You Can’t Go Home Again…

In my office there is a photo that sits in an old wooden frame on the bookshelf across from my desk.  It isn’t much of a photo as far as it photographic value is considered.  The sky is over exposed to the point of being pure white, the main subject is far too small to properly grab your attention.  The print itself has seen years of abuse at the bottom of various moving boxes as it shuffled from house to house, place to place.  It is scratched and faded and not wearing its 23 years of age all that well.

It is a pretty standard shot, of two grain elevators with a railway track running off in the distance.  It is a scene that could have been taken in any small town on the prairies at any point over the last century or so.  If you look really close you might be able to make out the word “Coaldale” painted on the elevator in the front and that would provide you with your only geographic clue.

However, if you take the photo from its frame and turn it over something new emerges.  Written on the back of the photo, in simple printing it says “Dan Overes 1987”.  If pictures are really worth a thousand words, that scrawl on the back of the photo would be the place to start the story.

I don’t know the exact date of the photo, but if I had to guess it was sometime in late September or early October.  I was in my first semester of high school and I had signed up for a visual arts class.  One of our first assignments was to take a SLR camera out around town and shoot some pictures.  No pre-determined subject matter, just shoot whatever you wanted.

This was the first time I had ever handled a “real” camera.  Sure, I had an old Kodak Instamatic that I had played with, but being handed a SLR was a brand new world.  Even the act of loading film into it was a new experience — on my camera all you had to do was drop in the cartridge and wind it a couple of times.

Out of all the roles of film I shot and developed that semester, only three images stand out for me.  The first was of water running through a “check” on an irrigational canal.  That image stands out for me mainly because when I took that photo it seemed like it was a long way out of town, but not long after the town started building a new subdivision and golf course around that area, swallowing it up forever.

The second image that I specifically remember was a shot of our main street, taken while crossing the road.  I remember it because it captured the sign of the old Gulf gas station which was situated on the corner.  That gas station has long since been torn down and replaced with a modern 7-11.  It leaves me with a sense of history to know that photo would look as dated to today’s Coaldale high schoolers as similar pictures taken in the 1950s looked to us back then.

Sadly, as far as I know, neither of those two images survive.  They may be still sitting at the bottom of the box somewhere waiting to be re-discovered at some date in the future, but for now they are lost to the ages.  No, only one of the three memorable images I shot still is around, and that is the picture of the elevators I first mentioned above.

I remember standing on the railway tracks, wanting to capture the twin rails of steel disappearing off onto the horizon.  I remember how, even then, I really felt the power of photography and how we were documenting something for future generations.  I remember trying to capture the feeling of the era, all the while knowing the black-and-white film we were using would give it a timeless look.

Those few months back in the Fall of ’87 were the only time I ever spent working in an actual darkroom developing actual film. 

Now that simple shot — wrong in every photographic sense — still speaks to me across the years.  It reminds me of those years in high school which were some of the best I ever had.  It reminds me of my friends from that era, those I still remain in touch with and, more poignantly, those I have lost all contact with.  It reminds me of driving into Lethbridge to shoot pool during our spares, of grabbing a coffee downtown and then frantically crashing into our desks in Mr. Evan’s Social Studies class before he deemed us to be late.  One picture, a thousand memories…

That brings me back to today.  One day a few weeks ago I was sitting at my desk looking at that picture and I decided to make a return trip to the ole hometown and try and take a modern day version of that shot.  I get down to Lethbridge on a fairly regular basis, but visiting Coaldale is a rare and special thing for me.

This is how I found myself walking through the weeds heading for the train tracks in Coaldale last night.  I had in my pocket a printed copy of the photo, with plans to try and line up the exact same shot once again. 

It proved to be a challenge.  The original photo was shot in portrait format and I simply couldn’t capture all the same key elements when I tried to shoot the same way today.  Also, there was a train coming up behind me and I was pressed for time, so rather than waiting for it to pass I stood off to the side of the tracks to snap my shot. 

The major landmarks were in place, the fertilizer tower to the left, the vet clinic to the right.  The main rails and the side track were there, although the second side track which only had its rails pulled up in the ’87 photo was now nothing more than a pile of railway ties. 

