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Fabulous Summer Job for Young Hiker

The Trailmaster's Blog by John McKinneyFor a young hiker, aged 18 to 25, it might just be the ultimate summer job or what the Sierra Club calls “The Best Internship on Earth.”

The Sierra Club is looking for one guy/gal to spend the summer of 2010 traveling across the U.S. to report on various Sierra Club outdoors youth programs including Volunteer Vacations, Inner City Outings and Building Bridges to the Outdoors.

By “report on” the Sierra Club means the lucky employee will hike, backpack, camp and raft in beautiful places then video-blog about these outdoor adventures.


Hikers: Love the Trail You're With - The Trailmaster's Blog

Hikers: If you can’t hike the trail you love, love the trail you hike.
 
“Love the One You’re With” was playing on the car radio as I was driving to a trailhead in the Santa Monica Mountains. The classic Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young tune got me thinking about how important it is to be open to new possibilities when the object of your desire is denied.
 
The trail I really wanted to take winds through Rattlesnake Canyon, located in the Santa Ynez Mountains a few miles from my home. However, this trail and surrounding environs was scorched by wildfire last year and eroded by runoff from heavy rains. Other trails in the mountains are in similar shape, and frankly are just plain butt ugly as a result of their 2009 incineration.


National Parks Visitation--is it really increasing?

National Park visitation increased by nearly 3.9 percent from 2008, the National Park Service reported recently.
 
What does that mean?
 
By the numbers it means 285 million people visited national parks compared to 275 million in 2008.
 
What caused the increase? Are more people partaking of the pleasures of the great outdoors?
 
I doubt it.


Fire, Flood and Footpaths

Watching the TV news and reading super-exaggerated reports of a “Niagara of Mud” reminded me of the many trails in the San Gabriel Mountains that have been affected by fire and flood. A number of hikers have asked The Trailmaster for an update on trail conditions in the Angeles National Forest, so here’s an overview.
 
There’s nothing like what the TV news terms a “natural disaster” to get the reporters out of the studio into the hills. Recent rains washed a whole lot of soil from the fire-scorched slopes of the San Gabriel Mountains. Mud, lots of it, washed down natural creeks and manmade flood control channels, as well as a few streets and driveways.
 
The 2009 Station Fire burned some 161,189 acres in the San Gabriel Mountains. Vegetation in the burn area was mostly chaparral, though the fire did burn forested areas at higher elevations and scorched a number of riparian areas along creeks and rivers.


Turn a Routine Walk into a Rewarding Hike

Boredom thwarts our best intentions to exercise—including going out for a walk. Taking the same neighborhood loop day in and day out can dull the motivation of even the most diehard walking enthusiast.
 
To keep the spring in your step, add a little green exercise and try a different route. You might be surprised what a little research might uncover in the way of greenery and scenery in your area. Reinvigorate your walking by relocating your usual walk and turning it into a hike.


Counting Our Blessings on a Thanksgiving Hike

Before we gather for Thanksgiving dinner with friends and family, it’s our tradition to take a hike.
 
Usually, we hit the trail on Thanksgiving morn, and our family hike is as much a part of our celebration as the big turkey dinner and the Robert Louis Stevenson Thanksgiving prayer I like to recite. This year, however, with the need to prepare a feast for a whole lot of relatives, more than a few of whom are quite elderly and in ill health, we took our hike the day before the holiday.
 
My wife Cheri, son Daniel, 12, and I meandered through the Coronado Butterfly Preserve located on the coastal bluffs about ten miles north of downtown Santa Barbara. We wanted to see if the monarch butterflies had arrived after their long migration from colder climes. The butterflies seem to have a knack for wintering in some of California’s most beautiful coastal locales, and the eucalyptus grove where they hang and hang out at the edge of Santa Barbara is a lovely place.


Hike With Gratitude

“God has two dwellings: one in heaven, and the other in a meek and thankful heart,” declared Izaak Walton, the 17th century English writer now regarded as the patron saint of fishing.
 
Walton’s walks by the river Dove and along the banks of many other brooks and ponds, inspired him to write “The Compleat Angler,” still regarded as the greatest book ever about fishing. His book combines practical advice on the art of angling with some highly moral and spiritual passages. Walton’s gratitude for God’s gifts, the beauties of pastoral England and the companionship of his fellows shines right through in his book, as popular now as it was 300 years ago.
 
“Nobody expresses their gratitude about anything or thanks me,” you say. Likely as not, you’re probably right. Try to remember the last time anyone thanked you for anything. It was probably a “Thanks-and-have-a-nice-day,” at the check-out counter from a supermarket cashier or a “Thanks for your order,” from a fast-food franchise. Such gratitude!
 
Now try to remember the last time anyone thanked you for anything important. It’s a dispiriting cycle: we rarely get thanks, and we rarely give it. Even those of us who try hard not to be thoughtless are often thankless--except perhaps for the one hour a week we spend inside our house of worship.
         
My suggestion: On one walk—better yet one hike—a week use a few minutes of your time to exercise your gratitude while you stretch your limbs. List everything in your life that you are thankful for, and everything that you enjoy. Contemplate this list on your walk.
         


Thanksgiving Travel: Keeping Nature in Mind

 
 
 
Every kind of media is supplying loads of Thanksgiving week travel advice: The dangers of driving or of facing what is now either an unpleasant or barely tolerable experience of getting on an airplane. No one, however, is giving advice about keeping nature or the natural elements in mind when preparing for travel.
         
I thought of this lack of regard for nature as I flashed back exactly three years ago to the Kim family Thanksgiving week ordeal in the snowy Oregon backcountry, the tragic death of James Kim, and the fortunate rescue of his wife and two young daughters.
         
My friends and family, and people across the nation and around the world were gripped by the sequence of events that led the family from Interstate 5 in Roseburg Oregon to a dead-end spur road in the rugged coastal mountains near the Rogue River.ving advice about keeping nature or the natural elements in mind when preparing for travel.


Life, Liberty Canyon, and the Pursuit of Happiness

I’m always looking for a semi-secret trailhead that helps me get a good hike off to a great start and avoid the sometimes maddening crowds. I figured I’d love the rather obscure Liberty Canyon Trailhead at the northern edge of popular Malibu Creek State Park.
 
I figured wrong.


On the Trail with Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Coleridge and the Lake Poets of 1809 have a message for today's hikers: Take a walk in nature, renew your spirit, and gain a fresh perspective on what really matters in this life. Oh, and don't spend so much time on your business that you stop walking and stop writing.


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