Archive for June, 2006
my butt hurts
Monday, June 26th, 2006and i am so very happy!
As of Saturday evening, the Utah MS150 ride had earned $1,060,000 to help fight MS and support those with MS.
I ended up riding 100 miles on day one and the remainder on day two. Let me just say, that i really should have put slicks on for the 100 miles. I have a touring bike and the tires are wider and more nobbly than a regular road bike which gives you more resistance and i was definitely feeling that at the end of day one. Luckily, i hooked up with my friend Carol’s team, which i have ridden with a couple of times, and got to do some drafting. Thank you Janet and Beth for pulling the last 15 miles!
Sunday had an open start, so i headed out at 7:15 and hooked up with two other brighton team members, Zita and Jay, to do the last loop. The volunteers on both days were fantastic. The route was beautiful and the people were great. How cool to be riding along with someone who was grateful to be the 6th top fund raiser last year. His wife has MS and both he and his son were riding the 150. She was hoping to join them for a few miles at the end.
Sunday, when we got back to camp at 10:00, sop was waiting for me (he had not been able to come up with me because we had Dogie) with beer and sandwiches. I finished breaking down my camp and we headed out to a reservoir on the bike route to hang out for a while. Perfect wrap-up to a fantastic weekend!
Oh, yes, pictures:

Team Brighton - Lifts for Life
Thank You!
Friday, June 23rd, 2006Thank you to everyone who contributed to the MS 150 ride! Thank you Spider Woman for spreading the word! I am heading up to Logan today, looking forward to riding 150 miles over the next two days. My butt may not be looking forward to it so much, but it’ll get over it.
towards the end of the day
Friday, June 23rd, 2006we headed to the trail head of the hike we wanted to do on the following day. This is an area of many old uranium mines through the bentonite hills. We set up camp and hiked out to find the trail so that we wouldn’t have to search too much in the morning. For those of you unfamiliar with hiking in this area, very few ‘trails’ are marked. Guide books read, “if you look to the southwest, you will see an arch in the wingate escarmpent. Look further west and notice where the chinle formation forms a ‘v’ - this is where the trail starts.” We wanted to make sure we weren’t hunting in the heat of day, and we also wanted to wander in the desert twilight.
finally fields
Thursday, June 22nd, 2006and finally news from the desert trip:

written with one foot out the window
One of the first hikes we wanted to do was off the Burr Trail. I needed to get a 12-mile run in, and so we camped at our Cottonwood Tree spot and then SOP hit the road in the truck and i hit the road with my feet, meeting at the turnoff for Lampstand, a.k.a. Ginstand.
The fields around lampstand had been chained this year. I believe it is done to clear out the Juniper, also known as Cedar in these parts, and allow some more grasses to grow for grazing.
One of the cool things we saw this day was a rattlesnake - a RED rattlesnake! I saw him, he saw us, he rattled and shimmied, we shot (photos).