There were more street lights along the highway now and the trees had certainly grown a lot in the 23 years since the original photo.  Most notably, one of the grain elevators which dominated the original photo has long since vanished, leaving just one still in place.

No, I wasn’t able to perfectly line up the shots to get an exact modern-day equivalent of the old shot, but that seems fitting.  After nearly two-and-a-half decades I am not the same 14-year-old who took the original photo.  I have had a third of a lifetime of experiences since then and so much has changed.  At the time I took that photo I was less than three years away from leaving Coaldale and moving into a totally new era.  Just as my dSLR and digital lightroom of today bears only a slight resemblence to the film and darkroom of the late 80s, so do I only bear a slight resemblence to the gawky teen standing on a set of railway tracks all those years ago.

You can get close, but you just can’t go home again…

 Coaldale Revisited 

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Geocaching Road Trip

07:47: Been on the road for about an hour and a half. Driven 139.8km. Just stopped and found my first Geocache of the day, which was Brass Cap BCP485. Easy find as it was well-marked, despite being well below ground level. Had a quick stretch of the legs and I’m now heading towards Brooks.

08:46: Stopped for a quick cache near Stafford Lake in Brooks. Nice place, I don’t think I even knew this part of town existed. Looked for about ten minutes but couldn’t find it. I hate when cache owners don’t provide a hint on the cache page. Oh well, can’t get them all anyway. Nice visit with some annoyed ducks. Better get back on the road!

10:02: I’m here, but we can’t get in. No one has keys to the church. 🙂

13:23: Been out caching with Richard, Dave and James. Done a number of caps and caches. We’re back at the main event listening to Don present his session on capping.

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I’m Glad I’m Old Enough To Remember…

It’s that time of year, where the annual Beloit College Mindset List is released.  I originally became interested in the Mindset List because, working at a post-secondary institution, it is useful for me to try and understand the new students who arrive every year.  Now, it has become so much more — it has become my own road map through life, highlighting for me how things my generation once considered amazing have already become obsolete.

To mark the twenty years since I first stepped onto campus, I decided to compile my own personal list — a list of things I can say I am happy I am old enough that I can say I have experienced.  Maybe the new generation needs an insight into the mind of us old buggers?

  1. I can remember having to get up to turn the dial on the televsion because we didn’t have a remote control.
  2. Not every television in our house was colour.  Actually, I can remember when we only had one TV in the house.
  3. I can remember the day we had cable TV installed and we didn’t need to have the antenna on the roof or, GASP, rabbit ears!
  4. I’m glad I had to experience the agony of knowing if you wanted to phone a girl it meant you were going to have to ask her parents if she was available to talk.
  5. I’m also glad I got to experience the relief that came when she answered the phone herself!
  6. I can remember being happy our phone had a cord long enough that I could take the handset into the closet to have my conversation in “private”.
  7. I am pleased to say I am a member of a generation that knew the absolute joy of riding in the open bed of a pickup truck.
  8. I actually used to know how to find a library book using a card catalogue.
  9. The first thing my parents did after buying a car was stuff the seatbelts under the seat so they wouldn’t be in the way.
  10. I can remember my dad taking the foil from inside a package of cigarettes, wrapping it around a blown fuse in the car.
  11. I can remember my mother shoving a piece of cardboard underneath the eight track so it wouldn’t drag as the belt wore out.
  12. Does anyone else remember having to figure out which side a video store was Beta and which was VHS when renting a movie?
  13. My generation could tell what someone ordered at McDonald’s by the color of the Styrofoam container his burger came in.
  14. Remember when you had to figure out how many times to let a phone ring before you decided no one was home and hung up?
  15. I remember going to the bank to cash a paycheque and deciding how much cash you were going to need to get you through to the next pay day.
  16. When I was a student we thought we were advanced because we could use a phone system to drop a class or change our schedule.
  17. Yes, I actually had to balance a penny on the stylus of a record player to keep the needle from skipping.
  18. Our parents would let us run free outside without supervision as long as we agreed to come home when the streetlights came on.
  19. I can remember when hearing you had a computer in your house meant you must be “really rich”.
  20. Yes, even for my generation, getting a physical letter from a friend was a special occasion.

Please feel free to add your own points.  Let’s all revel in our middle-aged-ness.

