxing. We introduced Jim and Linda to Geocaching, Waymarking, Letterboxing, and Munzee very briefly last winter and resolved to do more when we returned to TGO in the fall. Today was a perfect day to start. Last night I logged into the Geocaching Website and identified a half dozen Geocaches in our local area that appeared to be "interesting". By interesting I guess I mean lazy. I'm not interested in Micros. They are too small for anything but a rolled up log sheet, so why bother. I also mean reasonable Difficulty and reasonable Terrain. Climbing Mount Everest, wading through patches of poison ivy, and reaching into a rattlesnake den does not excite me. I like caches big enough to hold some SWAG (Stuff We All Get) with a log book big enough to write something worth reading. Reading past log entries is part of the fun. I printed out the description sheets on these caches. I also printed the clue sheet for a set of four letterboxes that I already knew about to give Jim a bit of a letterboxing experience. All of these I loaded into my GPS Receiver. This is the unit I use.

DeLORME Earthmate PN-40 handheld


We met up about mid-morning. Jim wanted to drive but I insisted he navigate. Geocaching is a game of navigation not driving. Our first stop was Walmart and Staples. Jim needed a log book and I have been agonizing over replacing mine. I have been using a very small spiral notebook with cheap paper. Low quality paper is not good for letterbox stamp images and I have found a few letterbox stamps that were too big for the small pages. We checked out Walmart then opted to try Staples. We both settled on a Bienfang Mixed Media Spiral Notebook with 5.5" x 8.5" pages of acid free 90 pound paper. Spiral binding is important.

From Staples, we set out in search of our first Geocache. I selected GCZGXQ -- "Just Do It!" which is on a multiuse trail not too far from home. Jim and Linda are hikers and bikers so Jim noted that this is a trail they will revisit on bikes in the future.

Sometimes Geocaching puts you upclose and personal with ferocious wild creatures like this tortoise just minding his own business.


Reaching the cache required a short walk; that gave Jim a chance to get familiar with my handheld GPS receiver. After arriving at the coordinates, and a few minutes of tramping around in the bushes, I heard Jim shout out "I FOUND IT!". Success!

Jim Leibold's first geocache


Back to the car and off to downtown Titusville for our next search. However all that searching had made us both weak with hunger so we had to pause for lunch. Jim's expertise took over here. I didn't know that Jim was the go-to-guy for restaurant information. He is – and he guided us to Caffe' Chocolat Restaurant, Coffee Shop, Gift Gallery, Chocolate Factory. I had a Reuben and Jim a Portabela – both delicious. If you're a sucker for sweets, better stay out of this place.

Caffe Chocolat, Titusville, FL


Refreshed by that fine lunch we walked the two blocks to Space View Park. This park has become one of my favorite places in Titusville. Quietly understated, it is a tribute to the very early days of the space program – Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and the Space Shuttle. When I brought our grandson Andrew here last spring, I discovered he had no knowledge of those early space programs. I felt very old and very sad. Alan Shepard's first sub–orbital flight to Neal Armstrong's first steps on the moon is the space program of my life. Both Alan Shepard and Neal Armstorng are gone.

This quiet little park commemorates so much


We entered from the west so we traversed the park in reverse order. Starting with the Space Shuttle

Mission: Build and supply a space station with a reusable vehicle

We recovered a letterbox in the Space Shuttle area and logged its stamp.

Then moving to Apollo

Mission: Walk on the Moon

We recovered a letterbox in the Apollo area and logged its stamp.

Then to Gemini

Mission: Work in Space

The geocache and letterbox in the Gemini area are both missing.

Finally to Mercury where it all began

Mission: Put a Man in Space

We recovered a letterbox in the Mercury area and logged its stamp. An interesting side note here – the clue to the letterbox location directs one to a tall lone Palm tree. The tree has been cut down since I was here last spring. However, the letterbox was hidden in the shrubs that now surround just the stump of the palm tree. If I hadn't been here before, I probably would have missed it.

It was getting late and Jim had an evening commitment so we headed back home where we got him logged into and signed up with Geocaching.com. He chose "snailonthetrail" as his geocaching name. He told me there was a story behind that. I'll get that some other time. Jim logged his first "Find" and we called it a day.

It was a good day Jim. Let's do it again.

Sunday, November 30, 2014

TB3E3X5 – Mr. Muddler the Muddler Minnow


GC4652A,The Camo Bug Inn
Titusville, FL
GPS: 28.552499, -080.854722

My mission is to carry the Project Healing Waters message to flyfishermen in all 50 states.

Mr. Muddler the Muddler Minnow


This is a second life for Mr. Muddler the Muddler Minnow. This time it is a laminated business card with the tracking code displayed prominently on the face of the card and a message on the back. In the first life, this travel bug was a piece of paper inside a film canister, yellow body, green top, attached to an actual TB. I launched Mr. Muddler the first time in Fayetteville, NC in May 2010. It disappeared sometime in 2012 after having logged 6,327 miles and 25 posts. I pulled back the travel bug number and relaunched Mr. Muddler in GC4652A, The Camo Bug Inn, in Titusville, FL on 30 Nov 2014. I guess there is some slim chance that the original might show up.

First Launch


The Muddler Minnow was spawned, so to speak, by Don Gapen of Anoka, Minnesota in 1937, to imitate the slimy sculpin. The Muddler, as it is informally known by anglers, was popularized by Montana, USA fisherman and fly tier Dan Bailey. It is now a popular pattern worldwide and is likely found in nearly every angler's fly box, in one form or another. Due to its universal appeal to game fish, the muddler minnow will remain as an integral tool in sport fishing.

The Muddler Minnow


Mr. Muddler is one of twelve characters created by artist Kirk Werner for three books designed to introduce children to fly fishing.

Book Series by Kirk Werner


I have created a Trackable for each character. If you would like to see them all, here are the Geocaching Travel Bug Numbers: TB3E3X5, TB3E3Y2, TB3E3X7, TB3F6AD, TB3F69B, TB3F6AW, TB3F69V, TB3F69Z, TB3F6AV, TB3F6A3, TB3F6A5, TB3F6A0.



MEET MY FRIENDS

TB3F69V – Andy the Adams

TB3F6AD – Billy the Blue-Wing Olive

TB3F6AW – Ernie the Elk Hair Caddis

TB3F6AV – Gilbert the Gold-Ribbed Hare's Ear

TB3E3X5 – Mr. Muddler the Muddler Minnow

TB3E3X7 – Olive the Woolly Bugger

TB3F69B – Pete the Prince Nymph

TB3F69Z – Polly the Partridge & Orange

TB3F6A3 – Randal the Royal Coachman

TB3F6A5 – Sally the Yellow Sally

TB3F6A0 – Stan the Stimulator

TB3E3Y2 – Zachary the Purple Zonker

Pictures of all of us – just pictures

LINKS TO LEARN MORE ABOUT

Geocaching (and other GPS games)

Project Healing Waters

Miami Valley Fly Fishers

Kirk Werner