Monthly Archives: October 2009

Moaning Caves

The 2009 October Campout for Troop 453 was a trip to Moaning Cavern, in Vallecito, California. As the actual cave location did not have campsites, we camped in the nearby Calveras Big Trees State Park (imaginative name, I know).
The cavern itself was actually quite interesting, seeing as there was only one entrance in, and it led to a 165-foot tall cavern – from the top. This meant that the first leg of the trip was to rappel down from the top entrance, about 95 feet of rock wall descent and 70 feet of free descent. Unfortunately, we were not allowed to speed-rappel, or it could have been even more fun than it was. On a side note, the guides seem to be able to break this rule at will, seeing as they did the entire free descent at nearly free fall, with a jerk up at the end to slow down and land safely. What was quite interesting, however, was that free descent is actually substantially easier and faster than wall descent, since you don’t have to worry about accidentally whacking your head against the other wall.
Once we were at the bottom of the cavern, we entered the lower caves, which were all much smaller. The largest chamber was about 2 feet tall, so it was not possible to stand. We had to crawl through the caves, which is actually different than what you’d expect. Many of the entrances are too slippery and to narrow to allow a person to go on their knees, and as such, it is necessary to move forwards by essentially swimming and pulling oneself along via use of small handholds and footholds.
A small highlight of the trip was the “Hotel California” cave, which was a small detour that we took from the main route. It was made mostly out of mud, and was easy to get into, but quite hard to get out. Exiting required a decent amount of flexibility, and a lot of trust in the guide, seeing as there wasn’t enough space to see where you were going. Several people in our group left small messages made out of mud on the walls.
One other thing we did was to experience total darkness. We turned off all our lights, and pointed the headlamps away from each other (LED lamps have residual lighting after being turned off). It turns out that when it’s dark, and you expect something to be moving, such as your hand, you will hallucinate its movement in front of your eyes – an eerie experience once you realize you can’t see anything.
On the second day, we stayed at Big Trees State Park and took a hike in the South Grove. When they say big trees, they really mean big trees. The size of the average “big tree” was about 25 feet in diameter, measured near the ground (about 20-21 feet at 6 feet). As surprising as that may be, the biggest one, at the end of the trail, had a diameter of about 26 feet measured at six feet above the ground! To put this into perspective, it was big enough to fit all the people with us inside with about half the space to spare.

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October 19, 2009

Categories:

Trips

Another Weekly Update

It’s been a busy week, but now we have a nice, 3-day weekend to rest before the next. Over the week, I’ve had fun doing a variety of things, namely Halo and surfing the internet.
Halo has been one of those things which helped me get through the week without stressing out the whole time. It’s a nice break from the monotonous chore of homework when you can play a internet game with a friend, or even join one of the many servers available and play with people you don’t know.
I did manage to get an iPod (my first iPod) Nano 4th Generation (8gb) over the week, so I’m finally joining the crowd and listening to music. Of course, I don’t really know any of the songs in my library, so I’m depending on my friends to help me out with it. I do believe I have eliminated something like 60% of all modern music when I say I don’t like hard rock or rap, but playing piano for years on end has given me a bias towards instrumentals and melodic music.
On another note, I don’t have a speech and debate tourney this weekend, so it be easier to do homework overall.

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October 10, 2009

Categories:

News

The Last Few Weeks

The last few weeks have been pretty hectic for me, so I haven’t had time to post. Some notable things:

Last weekend, I went to St. Francis’ Robert Garcia Invitational with ChangChun Hwang. We went 3-3, and hit both Ott/Song and Rylan Schaeffer. It was pretty fun, and I got to experiment with some things during downtime. I also started playing Halo© again, mostly for the multiplayer aspect. Judging also happened to be quite good, with many policy flow judges. You can see my coverage of the tourney at Point of Information.

Over the week, I experienced a large amount of homework, as is common for people taking AP Calculus. I can’t say anything really happened… Although I did set up TTTH in order to shorten fileURLS for my webpages. For all intents and purposes, ttth.org is equal to aeturnalus.com except on the front page.

I just got back today from yet another speech and debate tournament: CFL Fall @ Menlo-Atherton. This time, I went with Sarthak Angal. Judges were ok, but not great. Through some stroke of luck (or unluck, really) I hit Schaeffer once more. This lost me the first round, keeping me from my undefeated record. I also got to talk to some people from other schools that do debate, and it was pretty fun overall. The tourney didn’t run behind, but they were pretty strict on CHSSA rules. A team apparently was even disqualified in the first round. Unfortunately, internet access was not provided in the tourney.

Something to mention about the two tourneys is that Ryan Lawrence, our head coach, wrote most of the resolutions.

Overall, it’s been a fun two weeks.

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October 4, 2009

Categories:

News, Speech and Debate

 
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