 

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South Baldy Ridge

This hike started off on the wrong foot.  I was only ten minutes down the road from home when I realized I had left the bear spray sitting on the shelf in the garage.  Foolishly I choose to carry on despite knowing this was a dumb thing to do.

This was still on my mind as I turned off the TransCanada Highway and started down Highway 40 into Kananaskis.  However, by the time I reached the parking lot for the Baldy Pass Trail the concern had faded into the back of my mind and I set my focus on the hike ahead of me instead.

Mount Baldy from Highway 40. The south ridge is not visible in this photo.The first part of this hike was pretty boring.  The trail crosses the highway and then through the forest to the south, before eventually curving around and heading in a more easterly direction.

The initial part of the trail is hard-packed and easy to follow.  There are a number of roots and washed out sections, but it is quite simple terrain to navigate.

Eventually it becomes much more rocky.  You want decent footwear to protect your feet from the pointy edges.  The top of the pass is about 4km from the trailhead and involves an ascent of approximately 400m.  I was able to reach this point in about one hour.

As you near the top of Baldy Pass you will reach a large cairn which marks the location where you can begin your ascent of the ridge.  I actually carried on further up the pass first, as I wanted to look for a nearby Geocache.  That cache, called Kenobi-15 Baldy Pass would eventually elude me and I could not find it.  I also used this as an opportunity to have my first water break and to pull the D90 out of the backpack and snap some photos.  My point-and-shoot Canon S3IS died on vacation so I’ve been forced to carry the D90 with me on these hikes, meaning it spends more time in the protection of the backpack than it does around my neck getting used.

Looking at the ridge from near the top of Baldy Pass

I worked my way back down to the stone cairn and then began the ascent of the ridge.  The first part of this trail is pretty straightforward — yes, it is steep and there is plenty of loose rock, but it is nothing more than a grind.  It’s once you reach a gendarme that things get interesting.  There is a well-defined path that appears to go around it to the right.  I started in that direction and it immediately got very interesting.  You find yourself on a ledge with some fairly serious exposure.  I crossed a couple of sections that got my heart rate up before deciding I had reached my limit and needed to turn around.  Convincing the dog to turn around on that section of trail wasn’t all that easy.

 Approaching the gendarme. Go over it, don’t try going around it.

I returned to the base of the gendarme and decided to tackle it head on.  As I started climbing the rocks I realized a couple of things — first, I make no claims to be a scrambler so this was a different experience for me and second, it wasn’t nearly as difficult as it looked from the bottom.  It’s about a 4m climb but, as I proved, it is not much of an obstacle, even for someone handicapped by having a dog leash in one hand.

I reached the top of the crux and began making my way further along the ridge.  The high point of the ridge was still well over 1km away, further than I had expected it to be, based upon my view from the top of Baldy Pass.  (Only later would I realize I had identified the wrong peak as the summit while on the pass.)

The views from up there were amazing.  You have open valleys on both sides — looking down Baldy Pass and along Highway 40 to the left and looking at the cut blocks in the Lusk Creek area along Highway 68 to the right.  There are some spots where a misstep could land you in a world of trouble, but as long as you have a healthy respect for the elevation and take your time it is a very pleasant ridge walk.

Approaching the ridge high point, which is about 500m away in this shot on the right side of the photo.The summit (or high point of the ridge if you prefer) is much like the gendarme in the sense that it looks worse than it really is.  At first I wondered if my nerves would last long enough to reach my destination, but it ended up not being an issue.

I was about 100m from the summit when I noticed that for the first time on this trip I had human company.  A lone hiker was standing there taking photos.  I was hoping he would be able to take a photo of me on the summit, but he left the summit before I could reach him.  I assume he headed north towards the summit of Baldy Mountain, but I was not able to glimpse him again by the time I reached the top.

I stopped and located the Geocache which was my target for the day:  “Baldy Ridge Summit by BVPete“.  I also snapped a number of photos and took the time to share my tuna sandwiches with Tucker.  After that it was time to explore the summit, snap more photos and then prepare for the descent.Tucker the Dog near the summit 

The trip down was uneventful.  By the time I was ready to vacate the summit it was noon and the sun was starting to be a factor, especially since — like my bear spray, I left the sunscreen at home.

