All posts by Scott

2010 SAPES Games Stair Race

What a busy day today. Four things on starting at 8:00 am with the Stair Race at Wakefield House for the SAPES Games.

I was asked to fill in for the organiser back in 2008 and I am still doing it now 3 years later.

This year saw a record entries both in the Stair Sprint and the Full Firefighter Race.

This year also saw a record time set of 1:22 for the 18 story sprint. The previous record was 1:42. 🙂

Earthquake in Adelaide ….

How ironic is this world. I have just been over in LA where they had an earthquake down at the Mexican Border, I met with the Orange County Fire Authority and spoke with them about their earthquake procedures, get back home and the local newspaper does an article on the possibility and consequences of an earthquake here – and what happens, we go and have an earthquake.

Tonight around 11:35 pm, we experienced an earthquake of magnitude between 3.2 to 3.9. It wasnt a big one but it certainly shook the house and woke up the kids.

Here are some links to the various monitoring sites:

April 12 of 12 ….

What to do for this months 12 of 12. A work day and not one that was to be all that exciting – spending the day in Court as an assessor on an Appeals Tribunal. Taking a leaf out of DarrylW4’s book, I decided that I would take photos of anything that happened on my iPhone.

The 12 photos I grabbed for the day are:

Ended up not being too bad of a 12 of 12. See what next month brings. 🙂

The OC to Ventura County …

My last day in the US this time round was spent visiting Fire Departments at opposite ends of Los Angeles.

The morning was spent with Battalion Chief Mike Ferdig of Orange County Fire Authority at their Headquarters in Irvine. This is my second visit here as I visited last July.

We spoke about the Earthquake Preparedness of the OCFA, given the 7.2 Earthquake of a couple of days ago on the Mexico / Californian border. Their preparedness looked similar to what we were trying to achieve with our Strike Team pre planning. I can see this doubling as earthquake pre-planning as well for us.

We headed out for a bite to eat. The fare of choice was an All American Dog from Jerrys Wood Fired Dogs. Wasn’t too bad at all. Back to HQ to have a look a their Communications / Logistics Trailer and it was time to hit the Freeway.

I had a 150km drive on the I-5 and I-101 to get up to the Ventura County Fire Department at Camarillo. The thing with LA Freeways is that you can be going at 115kph with hundreds of other cars hoping that someone doesn’t get it wrong or you are doing 10kph wishing you were doing 115kph. I was doing both today and ended up being 10 minutes late.

I met with Assistant Chief Vaughan Miller. I had attended a presentation of his at the conference and wanted the enquire more on his work with PPE and hydration. He has given me a lot of usefu information.

It was time to start heading down the coast towards LAX as there was a plane to catch back to Australia. It was a scenic drive with an opportunity to grab a few geocaches as well. It was going well until I hit Santa Monica when the traffic crawled to a stop.

Luckily I could turn off to grab a more direct route to LAX. Arrived in time to drop off the car, grab a bite to eat, check out the duty free then board the 747 back to Australia.  I used points to upgrade to Premium Economy which was well worth the extra room.

Farewell to the United States for now ……

High Desert California ….

Today I had a chance to drive through some of the country that we would normally see alight with wildfires. Taking the I-15 through the Sierra’s to Baker and Death Valley, it was easy to see why the wildfires get so large.

The landscape is so high and steep with access to most areas limited at best, although the areas were very green today due to recent rains, so it will be a while before this burns,

The further you moved towards Las Vegas, the lower the mountains became but they were still steep. It is similar to the Flinders Ranges.

I eventually made it to Baker, home of the World’s Tallest Thermometer and Gateway to Death Valley. The weather today wasn’t that bad with the worst that you would suffer would be a bad sunburn – temperature was 66F.

From here it was time to tackle one of the 3 Geocaching Power Trails. Due to the time of day I tackled the smallest one, the Presidents Trail with 32 caches, each located at the bases of High Voltage power pylons.

While in the area, I met up with Flaglady and BoydChicks, a couple of Californian Geocachers who ended picking  up 412 finds in 17.5 hours. I cached with them for a while but had to head back to Los Angeles while they continued on.

La Brea Tar Pits

The La Brea Tar Pits is somewhere I have always wanted to visit but all my times in LA, I have never had the opportunity until today.

It was a sunny afternoon on Wiltshire Boulevard and the park was full of a lot of families. It was interesting to hear about the history of the area and how it came to be, even though there was a lot of chances that it would have been lost to progress.