The descent was about 2.5 hours.  My feet were very sore by the time I completed the ridge descent and reached the Baldy Pass Trail again.  I only saw one other hiker on the ridge — she was just completing her ascent of the crux as Tucker and I were preparing to come down.

The crux actually is more intimidating to come down than it was to climb in the first place.  I didn’t have any problems, but I did have to encourage a the dog in a few different places as he was unsure of his footing.

There was a lot more foot traffic on the Baldy Pass Trail.  I would pass another nine hikers before completing the trip to the truck in the parking lot, some coming down like me but the bulk still heading up the pass.

With my detour for the first cache, the stops for photos, lunch on the summit and all the other rest breaks along the way the total trip time was about six hours.  Actual hiking time was around five hours as I estimate I spent close to a full hour at the two cache sites.

The odometer on the GPSr showed I had covered about 14km with a total ascent of 1000m.  The net elevation of the ridge’s summit is about 800m above the parking lot, so there wasn’t too much “up and down” on the ridge — I suspect if one didn’t go for the Baldy Pass cache you would be around 900-950m of total elevation and 13km in distance.  It’s certainly not a hike for the faint of heart, but not nearly as intimidating as it looks.  Or, perhaps, my fitness level and hiking skills have improved to the point where I can now do this sort of ascent without killing myself.  

As always, this is not intended to be a endorsement of any kind.  Hiking carrys a wide range of risks and you must take responsibility for your own safety.  Trail and weather conditions are subject to change without notice and you must be prepared for whatever you may encounter on the trail.  Don’t blame me if you get into a situation you can’t handle — know your limits and hike within them. 

Tucker and the author at the summit of the ridgeBarrier Lake, Mount Baldy, Barrier Dam as seen from the ridge summit 

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My Changing Face[book] of Social Media

I used to joke that “Facebook is for connecting with people I used to know; Twitter is for connecting with people I wish I knew.”  It used to be that simple.

That has changed a lot over the last three years.  More and more people that I have regular interactions with started joining Facebook.  It was no longer a place where I would go to see what old friends were up to, it was where I started to go to see what my current friends were doing as well.  It became my main method of communicating with all of my friends — past and present.  Just as email replaced the phone and instant messaging replaced email, Facebook quickly replaced instant messaging for me.

The same shift is happening on Twitter for me.  More and more I find people I actually know are on Twitter.  It certainly hasn’t reached the scale of the Facebook shift, but it is heading that way.  I think the adoption rate for Twitter was slow because, if you are anything like me, it takes a fair amount of time before you “get” Twitter.  As Facebook adopted the News Feed and became more of a “Twitter-lite”, I think more people found the transition to be less arduous than it was in the past.

So, whereas before I could safely operate under the assumption that Facebook was “personal” and Twitter was “public”, that is no longer the case.  Twitter has shifted and become more personal, and Facebook has become more public.  I still take steps to limit access to my Facebook — tweaking the privacy settings, not accepting Friend requests from people I don’t know — but I found I could no longer operate under the assumption that everyone who reads my Facebook updates fit into the same demographic.

I had tried controlling access using lists before — Family, people I play hockey with, coworkers, high school friends — but found them to be limited in usefulness.  As usual, the problem wasn’t with the technology but with my process.  Sure, I had created the lists of people but those lists, as logical as they may seem, didn’t help me really control who could see certain parts of my profile.  Sure, I could hide posts about my job from the Coworkers list, but there were some people on that list who I might like to include. 

Then, along came an article from Engadget explaing one method of using Facebook lists to manage your privacy.  As soon as I read this article I knew I had to jump on the idea and run with it.  Now my profile and updates are controlled by four distinct groups:

— People I Trust

— People I Know

— Family

— Limited Access

I think they are mostly self-explanatory.  The difference between “Know” and “Trust” is a subjective one, but I didn’t have much trouble deciding which people went on which list.  So far it hasn’t made a difference since I have yet to post anything that hasn’t gone out to the Know, Trust and Family lists, but I like knowing the option is there. 

So, my social media life has gotten a little more complex than it used to be, but that is what happens as things grow and evolve.  I’m looking forward to seeing where it goes from here. 

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