Nearby, even more fossils have been found while workers were excavating for a new car park. The most famous find in that area is “Zed” the mammoth.

After spending a couple of hours there and a couple of caches as well it was a 60km trip down to my hotel at Placentia. This took 2 hours as the I-5 was a car park for most of the way. Gave plenty of opportunity to check emails and twitter as well. 🙂

Camping for the next 2 days at the Residence Inn.

Caches found today:

GCPFPG – The La Brea Tar Pits

GC23J41 – That Black Gooey Smelly Stuff

Farewell Reno

Reno put on a show when I woke up this morning and looked out the window. There was a coating of snow from the mountains to the carpark.

Last minute packing and down to the airport. Arrived in plenty of time or so I thought until a few Mexican families with about 4 kids each and around 35 suitcases happened in front of me in the queue. Of course they had about 20 of the cases that were overweight and they had to transfer stuff into other cases to get under the 50lb limit.

This was probably a good thing in the end as the check-in girl looked at my 54lb and said don’t worry about putting stuff in the other case. 🙂

We were late getting off the ground – probably due to loading luggage. Took off to the north then a steep curve around and over the mountains all white and into LA not too late at all.

Mt Rose skiing revisited …

After being “slightly” sunburnt and windburnt from yesterday on the slopes, I did the right thing and added some suncreen. I needed not worry as the closer I got to Mt Rose the cloudier it got.

By the time I got to the slopes the wind had picked up and the snow was starting to fall. Despite the conditions, I persisted until 1:00 pm then called it a day when it really started to dump.

It wasn’t the snow so much but the wind which went straight through you. I still enjoyed the skiing I got in but my thighs are telling me different.

One thing I can say about Mt Rose is the staff. They were friendly to regardless of the conditions – this is something the Australian ski field staff could learn.

I headed back down the mountain being chased by large amounts of white stuff falling from the sky. Once down on the plains, the sun appeared but the wind persisted. It gave me a chance to go caching and I picked up another 32 finds.

Back to the hotel to pack the bags, then to find that there had been a number of earthquakes in California. LAX had been closed down to inspect the runways for damage. It will be interesting to see if we get in tomorrow if there are more quakes overnight. There is also up to 18″ of snow forecast for Reno overnight.

Skiing Mt Rose …

I had all intentions to be up on Mt Rose at 9:00 am with the lifts opening after 12″ of fresh powder snow but by the time I had got a rental car and rental skis, it wasn’t until 10:30 am before I got there.

There was plenty of evidence of the fresh snow. The snow here is different to that back in Oz. It is a dry powder rather than the wet and icy snow we have at home and the spring skiing here is a lot different to home – no elephant snot.

Mike Brown had organised a lift ticket for me but he was busy doing avalanche control and about every 20 minutes an large explosion was detonated on the Chutes until about 12:00 noon.

Had a great day skiing but the thighs and knees were telling me that it had been 7 months since I had last been skiing. Should be a lot better tomorrow.

Tried to find some of the caches on the mountain but had no luck due to the fresh powder. It wasn’t until I got to the base of the mountain that I could find a cache. 🙂

I managed to capture myself on the webcam at the end of the day. Caught up with Mike eventually and by the time I left the Ski Patrol, my car was the only one left in the parking lot. 😮

Grabbed a few caches on the way home but too many to list.

Good Friday Caching …

A big day out caching today with Jeditrekr, JimmyReno, ForeverChaos and HRKneese getting out to Pyramid Lake and around North Reno. 61 finds, 3 DNF’s and 1 hide which will have dual citizenship on GC.com (DUAL CITIZENSHIP) and GCA.com (Dual Citizenship – what the heck is that …..) 🙂

The day started out with LPC’s (Lamp Post Caches), even having the opportunity to try a Spicy Bite at a LPC. The further we got away from Reno and started getting into the “Outback”, the containers got larger with most being ammo cans and a chance to drop in some TB’s (Travel Bugs) I had brought from Oz.

The countryside is similar to the Flinders Ranges but not as high with rock formations and open spaces.

Our final location was Pyramid Lake which is an alkaline fresh water lake inside the Pyramid Lake Indian Reservation. There are a number of geological formations here as well as a large pelican population.

The wind started to increase and another storm headed in with a large dust storm covering the western end of the lake. This storm ended up dropping another 12″ of snow at Mt Rose. 😀